The enemy we allowed in

Who is the enemy?

The above is the refrain of every conspiracy theorist on the web. Its also a valid question, just because the most frequent users of the phrase ‘If you don’t know who the enemy is you cant win the war’ are either crackpots or mafia bosses in Hollywood movies does not make it a silly question. It’s a very important one.

Who is the enemy? Who is responsible for what has happened to the west? In truth the transformation from healthy to unhealthy society has been so rapid and overwhelming that no one cause could possibly be responsible. The poisonous heritage of the enlightenment, the actions of small groups of powerful people, the general economic trends of our times, the growth of Islam and the decline in western civilization confidence, all these play a part.


But overwhelmingly the main factor in the decline of the west, and the deciding factor for which societies have declined the most and which have a chance of recovery is the willingness of the upper middle classes to betray their own people.

The lynchpin

Regardless of your views on the other causes, and there are many, this single deciding factor is supreme. If the most educated, affluent, and well informed class sector of our society had not been so corrupted against its own people the situation would, in my view, not have descended to this level.

This class makes up the majority of journalists, teachers, lecturers, social workers, political activists, professors, clergymen, public relations professionals, union bosses and in fact any noticeably orthodox or politically correct person in society. They are a minority but the power they wield through their positions of influence, particularly in education and the dissemination of mass information holds the rest of society to ransom.

The Fabians, when founded at the turn of the last century, believed that if they could replace roughly 2000 people in society with socialist thinkers they could dominate that society without recourse to the ballot box. While their project has not been carried out entirely by them, or to their original aims of gradual socialism, it has been carried out. Over the course of the post war 20th century a new class has risen and shouldered the old establishment away to make a new one in its place.

How?

Why was this able to be put through so quickly? Why was society allowed to contract values so alien and unnatural against its very will? In short the infiltration of a single institution was to blame, the modern university.

In the modern world every person of influence is educated inside the walls of a place which teaches the politically correct to bully those who disagree and for those who disagree to either change their views or be silent. The atmosphere of hate and violence that seeps through the campuses in most of the west is palpable. You can almost taste the rabid fever in the air of the lecture halls.

 

The “Long march through the institutions” has given the forces of the politically correct fascists a bastion with walls of solid steel. They can dictate anything, even complete denial of reality, and a few years later it becomes the dogma of countless Journalists, Teachers and future politicians. All trained to train others to fear thinking differently, and to hate and loathe those who do.

What can be done?

There is only one thing we can do. While the electoral efforts of the likes of the BNP are great victories, they are victories hard fought. And what’s more those same victories can be taken away by government controlled courts; the ground won through sacrifice today can be lost tomorrow through no fault of anyone’s, simply a changing in the winds of public opinion.

While the work of the BNP is vital, the greater work has not even begun. We need reasonable and sound nationalist lecturers in western universities. Not to stand on tables and shout their theories to the world, but simply to teach the next generations that thought can be free, that they can refuse to participate in fascist hate fests organized by the likes of the SWP, that they can live lives of their own with thoughts of their own, that they can be proud of who they are and where they come from, and that the opinions put forward by the press are not always the right ones, especially when they are unanimous.

We don’t need to infiltrate the system as much as the politically correct elites have, only enough so that for the upper middle classes thinking free thoughts is a choice, and not one that means failure or exclusion from classes.

Sound hard? Yup it’s probably harder than winning half a dozen MPs in the House of Commons. But a victory like that is a cultural one, not a political one. In other words it’s not something they can take away simply by flooding an electorate with immigrants to change the voting demographics.

It sounds hard because it is hard, important things are hard. If it were easy we would have already done it. But in a political climate where violent, semi-fascist politically correct activism like that of the Unite Against Freedom mob is increasingly on the nose, it just may be possible.

Last Updated ( Saturday, 24 October 2009 06:44 )