Wednesday, 27 September 2017

Civic Nationalism invariably fails

I don't think it would come as a surprise to most people who are more ethnically inclined than most, that a nation that uses civic nationalism as the ties that bind are not really bound at all, are they? In a server on discord, someone posted an article from a magazine called "The Root". It's a magazine by and for blacks in America. Revolving around the issues those employed by the magazine write about concerning the black experience and outlook in America.

The first piece I've seen from this magazine is titled "Patriotism Is for White People".

You can read the article for yourself, but a point I wanted to highlight was that even the most ardent black advocates realize the fact that America was not founded as a multicultural social experiment like the liberals and those of the tribe would have you believe. Here's a paragraph to demonstrate this:

"America’s inception was never designed to accommodate the liberty and freedoms of its nonwhite people. When soldiers fought against Britain during the Revolutionary War, it was a victory for white people. The American flag was raised in victory in 1783 as its black citizens, who were still not legally full human beings at the time, continued to suffer in slavery some 80 years after the fact."

This shows that on some level, the blacks know what America is. At least the ones who think about it. It's also counter to the arguments of the globalist multicultural rootless cosmopolitan scum that have infested the cultural and moral fabric of the 20th and 21st centuries.  It also exposes civic nationalism as the fallacy that it is.

Each people need their own separate lands. Co-existence is a meme of those very same cosmopolitans who have to create multicultural nations so they can move about unseen among the coloured hordes void of identity, purpose, and meaning. Pulling at the strings and directing an intellectually devolved race of people who only know how to consume and obey.

This, this is what we resist.

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