jump to navigation

War is Hell but then so is peace March 18, 2007

Posted by ymarsakar in Culture, Politics, War.
trackback

Cair’s Propaganda

It’s been a while, but I could open a gun locker and slide a magazine into a handgun in under a minute, which is about 1/5th the time that the cops could get into their cars and roar down from the nearest police station six blocks away, even if they were willing to put on the lights and sirens for “burglary in progress”. Unless you actually live in a police station, this makes no sense.

There’s also a little confusion of cause and effect. The reason that burglars in America are generally “not there to start shit” is that Americans have guns; in Britain, “home invasion” robberties, where the burglars beat up the homeowners to find out where the really good stuff is kept, are alarmingly common.

She later relates an anecdote about a black friend who nearly got in trouble with the cops for having a flare gun after Katrina. My feeling is that the problem there is not the gun, it’s the cops. I hope we wouldn’t suggest that said friend should make himself up in whiteface to appear less threatening.

The ultimate problem, of course, is this: how do you know if the nice young man who has just broken into your home is there to quietly burgle you, or to rape and dismember you?

If people treat their self-defense in the way that they do (by appeasing the aggressor) perhaps this then explains why so many in the West wish to give up the fight against the Islamic JIhad, when they are not the ones fighting the war on the front lines. Perhaps it is because psychologically, they have always thought that appeasing those that do violence, will benefit them personally. It is not about political “debate”. It is about law and order after all. But some people prefer that the law protect them while others prefer to create the order from which law functions under.

If these demands are not fully implemented, if the European Union isn’t dismantled, Multiculturalism isn’t rejected and Muslim immigration isn’t stopped, we, the peoples of Europe, are left with no other choice than to conclude that our authorities have abandoned us, and that the taxes they collect are therefore unjust and that the laws that are passed without our consent are illegitimate. We will stop paying taxes and take the appropriate measures to protect our own security and ensure our national survival.

War never changes. And war in Europe sure as Fauk never changes. I’m not saying they don’t have the right to defend themselves or overthrow their repressive and totalitarian systems. A Canadian once told me that the EU was the future and would “counter-balance” the power of the US. Its tyranny shtick against our freedoms, sounds like he was right. I’m just saying that Europe seems to have a version of the Perpetual War, the Infinite War, all on their own. They keep coming back to it, again, and again, almost inspite of the blood shed by people like Americans who tried to end it.

That is one of the new techno gizmos. From www.instapundit.com of course. Glenn Reynolds really is one of a kind, since no guess blogger could really replace his style. Well maybe his style but certainly not his links.

The device cools your blood, which is probably a pioneer system for future exo-skeleton suits with internal temperature controls.

Hattip Bookworm


I have long maintained that Europe will either have a civil war or go mostly Islamic.

The wave of Jihad will come to Europe, it is already there. America must brace ourselves for a possible nuclear war should the blood shed by countless American patriots spent freeing France and Europe, be in vain. One way or another, America must end the strife in Europe. For it is not war that solves things… it is American wars. Wars in the rest of the world tend to go on and on, always coming back to the same thing. Whether that be Jews, sectarian strife, or a boatload of other countless irrational subjects.

Here’s some of the latest from the miltech world. This time we focus on ID grenade launchers and the SCAR for SpecOps.

More on why peace is hell here.

If the authorities refuse to uphold the laws designed to protect us and keep passing new laws that threaten the freedom of our children and the survival of our nations, we will sooner or later have to decide when civil disobedience becomes not just a right, but a duty. And I fear what will happen once we reach that point, which may not be too far off. Judging from the recent uprisings in Utrecht, this process has already begun.

Vladimir Bukovksy, a former Soviet dissident, fears that the European Union is on its way to becoming another Soviet Union:

“The sooner we finish with the EU the better. The sooner it collapses the less damage it will have done to us and to other countries. But we have to be quick because the Eurocrats are moving very fast. It will be difficult to defeat them. Today it is still simple. If one million people march on Brussels today these guys will run away to the Bahamas. If tomorrow half of the British population refuses to pay its taxes, nothing will happen and no-one will go to jail. Today you can still do that.”

