#1 Dave | 2008-09-01 01:02
I think that repetition is always good.
I also think that the reference to the Netherlands and Belgium being as crowded as Taiwan and Japan is very important.
I well remember that in my first introduction to the Mantra I was most influenced by the comparison of the Netherlands and Belgium to Taiwan and Japan.
Its logic is very powerful to anyone who has not considered the asymmetry of the standards of Political Correctness between white and nonwhite nations.
Black nationalism is a reality, Chinese nationalism is a reality, Japanese nationalism is a reality. These things need to be stressed.
AFRICA FOR THE AFRICANS, ASIA FOR THE ASIANS, WHITE COUNTRIES FOR EVERYBODY!
The Netherlands and Belgium are more crowded than Japan or Taiwan, but nobody says Japan or Taiwan will solve this RACE problem by bringing in millions of third-worlders and assimilating and intermarrying with them.
The words immigration, tolerance, and especially assimilation are being used to promote a program of genocide against the white race.
Everybody says the final solution to the RACE problem is for EVERY white country and ONLY white countries to bring in the third world and assimilate and intermarry with all those non-whites.
All this immigration and intermarriage is for EVERY white country and ONLY white countries.
This is about genocide against the white race.
Anti-racist is a code word for anti-white.
Notice that I dropped some style conventions in the text such as "quote unquote" and "i.e." because these are unnecessary to delivering a clear message.
Condensing the Mantra really isn't the issue.
The enemies of the white race and particularly the anti-white white traitors need to know that there are people who are intent upon bringing them to justice.
I have induced rages in formal settings by looking at my opponents with calm arrogance straight in the eye and saying, "Regardless of the formality of these circumstances, don't doubt my commitment to righting your wrongs".
That is a sure fire formula for inducing rage in a formal organizational setting. And it violates the cardinal rule of adult life of never delivering a threat publically or privately.
But I've lived long enough to notice that when I encounter my opponents thereafter, the respect and deference they give to me is usually elevated several notches.
People remember being threatened. It alters their conduct. Whatever the matter involved, it is taken much more seriously. It changes the entire patina of things.
Our enemies need to associate the Mantra with insecurity intruding into their lives. The Mantra needs to remind them that they may be subject to punishment for their treason. The Mantra needs to remind them that things may not go as they supposed.