When Yankees Come Knocking
http://www.occidentaldissent.com/201...come-knocking/
http://stumbleinn.net/forum/showthre...d=1#post371656
http://previousdissent.com/forums/sh...1334#post31334
http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...=7988#post7988
Alabama
A few days ago, I was outside in my yard feeding the dog when I noticed there were two girls hanging around the church at the end of the road – one of them was sitting on the steps in front of a cart loaded with clothes and blankets while the other was getting water out of the faucet on the side of the church.
Curious, I approached them to see what they were doing at the church as neither looked like a typical homeless person. Well, it turns out that these two girls – Ashley and Steph, I won’t use their real names – are from Rhode Island and are walking across the United States for the purpose of learning more about communities in distant regions, overcoming fear and prejudice, and rebuilding America’s shattered social fabric.
Ashley (who is 24) has been doing this for a year now and has walked from Massachusetts to Florida and back through Georgia into Alabama. Steph (who is 23) is a close friend from high school who now lives in New York City. She only recently joined Ashley (who was working on a farm in Georgia about 40 miles away) and will be catching a Greyhound bus to return home soon.
After hearing their story, I invited them to spend the night at my house. We ate breakfast and dinner and spent the rest of the day and night talking about politics, history, and culture. Ashley, a flower child who would have been at home at Woodstock, is a hardcore progressive Northeastern DWL who is into everything from protesting nuclear power plants to organic farming to learning Spanish for she can better communicate with illegal aliens. Steph was a College Republican and considers herself more of a “moderate” which is another way of saying “liberal” in the South.
Ashley and Steph are walking through my area on their way to Montgomery which they plan to reach by walking through Union Springs in Bullock County and Tuskegee in Macon County – yes, two Northeastern White girls plan to walk by themselves through one of the poorest and blackest areas in America, a place overrun by thugs and gangbangers, with no idea of where they are spending the night for they can visit Tuskegee University to learn more about the glorious accomplishments of Booker T. Washington, George Washington Carver, and the Tuskegee Airmen.
Concerned for their safety, I walked with them for 20 miles through Union Springs – along the way, we encountered a retired police officer from Union Springs who had worked there for 25 years, and who thought they were nuts for walking into a place like that and attracting the attention of all the dangerous thugs loitering around the abandoned gas stations. When they couldn’t find a church that would let them spend the night in Union Springs, Steph succeeded in prevailing upon Ashley to let her spend the night at the only (seedy) hotel in town.
Last night, we went out with one of my friends, had some drinks at the bars in Montgomery, and said our goodbyes. Presumably, those two set out this morning on their trek to Tuskegee to learn more about one of the most legendary chapters in black history as depicted in the movie Red Tails. I gave them my number and told them to call us if they got into trouble or needed assistance.
Where to start?
I like Ashley and Steph. They are really smart. We actually have a lot in common like a shared background and interest in communitarian political theory. Yet I have never in my life come across a greater example of willful stupidity.
When the subject of the SPLC came up, I pointed out how CNN and the SPLC doesn’t care when someone like Brittney Watts is murdered in a vicious anti-White hate crime in Atlanta, but makes a lot of noise whenever there is an anti-black hate crime like the Daryl Dedmon case in Mississippi. Ashley insisted that the SPLC was not hypocritical because “they are a private organization” and can set their own agenda.
I pointed out that was a dodge because the SPLC has raised hundreds of millions of dollars by judging and labeling other organizations and accusing them of racism and falsely insinuating that they have violent agendas. I kept asking her why the hate crime in Atlanta wasn’t considered as vicious or important as the one in Mississippi when both happened around the same thime. Finally, I asked her how she would would feel if her friend Steph was killed in a racially motivated hate crime.
This line of questioning seemed to frustrate both of them. I told them that I would be outraged if either of them were killed in a racially motivated hate crime … and that the SPLC and CNN should also care, even though they are not black like Trayvon Martin or James Byrd, a hate crime is still a hate crime.
Similarly, when I told them about what had happened in Bullock County and Macon County in the wake of the Civil Rights Movement, they kept insisting that the people who live in this area “just haven’t been educated” even though Head Start has been operating in the area for half a century, per pupil spending on blacks in public schools is higher than Whites who go to private academies, and the federal government has poured millions of dollars into the area to build nice public schools for black children.
To make a long story short, there are tens of millions of Northeastern DWLs who have the same mindset as Ashley and Steph, and over the course of several generations of “innovations” and “novelties” in the Northeast, this rather than a Jewish conspiracy is what is really responsible for America’s leftward drift.
Because of the existence of the Union, the South is always pulled along by these Northeastern political and cultural currents against its own conservative inclinations, especially on race and immigration. In much the same way, I found myself walking into Bullock County and Macon County (AL), the land of the living dead against my own better judgement.
What was I thinking? I was following those two and allowing their folly to guide my own behavior. In the end, I had to let them go. Just as one day we are going to have to let them all go or share their fate.
