Ground taken in the thread wars

Posted by Guessedworker on Saturday, 03 December 2011 21:01.

I had just spent a pleasant ten minutes sampling the anti-white racism of the liberal classes when, on checking the Telegraph opinion page, I found the first “right-wing” article about the Emma West video.  I say “right-wing” but it is written by a white female journalist who, it transpires, has Asian in-laws.

My first comment was also the first on the thread, and the 250+ that have followed demonstrate that, at the Telegraph at least and on threads specifically relating to the race issue, the only opinion that counts is our opinion.  The opinions of anti-racists and foreigners are almost wholly lacking.  But, and this is the significant thing, so too are the opinions of civicists, “respectable” conservatives, or anyone, frankly, close to the kind of view that the Telegraph itself puts forward on race matters.

This represents a real change.  To what extent it is the product of the kind of truth-speaking at which nationalists excel I can’t say.  It would be nice to think so.  But perhaps there is just a general drift towards the polarisation of opinion, which is fine too.

At any rate, I mark that one down as an objective achieved.  The next one is to effect the same kind of shift on threads not directly related to “the question” - on which I shall report later.


The mantra goes viral, maybe.

Posted by Guessedworker on Tuesday, 29 November 2011 00:41.

Does anyone know if a concerted effort is being mounted to plant Bob’s mantra across the MSM?  I happened to encounter a lot of it on this Telegraph thread about the short-lived racial segregation at Bjerke Upper Secondary School in Oslo.  Then at BDF I came across this quite powerful video, which is the work of a mantra-phile.

Anyone know anything about this?

And here’s another one:

 

Quite a few references to “the professional” Bob Whittaker, which I found superfluous but a target audience might not, I suppose.


Well, yes.

Posted by Guessedworker on Monday, 28 November 2011 17:04.

A Pee-Cee news report, with comments switched off, is here.


Alexander Baron’s Downing Street e-petition

Posted by Guessedworker on Tuesday, 22 November 2011 08:59.

Alexander has launched an e-petition on the Downing Street website proposing the end of the private fractional reserve system:

Abolition of credit creation by private banks

Responsible department: Her Majesty’s Treasury

To remove the power of credit creation from private banks and place it in the hands of either the Treasury or the Crown so that all credit for public spending shall be issued debt-free, and if necessary for Britain to withdraw from the Treaty of Maastricht with particular reference to Article 104(1) and its prohibition of debt-free government credit creation.

This constitutes an attack, in Britain at last, on the third great pillar of globalisation - the enslavement in debt of all the European peoples.  I hope you think it is worth disseminating knowledge of the petition wherever appropriate and worth signing yourself, of course.


Jeez, I luv Michele

Posted by Guessedworker on Tuesday, 15 November 2011 13:16.

Or 71% of her, anyway.

The Daily Telegraph has launched a VoteMatch application for the candidates in the 2012 Republican primaries (minus John Huntsman for some reason).

Mind you, it might not work.  Telegraph scribbler Tim Stanley took the test:

I’ll be honest and say that the answer I came up with was … Michele Bachmann. I’m surprised because I would have thought my views on foreign policy were unorthodox enough to put me in the Ron Paul camp. But I suspect that the part where I ranked my issues tilted the results towards the Minnesota Congresswoman. This election, it’s the economy, stupid.

For a person of my station, this is a humiliating result. I always did my best to stay a cut above the Middle American conservatives: did a fellowship at Harvard, went skiing in Aspen, made friends with a few of the richer Democrats, even donated a little money to reseed the golf club green. But, despite all this, the Daily Telegraph says that Michele Bachmann and me are ideological bedfellows. It seems this blue blood is a red neck after all.

And this Darwinian is a Creationist!


Trials or political trials?

Posted by Guessedworker on Tuesday, 15 November 2011 01:25.

Anders Behring Breivik appeared before the Oslo City Court today.  He was remanded by District Court Judge Thorkell Nesheim for a further twelve weeks, for the first four of which he will continue to be disallowed newspapers or television, and for eight weeks he will be prohibited visits.

The police had sought tougher conditions, including a twelve week ban on letters (of which he has been receiving many, including some which are threatening).

The Daily Telegraph reported:

Anne Leer, a journalist in court, said Breivik looked his victims straight in the eye when he entered the court.

“I am a military commander in the Norwegian resistance movement and Knights Templar Norway,” Breivik said in a low and controlled voice. “Regarding the competence (of the court), I object to it because you received your mandate from organisations that support hate ideology (and) because it supports multiculturalism.”

