American college students celebrating diversity.
Welcome back to this week's broadcast of American Dissident Voices, the Internet radio program of the National Alliance. I'm your host and the Chairman of the Alliance, Erich Gliebe.
Well, in terms of current events, things seem to be going from bad to worse. The wars in Iraq and Afghanistan are no nearer to being over. The American death toll in Iraq has passed the 4,000 mark, and the costs for the war continue to climb to new and ever-more-staggering heights. These costs, coupled with an economy and a housing market that have everyone in Middle America worried, have made "money" the hot topic for discussion all over the country. Foreclosures are at near-record high levels, while property values are sliding. Some property values have fallen so much that they are now worth less than what Americans still owe on them. Relative to foreign currencies, the dollar continues to fall.
The experts have no idea how long the economic downturn could last, but most are saying that there is a good chance that it could be a long-term ordeal. Older, retired Americans are concerned that their stock portfolios and other retirement plans are going to vaporize and middle-aged Americans are just hoping to have enough money to put food on the table and pay the bills. Some baby boomers, out of work and having lost their homes, have moved back in with their elderly parents. Credit card debt is rampant. The financial picture, to put it mildly, is bleak.
New environmental concerns are at the forefront of the news lately, too. Global warming fears are running high, with new predictions that, within the space of a century, much of the Earth that now experiences a temperate climate -- say, between 25o and 40o north and south latitude -- will have regular rainfall shortages that could lead to super-Dust Bowl conditions that surpass those that occurred in the Great Plains' states during the 1930s. Scientists from all over the world are stashing away the seeds of as many different plant strains as they can get their hands on, in the event of some kind of disaster -- natural or nuclear -- that wipes out the food plants from a large portion of the globe.
All of this gloom and doom makes it difficult to think about things like race. But Barack Obama found time last week to do just that, and we should, too. It is the position of the National Alliance that none of the other problems that afflict our society can be addressed and managed, long-term, without America being broken into separate monoracial states. In particular, the White race must have its own living space, and the other races are welcome to a similar state of affairs if they so choose. But the economy, the environment, the educational and health systems, the low level of culture, and a thousand other problems cannot be solved until we have once again separated the races into their natural groups.
I've stated many times on these broadcasts that there is a pervading feeling throughout our society that things aren't going the way they should be going. That is, there is a general uneasiness that, for most people, is hard to nail down precisely. Some blame the economy which, even up until recently, has been less-than-kind to millions of American workers, who have seen their jobs get shipped off to the farthest corners of the Earth. Some blame the prevailing media culture, in which traditional attitudes of honesty, hard work, and a willing heart have been ridiculed and largely replaced with deceit, sleigh-of-hand, and lip-service. Some point to selfishness and greed, both of which seem to be the predominant values of our leaders in business and politics, and which have permeated to a great degree the entire youth "culture" of America. Religious fundamentalists decry the increasing secular nature of our society, and point to America's turning away from the god of Christianity as the root cause of all of America's ills.
The contention of the members of the White racialist community in general and the members of the National Alliance in particular is that the uneasiness felt by all Americans is due mainly to the breakup of the feeling of community that is inherent in any society that is monoracial. Whenever people feel like those around them aren't on the same page as they are -- that is, whenever the basic understandings between people don't match -- there is always conflict and tension.
That conflict and tension are now rife throughout American society. One aspect of this is Political Correctness. One must watch very carefully what he says to his neighbors, co-workers, and friends lest he say something that offends another. And the media has so sensitized people to be on the lookout for Political Correctness that being critical of any group -- even if no member of that group is present -- is tantamount to setting oneself up for prosecution. At a senior citizens' card party in small-town Nebraska, one still might be able to laugh at the end of a hand for which hearts was trump that he had "a fistful of niggers," but certainly nowhere else. And even if no harm was meant in that type of a statement, such an utterance can get you into trouble, taking into account all of the hate-crime laws that judges interpret very broadly…when they want to.
But the disquiet that pervades America goes deeper than people spying on each other in hopes of collecting Politically Incorrect "dirt" on others. The apprehension derives from the complete atomization of America. There is no feeling of common history, common traditions, and common destiny, and that's because there are so many different groups all mixed together.
Democratic Presidential hopeful Barack Obama, too, has sensed this unease throughout American society. After all, the man's not an idiot. Besides being intelligent, Obama is perhaps more sensitive than most to questions of racial tension because of his mixed-race heritage.
In his speech last week, Senator Obama touched on many of the issues that trouble America. It was a brave attempt to set his candidacy apart from the rest of the pack, and it definitely did that, at the very least. His conclusion is that those issues can be resolved if all Americans look past the race of everyone else and focus in on the things we all have in common. In this sense, Obama offered not a single new idea to the collective consciousness of America because, after all, that is the very recipe that the Jewish-led mass media of news and entertainment have been pushing with disastrous consequences for decades now. The White racialist solution is to separate the races and then proceed from that point.
But be that as it may, I'd like to spend a few minutes here dissecting parts of Obama's speech.
Firstly, Obama hasn't been in the national political spotlight for very long, but he's been there long enough to know which side his bread is buttered on; namely, that the Jews aren't to be crossed. Listen to this segment of Obama's speech, in which he is discussing the controversial comments made by his pastor, which caused a media furor when they were made public a few weeks ago. I quote:
"But the remarks that have caused this recent firestorm weren't simply controversial. They weren't simply a religious leader's effort to speak out against perceived injustice. Instead, they expressed a profoundly distorted view of this country -- a view that sees white racism as endemic, and that elevates what is wrong with America above all that we know is right with America; a view that sees the conflicts in the Middle East as rooted primarily in the actions of stalwart allies like Israel, instead of emanating from the perverse and hateful ideologies of radical Islam."
