Pale - Wake up brothers and sisters!

Pale, 25/17 - Wake up brothers and sisters! V.2 You do not show it on the first channel. We see too much and know a lot of things. tightened by radio song the old, familiar: hide, dear, started riots. also damaged the visitor - this is fascism! - A cry in the ear. If the guests cut local - it bytovuha. Human rights activists are silent, mute, like fish, because the masters of life for us - slaves pipe. shoot the head off may be an element in the supermarket. Dissenters under the press - spit blood! substitution of concepts , in the minds of our cook porridge and sawing of the big country MAZ rush. Two hundred and eighty two - art as a sword of Damocles. To order, show, the serfs have to flog. Russian is here now second-class people, soon voltage burst aorta. We have nowhere to run, brothers and sisters, wake up, wake up! We have something to lose, brothers and sisters, wake up before its too late! Vera prevents them to break us up to the end, faith in the One Creator God the Father. They want to destroy our body from the inside - more all stored in his heart bless. rage clowns, diverting attention. During the plague - a buffet. At a distance of several thousand kilometers from Moscow - the signs of degeneration in the context of poverty. Behold, the servant said that he could become king. The power of the people, vote, Do not think about anything else! freedom of choice and the choice of something like this: Fascist or gay, or kafir goy. All this would be funny if it were not serious. I realized finally that it is too late to hope for change for the better - Kali Yuga. Let us hold on tight, pray for each other. We have nowhere to run, brothers and sisters, wake up, wake up! We have something to lose, brothers and sisters, wake up before its too late!

Posted by Søren Renner on Sunday, October 30, 2011 at 02:55 PM in European Nationalism
Comments (7) | Tell a friend

Comments:

1

Posted by Graham_Lister on October 30, 2011, 03:23 PM | #

We all have an inner authoritarian waiting to get out...

 

2

Posted by Ex-Pro White Activist on October 30, 2011, 05:17 PM | #

We all have an inner authoritarian waiting to get out…

Absolutely.  Here’s mine.  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lork4zxRGxI&feature=related  To the extent the white race has a future those are the probable languages.

This one’s for you, Leon.  Let’s see if you are capable of learning:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-wBH6HXidO4

Didn’t like that, huh?  Well, since you insist, let’s close with a Paytriotic red/white/blue number:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yydlX7c8HbY

 

3

Posted by Jimmy Marr on October 30, 2011, 05:41 PM | #

Another authoritarian favorite.

4

Posted by Thorn on October 30, 2011, 07:54 PM | #

Maybe I’m missing something about RamStein? They always struck me as a bunch of homosexual degenerates. Anyway I love Dr. Peirce. Thanks for posting that Jimmy. I used to listen to Dr. Peirce religiously on American Dissident Voices decades back via shortwave radio.
Here’s an example of what I consider an authoritarian fave: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vR87SSom5nA

6

Posted by RedSpaniel on October 31, 2011, 04:11 PM | #

Related:

Putin Uses Symbols of Soviet Power to Announce Idea of Eurasian Union
October 25, 2011

Marlene Laurelle

On October 3, 2011, Vladimir Putin made headlines by putting forward the idea of a Eurasian Union including several post-Soviet states. This was his first foreign policy initiative since the announcement of his candidacy for a third mandate, made at the United Russia Congress at the end of September this year (Gazeta.ru, September 24). Is this new Eurasian Union inspired by the Soviet Union or by the European Union? Is an official revival of Soviet nostalgia at issue, or a project of supranational integration following the models, cited by Putin, of the EU, the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation, the North American Free Trade Agreement and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations?

Putin has always excelled in manipulating the symbols of the former regime and playing on the Soviet nostalgia of a large part of the population – here one will recall his declaration according to which the fall of the USSR was the twentieth century’s greatest geopolitical catastrophe (http://www.kremlin.ru Septe,mber 25, 2005). However, the objective of the new Eurasian Union is not to rebuild a unified state. The Kremlin knows all too well that no ruling circle among the post-Soviet states would accept losing the political independence gained in 1991. Further still, neither are the Russian elite interested in any such development. For them, it recalls bad memories of the USSR’s last years when Moscow would complain about paying out of its pocket for the non-viable economies of certain republics, as well as of having to manage local conflicts in the Caucasus and Central Asia.

Rather, in putting forward this idea, Putin’s aim is to put into place a few joint, supranational mechanisms in specific domains – mainly the economic and financial domains, but also potentially the strategic one – which would guarantee Moscow a right to oversee the evolution of its neighbors. Moscow’s aim is quite obviously to merge the Russia-Belarus Union State, created in 1996 but ailing for some years; the Eurasian Economic Community (EurAsEC – Russia-Belarus-Kazakhstan-Kyrgyzstan-Tajikistan); and the Customs Union of Russia-Belarus-Kazakhstan into a single entity. This Union could eventually also be endowed with a strategic section integrating the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO).