It is still not established that Breivik can be held criminally responsible for the bombing in Oslo and the massacre at the Labour Youth League summer camp on Utøya.  If a psychiatric examination confirms that, his trial should begin on April 16.

The police investigation, meanwhile is scheduled to conclude in February.  No evidence of accomplices has been found.  The principle line of investigation, however, is into the question of radicalisation.  The police are interested in what happened in the period from 2002, when Breivik was “knighted”, to 2009, when he started planning the bombing.

Now, this assumption that the forms of dissent Breivik encountered are “radicalising” is very liberal-centric.  Breivik made the point in court that he admits his actions but does not take responsibility for them, that responsibility belonging to the elites who have visited multiracialism and its attendant “hate ideology” on Norway and Norwegians.  What, after all, could be more radical than the race-replacement of a European people with Africans and Asians - a process driven by a morally insular and socially insulated elite whose own familial future consists, apparently, in training their children to carry on their “work”?

Without this unparalleled extremism in Norwegian political life, Breivik would never have conceived the balancing idea that the elites were at war with Norway, that they saw the heirs to the cause in their own children, that the terrible costs they incurred on Norwegians were not paid by them, and bringing those costs home in the most brutal and absolute way was the logical response.

Obviously, the police are not going to stray from their liberal-centric mentality.  So they will look determinedly at Breivik’s online life and at his travels aboad for the mysterious “radicalisation”, making him a victim of some evil “out there” rather than the self-actualised historical fulcrum which he imagines himself to be.

Meanwhile in London the latest twist in the story of Stephen Lawrence has finally come before Mr Justice Treacy at the Old Bailey.  We now await details of the new forensic evidence which, it seems, places David Norris and Garry Dobson at the scene of the crime in 1993.  ITV News mentioned that the defence rejects this evidence vigorously, which makes one wonder whether it is as robust as the race industry would like.

And that, really, is what this trial is about now: the blind, implacable will of the race industry to finally justify all the millions of words written and spoken in the anti-white war it has generated over this death.  Norris and Dobson are doubtless not the most appealing white men one might meet, and the Metropolitan Police were a dubious bunch before the anti-racist disease ever caught hold.  But on to these slender foundations the moral worth of the English people was somehow manoeuvred, along with the proposition that only a repentance from our “racism” and a committment to “diversity” would make us fit for the modern age.

Frankly, I hope the new evidence is very weak, cross-contamination all too likely, and the jury are unable to convict.


Max Keiser?

Posted by Guessedworker on Sunday, 13 November 2011 00:55.

So what is Max Keiser about?  OK, he’s the best in the media on the power and criminality of the banks.  No question.  But is he just a left-leaning enemy of the money-changers?  I think probably so.

Here is the latest offering of the Keiser Report, dated the 12th November.  Goes a bit wild over George Osborne.  Gives Mike Gravel and his Direct Democracy initiative an easy ride.


Sir Andrew’s e-petition

Posted by Guessedworker on Wednesday, 09 November 2011 00:26.

No to 70 million

Responsible department: Home Office

Over the past ten years the government has permitted mass immigration despite very strong public opposition reflected in numerous opinion polls. We express our deep concern that, according to official figures, the population of the UK is expected to reach 70 million within 20 years with two thirds of the increase due to immigration. While we recognise the benefits that properly controlled immigration could bring to our economy and society, this population increase, which is the equivalent of building seven cities the size of Birmingham, will have a huge impact both on our quality of life and on our public services yet the public has never been consulted. So we call on the government to take all necessary steps to get immigration down to a level that will stabilise our population as close to the present level as possible and, certainly, well below 70 million.”

So reads the immigration e-petition posted on the Downing Street petitions site by Sir Andrew Green of MigrationWatch.  It is doing a brisk trade.  Only two petitions so far have scraped together the 100,000 signatures that triggers a House of Commons debate. The government allows a full year for this total to be reached.  The immigration petition did it inside a week.

Of course, it’s weak tea stuff.  Sir Andrew is involved in the balanced migration campaign, which only seeks to match immigration numbers with those emigrating.  But it’s a start, and the explosive success of the e-petition is not an endorsement for balanced migration.

Some time in the next two years the government will have to make time for a debate on the 70 million issue.  The debate itself will be no less controlled than the EU debate of a few days ago.  Nothing will come of it. It is inconceivable that there will be another large-scale rebellion among Tory MPs.  But the petition could easily be several hundred signatures strong by then.  It will feel very lonely in the “we love migrants” camp.

I have signed the petition.  Every loyal Brit should do so.


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