Tell you what RA , you and Swale are quick to scream for proff over something, or refuse to believe any posts or opinions from anyone other than the Guardian or BBC.
So it's time for you to deliver in that in reverse.
Here is Farage's answer to that allogation in 2013, which got no response from the stirrer.
Over to you.
Nigel Farage has denied singing Hitler Youth songs as a ****ager after allegations that the Ukip leader "professed racist and neo-fascist views" during his schooldays.
Farage claimed that he had said "ridiculous things" in his youth but these utterances were "not necessarily racist", and described the reports about Hitler Youth songs as "complete baloney."
The eurosceptic figurehead was responding to Channel 4 News, which had aquired a letter written by one of his teachers at Dulwich College in 1981. The letter, from Chloe Deakin, was written shortly after Farage had been made a prefect at the south London independent school.
Deakin wrote to the school headmaster that staff had discussed Farage's prefecture, with one teacher saying the future politician was "a fascist, but that was no reason why he would not make a good prefect." This remark prompted "considerable reaction" among colleagues.
The teacher continued: "Another colleague, who teaches the boy, described his publicly professed racist and neo-fascist views; and he cited a particular incident in which Farage was so offensive to a boy in his set, that he had to be removed from the lesson.
"Yet another colleague described how, at a Combined Cadet Force [CCF] camp organised by the college, Farage and others had marched through a quiet Sus*** village very late at night shouting Hitler-youth songs."
Farage responded by telling Channel 4 News: "Yes of course I said some ridiculous things. Not necessarily racist things. Well it depends how you define it.
"You've got to remember that ever since 1968 up until the last couple of years, we've not been able in this country intelligently to discuss immigration, to discuss integration.
"It's all been a buried subject - and that's happened through academia, it's happened through politics and the media."
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A young English teacher said these things, in a discussion of who was to be prefect. Mmmmmmm call me suspicious

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