"We must secure the existence of our people
and a future for white children."
and a future for white children."
Clearly evil, no?
"We must secure the existence of our people
and a future for Jewish children."
and a future for Jewish children."
A more succinct rationale for the State of Israel would be hard to find.
Wasn't there a famous Jewish teacher some two millennia ago who talked about the speck you can see in your neighbor's eye and the log you won't in your own?
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Speaking of what Jack Donovan humorously calls The Mighty Whities, in the fever swamp of one of their comments boxes I found their most intellectual spokesman declare that if the only way he could have a White ethnostate was in the form of a Christian theocracy, he'd forego the pleasure. In the name of "Enlightenment values."
Although White Christian conservatives would potentially be the largest demographic eventually able to support such a state, the intelligentsia behind the idea are virtually unanimous in their loathing of Christianity. Doesn't sound like a recipe for success.
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1 comment:
If there was a white conservative country, say, on the eastern seaboard (just for argument's sake), it would not be religiously unified. It would be some combination of Christian, namely evangelical and (possibly schismatic) Catholic, and revivalist heathen. How to reconcile such wildly opposed religions?
Perhaps a geographical division, with Christians taking the South and Heathens taking the North, with the mid-Atlantic states serving as a melting pot buffer zone? Or, in a crazy scenario that I have been mulling over as of late, could you syncretize the two? Perhaps with a cosmology approaching something like this:
God created Heaven/Asgard, with the Norse gods as angels. God draws up the designs of the universe and directs the Aesir and the Vanir to carry it out and to act as its governors in His stead. Loki and Satan are one and the same (deceiver and snake motifs are a commonality), while Michael could be an analog of Odin (god of war, guardian of slain warriors) or Tyr (god of war, god of law). A syncretism would be thorny in some parts, but possible, I think.
-Sean
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