The Kremlin’s motivations are multiple. The ruling circles think that the time has come for a new post-Soviet dynamic: since the 2008 economic crisis, Europe has lost influence, a tendency that has been reinforced by the current difficulties with the euro, the question of sovereign debts and Brussels’s crisis of political legitimacy. Russia, on the other hand, presents the image of having a more dynamic economy, even if budgetary difficulties will also soon come into play. Moreover, Putin has never been convinced by the need for Russia to enter the WTO. The Custom Union, and the potential Eurasian Union, is therefore probably a nice way to postpone, once more, Russian accession to the global trade body.

But the stakes are mainly internal to the post-Soviet space, though not all the states of the region are concerned. Kazakhstan remains Moscow’s most faithful ally in terms of economic reintegration, and Putin knows he can count on Nursultan Nazarbayev for such projects, which would not necessarily be the case with a younger successor. Presidential succession, Astana’s most significant future political issue, thus invites Moscow to act in a preemptive fashion. As for Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan, they have indicated that they would like to join the Customs Union despite the problems this will present Bishkek, which is already a member of the WTO (Oxford Analytica, July 28).

With this Eurasian Union, Moscow is also seeking to avoid Alexander Lukashenka making any new attempts at increased autonomy. Minsk’s unprecedented economic difficulties were exacerbated by the EU- and US-imposed sanctions after its repression of the opposition. This has put Belarusian power in a deadlock, leaving it in a head-to-head struggle with its Russian neighbor and largest economic and strategic partner. Last but not least, the time seems ripe to try to force destiny with Ukraine. On many issues Viktor Yanukovich has softened Kiev’s position toward Moscow (e.g., by reinforcing the status of the Russian language, putting limitations on historiographical memory wars, and making its agreement on the Sevastopol base). However, Moscow is annoyed by the Timoshenko affair and Ukraine’s continued dialogue with NATO and the EU, and above all, wants Kiev to join the Customs Union.

The Eurasian Union thus targets a Eurasian core including Russia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Tajikistan, and possibly also Armenia, which is already a member of the CSTO. Above all, however, what Moscow dreams of is the key missing piece in its reconstitution of a post-Soviet puzzle, Ukraine. But by no means does Russia imagine a return to forceful integration: reticent countries will not be forced, but simply bypassed and marginalized.

The announcement gave rise to significant activity among the most diverse ideologues of Russian nationalism. Alexander Dugin, the eulogist of neo-Eurasianism and president of the small International Eurasian Movement, rejoiced at this declaration, and suddenly seems once again to be riding high after having spent many years in the wilderness. In fact, some rumors on the Russian internet suggested that the Secretary of the Russia-Belarus Union, Pavel Borodin, might soon be replaced by Alexander Dugin, Borodin’s close friend, who has regularly visited Minsk to be at Lukashenka’s side (http://www.rus-obr.ru Septe,mber 10). But the Presidential Administration will more probably choose the presidential envoy in the Volga Federal District, the former secretary of EurAsEC, Grigoriy Rapota.

Is Putin inspired, then, by Eurasianist ideology? He never overtly makes reference to it, nor does he insist, in his last declaration, on the unity of civilization of post-Soviet peoples. His narrative is in fact centered, not on the need for a unity of culture between Eurasian peoples, but on that of Russia to arm itself better against globalization. To become one of the leaders of a new globalized world, Russia needs both a partnership with Europe, and a right of supervision over some of the ‘Eurasian,’ i.e. post-Soviet countries. Nor does he present this potential Eurasian Union as having an overtly anti-American or anti-European agenda. However, if Eurasianism is defined as a vision of Russia’s great power aspirations backed by the rest of the post-Soviet space (or at the very least by some of the post-Soviet countries), then Putin’s declaration is part of a kind of “soft” Eurasianism. Putin’s previous declaration during the re-opening of the Russian Geographical Society, “When we say great, a great country, a great state – certainly, size matters. (…) When there is no size, there is no influence, no meaning,” is a Eurasianist declaration of intent on the role of geography in building a Russian destiny (http://www.sptimes.ru Novem,ber 20, 2009). But the Eurasian Union could also turn out to be a simple PR action addressed to the Russian electorate, since, while there may be no doubt about Putin’s re-election, there does exist a question about his regime’s declining popular legitimacy.

Source: http://www.jamestown.org/programs/edm/

7

Posted by jamesUK on November 01, 2011, 07:35 PM | #

Traitorous dogs. Anarchist toddies of the NWO and US imperial foreign policy.

@RedSpaniel

Putin’s Eurasian Union which is something he should have initiated years ago is a Russian and Chinese centred development and security development to counter the US, EU, Israel and Islamic states Pan-Turanian Turkish Islamic union states and turning the Eurasian region into another Africa.

The Jamestown Foundation is one if not the most prominent organisation implementing this agenda supporting and financing various Chechen websites, propaganda, PAC associations and lobbies in Washington, etc. 

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