Obviously, Senator Obama has been put into line by his advisors as to Jewish issues. It will be interesting to see what happens to Obama's plan to bring U.S. troops home from the Middle East if he is elected President. You might recall that Jewish forces are uneasy about bringing the troops home, a fact that we discussed in some detail on one of these American Dissident Voices broadcasts a few months ago. Now that the Arabic Middle East has been so destabilized from the U.S. invasion and occupation, and also because of the resurgence of the Islamic Republic of Iran, Jews everywhere are hoping that the American troops stay as long as possible to protect Israel.
But back to Senator Obama's speech. He acknowledged in several places the uneasiness that pervades the American consciousness, and he suggested that only by the various races coming together can we hope to tackle America's problems. Again, I quote:
"The fact is that the comments that have been made and the issues that have surfaced over the last few weeks reflect the complexities of race in this country that we've never really worked through - a part of our union that we have yet to perfect. And if we walk away now, if we simply retreat into our respective corners, we will never be able to come together and solve challenges like health care, or education, or the need to find good jobs for every American."
As I mentioned before, the White racialist perspective on this question is that there is no possible way for the many races now present in America will be able to look beyond race and work together. It simply isn't going to happen. Racial harmony might be a good theory and it might look nice on paper, but reality says that it won't happen. And I'm not being a cynic here; I'm just reflecting on what history has to say on this issue. Racial harmony might work on a small scale and for short periods of time, perhaps, but never for long and stable periods. Always, one group becomes the subject of the other or is bred out of existence by the higher birthrate of the other. And this intermingling of the races is responsible for the increasing miscegenation today, a condition that has as a result the loss of White genes that took hundreds of thousands of years, at least, to arrange in their unique combination. That combination must be preserved, and no matter if it isn't "nice" or if Senator Obama doesn't like it, the mixing of the races has to be stopped.
Now, for all of Senator Obama's please that the races should work together, he then brings up what he calls "racial injustice" to his audience, blaming many of the problems that afflict the Black community on White racism. He stated:
"We do not need to recite here the history of racial injustice in this country. But we do need to remind ourselves that so many of the disparities that exist in the African-American community today can be directly traced to inequalities passed on from an earlier generation that suffered under the brutal legacy of slavery and Jim Crow."
"Segregated schools were, and are, inferior schools; we still haven't fixed them, fifty years after Brown v. Board of Education, and the inferior education they provided, then and now, helps explain the pervasive achievement gap between today's black and white students."
"Legalized discrimination -- where blacks were prevented, often through violence, from owning property, or loans were not granted to African-American business owners, or black homeowners could not access FHA mortgages, or blacks were excluded from unions, or the police force, or fire departments - meant that black families could not amass any meaningful wealth to bequeath to future generations. That history helps explain the wealth and income gap between black and white, and the concentrated pockets of poverty that persists in so many of today's urban and rural communities."
Now, my belief is that MOST of the blame for the problems of the Black community should be put on the Blacks themselves and their inability to create stable communities. But, for the sake of argument, let us temporarily accept Obama's claim that White racism is largely responsible for the poor plight of the average Black American. Is he so naïve as to believe that, after hearing this, American Blacks are going to happily go along with Obama's earlier plea to work together with Whites and the members of every other race in America?
Let's be realistic. Black Americans can't be told that their plight is due to discrimination by Whites AND -- at the same time -- be told that they need to work together with Whites. The same is true for every other race in
America which, thanks to the Jewish media, have accepted the notion that Whites are responsible for holding them down. Are these many races -- Asian, American Indian, Latinos -- going to forget the Jews' official version of the past and suddenly choose to work together? I don't think so. A simpler and better answer is to separate the races.
Near the end of his speech, Senator Obama touched on a few of the issues that I've talked about quite a bit on these broadcasts. I'd like to quote from that speech one last time:
"Just as black anger often proved counterproductive, so have these white resentments distracted attention from the real culprits of the middle class squeeze - a corporate culture rife with inside dealing, questionable accounting practices, and short-term greed; a Washington dominated by lobbyists and special interests; economic policies that favor the few over the many."
I've harped on all of these issues at some time or other on these programs, but of course I've always taken the racialist perspective. One issue that Obama never touches, though, is the media issue.
It is interesting that he should leave out the media. It isn't just that the American news and entertainment media are guided and controlled by the forces of organized Jewry; who could expect a man running for the nation's highest office to utter something so blasphemous as that? But Obama could at least have acknowledged that it is the media in this country that hold the lion's share of the power. It is the media that tell people what is acceptable to think and what is not. It is the media that can destroy or uplift the candidacy of any office-seeker. It is the media that can turn anyone, at any time, into a hero or a villain. It is the media that pump ideas into Americans' heads every waking hour and that can therefore mold the public into a tool that can be used to accomplish whatever purpose the molders desire. Even without the Jewish aspect of the media being mentioned, surely it is important enough of an issue to bring up in what is probably Senator Obama's most ambitious and most important speech to date.
But no, Obama didn't even touch on the enormous power wielded by the media. And we know why that is.
The problems of this country CAN be met, but not by a racial polyglot nation. Help the men and women of the National Alliance create a better future for the White race.
I'm Erich Gliebe, and thanks for being with me again today.