Mr. Bukovsky is right. Europeans should launch tax rebellions and stage street demonstrations in every major European city until Muslim immigration is ended. We should stage a Million Man March to Brussels, for instance on September 11th this year, to demand that the pan-European dictatorship called the European Union is dismantled. We need to get angry and squeeze our so-called leaders into doing this, since they obviously understand nothing else.

Here is what Thomas Jefferson wrote in the American Declaration of Independence from 1776:

“That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness. [...] It is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security.”

Europeans are currently subject to worse insults from our governments than the Americans were at that time, being persecuted in our own cities and subject to a government-supported program of gradual cultural eradication. We need a European Declaration of Independence, calling for our emancipation from the bureaucratic feudalism of Brussels and the totalitarian ideology of Multiculturalism. Allow me to write the first draft:

Peace is a lie. Because peace is just the leadup to another war, in some time, in some way. Isn’t it? There is no perpetual war just as there is no perpetual peace. Although Europe, obviously, tries for perpetual war. Especially against the Jews.

According to Theodore Dalrymple, “For the last 40 years, government policy in Britain, de facto if not always de jure, has been to render the British population virtually defenseless against criminals and criminality. Almost alone of British government policies, this one has been supremely effective: no Briton nowadays goes many hours without wondering how to avoid being victimized by a criminal intent on theft, burglary, or violence.”

There is no free ride. No free lunch. Sooner or later you will pay the costs. Europe’s support of Palestinian terror… will come back full circle. It always does after all, even for the United States. You cannot escape your fate and destiny, nor can you escape the consequences of your actions. This is reality after all, not the genjutsu that the media practices.

Here’s a great comment I saw on the brussels piece.

Submitted by Rob the Ugly American on Sat, 2007-03-17 04:35.

I don’t live in Europe, so I must admit my first-hand ignorance, and I find this account and others I’ve read over the internet very troubling. I find it astounding that we hear next to nothing of this in the US; the internet gave us the hope that we could break through the filter of the uniformity of the media, but I guess that is only at this point for people who choose to look. It seems to me the first problem is the media, which really has become the most powerful force, at least in the US, after Watergate. In the US, we see some of the same increase in distrust in all areas of authority, exacerbated by Bush v. Gore. It seems we share this trend of the breakdown in trust, especially as some of our own institutions are cleverly used against us; for example, six imams are suing an airline after they started praying and acting like they were going to hijack the plane, and so were thrown off the flight. Not only is the airline being sued, but so are the passengers that reported the suspicious behavior. The meaning of this couldn’t be more clear: if you report a Muslim who’s acting suspiciously on an airplane, you face a lawsuit. This is leading to an increasing feeling of powerlessness (but, at least we can still own guns).

But, just as importantly, the trans-Atlantic alliance is breaking down. I see many of the same trends in our view of the UN happening with our feelings toward Europe. Over time, Americans began to distrust the UN, we wondered if the problem was with us, but we became increasingly frustrated, and now we view it, at best, as a place for political whores. We see ourselves portrayed in the European media as the snake in an international Eden. And our own media parrots this view. At first, we asked ‘Why do they hate us?’ We love and admire Europe, most of our ancestors came from Europe, and we are raised with the understanding that defending Europe, if it becomes necessary, is somehow our duty. But that question and duty is increasingly being questioned, as it seems there isn’t much we can do to change what seems to be an irrational feeling toward us, maybe because of the media (a poll released this week shows that over 80% of Americans believe the media gives us a biased view). Most Americans would admit Iraq was a mistake, but Europeans seem to want to impute the most base motives for our actions there. This is spreading within the US, as well. But, it is starting to do real damage to our relations. For the first time in my lifetime, Americans are questioning why we need NATO, that it’s served its purpose in defeating the Soviets, and why should we be committed to defending people who seem to want to see us so negatively. I see the same lack of faith or interest or trust that Americans now have with the UN spreading to Europe and the concept of NATO.

Anyway, great blog.

Comment says a lot doesn’t it.

This eerily familiar comment [un-common word to be spelled, though not uncommon to be said, er... eerily] reminds me of a post neo did on a poet, who back in 1992 wrote a song and commented that he thought the bond of trust between individuals was breaking down and that this meant we were doomed. Regardless of the melodrama and prophesizing, Neo made the point that it was prophetic in a way. Or prescient.

Comments»

1. andhru82 - May 5, 2007

I’m completely against war