Holder … presented no evidence that states are failing to prosecute hate crimes and need big government to get involved!
This video is a must-watch, in the final days before possible hate bill passage, for all who need powerful, easily-understood ammunition. It can help not only you and your friends, but members of the US Senate and their staff understand why all should oppose the hate bill: that European Americans are clearly left out of the equation — unless they are perpetrators.
Senate here
Thirty-six years ago, well-known Wilmot Robertson in his 1972 book, “The
Dispossessed Majority,” commented on the need for a watchdog organization to criticize slurs and smears against European Americans: “There are
aggressively censorious minority organizations, principal among them the B’nai B’rith’s Anti-Defamation League, which monitor the printed and the spoken word for the most subtle anti-minority allusions. Should any be found, the owner or editor of the offending media and, if necessary, the writer, advertisers and stockholders are so advised and admonished. The majority, to its great loss, has no similar watchdog organizations.”
Every other demographic-based organization in America has established such an organization to protect its children and grandchildren from unwanted and derogatory names and labels. Only European Americans have failed to speak out against such hate speech.
In the sixties and seventies, a flier circulated by left-wing racialists listed ten ways to determine supremacy. (In those days, of course, it was directed toward minority groups to liberate them from “white oppression.”) The first key to recognizing supremacy was to determine who named and labeled you. Nowadays, it is the diverse European Americans who are named, and named differently, by other groups. For example, some African Americans call us “honky,” some Asian Americans call us “round-eyes,” and some Jewish
Americans call us “goyim.” The second key to recognizing supremacy claims
was to determine whether we have internalized the names others imposed on
us. And, of course, there are many that we carelessly and thoughtlessly use to describe ourselves, e.g., gentile, gringo, shiksa, and haole.
It behooves us to reject all names imposed on us, to combat slurs (“dumb
blonde”), hate caricatures (“All In The Family”), and negative stereotypes
(“typical white person”), and to fight all labels that smother our nationality (American), that smother our diversity (various European countries), and that validate supremacy claims by groups outside our diverse European American family.
A European American anti-defamation program would demand that we have the sole right to name, label, define, and describe ourselves, and the ultimate goal of such an anti-defamation organization would be to allow our children and grandchildren to have a decent sense of self-respect. It is a goal of this organization to bring such a sensibility to our members and readers, and to support all movements and efforts that defend European Americans from slanders, canards, and imposed labels. Read More…