Posted on March 9, 2013 by Hunter Wallace
http://www.occidentaldissent.com/201...come-knocking/
http://stumbleinn.net/forum/showthre...d=1#post371656
http://previousdissent.com/forums/sh...1334#post31334
http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...=7988#post7988
Alabama
A few days ago, I was outside in my yard feeding the dog when I noticed there were two girls hanging around the church at the end of the road – one of them was sitting on the steps in front of a cart loaded with clothes and blankets while the other was getting water out of the faucet on the side of the church.
Curious, I approached them to see what they were doing at the church as neither looked like a typical homeless person. Well, it turns out that these two girls – Ashley and Steph, I won’t use their real names – are from Rhode Island and are walking across the United States for the purpose of learning more about communities in distant regions, overcoming fear and prejudice, and rebuilding America’s shattered social fabric.
Ashley (who is 24) has been doing this for a year now and has walked from Massachusetts to Florida and back through Georgia into Alabama. Steph (who is 23) is a close friend from high school who now lives in New York City. She only recently joined Ashley (who was working on a farm in Georgia about 40 miles away) and will be catching a Greyhound bus to return home soon.
After hearing their story, I invited them to spend the night at my house. We ate breakfast and dinner and spent the rest of the day and night talking about politics, history, and culture. Ashley, a flower child who would have been at home at Woodstock, is a hardcore progressive Northeastern DWL who is into everything from protesting nuclear power plants to organic farming to learning Spanish for she can better communicate with illegal aliens. Steph was a College Republican and considers herself more of a “moderate” which is another way of saying “liberal” in the South.
Ashley and Steph are walking through my area on their way to Montgomery which they plan to reach by walking through Union Springs in Bullock County and Tuskegee in Macon County – yes, two Northeastern White girls plan to walk by themselves through one of the poorest and blackest areas in America, a place overrun by thugs and gangbangers, with no idea of where they are spending the night for they can visit Tuskegee University to learn more about the glorious accomplishments of Booker T. Washington, George Washington Carver, and the Tuskegee Airmen.
Concerned for their safety, I walked with them for 20 miles through Union Springs – along the way, we encountered a retired police officer from Union Springs who had worked there for 25 years, and who thought they were nuts for walking into a place like that and attracting the attention of all the dangerous thugs loitering around the abandoned gas stations. When they couldn’t find a church that would let them spend the night in Union Springs, Steph succeeded in prevailing upon Ashley to let her spend the night at the only (seedy) hotel in town.
Last night, we went out with one of my friends, had some drinks at the bars in Montgomery, and said our goodbyes. Presumably, those two set out this morning on their trek to Tuskegee to learn more about one of the most legendary chapters in black history as depicted in the movie Red Tails. I gave them my number and told them to call us if they got into trouble or needed assistance.
Where to start?
I like Ashley and Steph. They are really smart. We actually have a lot in common like a shared background and interest in communitarian political theory. Yet I have never in my life come across a greater example of willful stupidity.
When the subject of the SPLC came up, I pointed out how CNN and the SPLC doesn’t care when someone like Brittney Watts is murdered in a vicious anti-White hate crime in Atlanta, but makes a lot of noise whenever there is an anti-black hate crime like the Daryl Dedmon case in Mississippi. Ashley insisted that the SPLC was not hypocritical because “they are a private organization” and can set their own agenda.
I pointed out that was a dodge because the SPLC has raised hundreds of millions of dollars by judging and labeling other organizations and accusing them of racism and falsely insinuating that they have violent agendas. I kept asking her why the hate crime in Atlanta wasn’t considered as vicious or important as the one in Mississippi when both happened around the same thime. Finally, I asked her how she would would feel if her friend Steph was killed in a racially motivated hate crime.
This line of questioning seemed to frustrate both of them. I told them that I would be outraged if either of them were killed in a racially motivated hate crime … and that the SPLC and CNN should also care, even though they are not black like Trayvon Martin or James Byrd, a hate crime is still a hate crime.
Similarly, when I told them about what had happened in Bullock County and Macon County in the wake of the Civil Rights Movement, they kept insisting that the people who live in this area “just haven’t been educated” even though Head Start has been operating in the area for half a century, per pupil spending on blacks in public schools is higher than Whites who go to private academies, and the federal government has poured millions of dollars into the area to build nice public schools for black children.
To make a long story short, there are tens of millions of Northeastern DWLs who have the same mindset as Ashley and Steph, and over the course of several generations of “innovations” and “novelties” in the Northeast, this rather than a Jewish conspiracy is what is really responsible for America’s leftward drift.
Because of the existence of the Union, the South is always pulled along by these Northeastern political and cultural currents against its own conservative inclinations, especially on race and immigration. In much the same way, I found myself walking into Bullock County and Macon County (AL), the land of the living dead against my own better judgement.
What was I thinking? I was following those two and allowing their folly to guide my own behavior. In the end, I had to let them go. Just as one day we are going to have to let them all go or share their fate.
Posted on March 9, 2013 by Hunter Wallace
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