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Everyday Activism for Every White Nationalist, part three
by George Crane
19 November 2003
In parts one and two of this series, previously on VNN, we began a
discussion of the 14 things that the average working White person can do right now, to commit himself or herself, regardless of age or income or education, in a personal and valuable way to the ultimate victory that will be achieved by White Nationalism and the restoration of White sovereignty over White territory for the benefit of White families.
7. Find one more thing you can do for yourself. There is
amazing power in self-sufficiency, when all is said and done, despite the constant ZOG-consumer hype that tells you the opposite: that you can't live without total dependency on ZOG and faceless (mostly jew-controlled) corporations. Putting this action into practice robs the anti-White corporations and the NWO (new world order) types of both your cooperation and your dollars for their continued evil! In short, it gets "the international jew" (as Henry Ford named them) out of your pockets!
The first White Americans, whom we have to thank for living at this material
level of wealth at all (health, convenience, sanitation, education, etc.) were
incredibly and admirably self-sufficient. They had to be, since there were no Wal-Marts, no 24-hour grocery stores in the neighborhood and no Home Depots!
I have found that one does not have to live in the "boonies" to make this
work. This principle can be used in a high-rise in an urban city, if you commit to it. Will, determination, effort, creativity, and imagination are the key factors involved, and not location or amount of real estate or net worth.
More and more White Nationalist families are now home-schooling (probably
the single most important thing you could possibly do for White children after shelter, food, and clothing), making their own bread, furniture, articles of clothing, cutting their own firewood, raising a few egg-laying chickens, experimenting with alternate energy, re-loading ammunition...a whole host of things. Others will think of things to do that I have not yet even considered.
Lately I've looked into how to make my own paper and my own charcoal. There
must be a thousand more things we can do for ourselves by "cutting out the
jew middleman"!
I've even seen the first scant mention of this in the jew media: something
like the "exploding growth of home-based production." The jew-media will attempt to spin it as an economic thing or a "stress" thing or something else, rather than what it really is: NAMING THE JEW!
Last week, in order to totally resist against the local jew-media here and
all the hubbub promoted for the just-opened jew-franchised "Krispy Kike"-type chain donut shop (complete with nigger and third world employees, which was totally unnecessary in the 99% White town where I live!), I "experimented" with making my own donuts, from scratch, for the first time in my life. They get a rating of "Bachelor Edible," which is an acceptable first step. (At least I know who touched them at all stages of production!)
We live on two small city lots in a downtown urban area. My backyard garden
is about ten feet by eight feet. We have grown a large amount of organic vegetables here, including cabbage, lettuce, carrots, broccoli, peppers, okra, tomatoes, cucumbers, radishes, mustard, turnips, collards, yellow squash, zucchini squash, winter acorn squash, as well as herbs that we use, such as basil, coriander and dill. I got a lot of mustard seed from those plants, too, and we use it as a spice. We challenged ourselves with a "fun" personal goal and finally made it: On certain days, our entire meal, one hundred percent
of it, came from our own backyard and our own hand-picking ... a satisfying
achievement!
I do all of my own haircuts, with hand scissors and battery-powered hair
clippers. The batteries are recharged by my small window portable solar charger ($8 on sale), using two sets of batteries so that one set is always charging on days when the other set is in use. I have been using the same charger and batteries for more than four years. Thus, my yearly expense for haircuts is zero. When not actually using the clippers, the same
batteries are used in my AM/FM radio, so that I have daily music and talk
shows with absolutely no charge for electricity, ever, all year long. (All of this equipment is still in great condition after four years of use, so I believe it is cost-effective, too.)
Over the past several years, I've started making my own furniture, as a
matter of both preference and necessity, beginning with a simple bedside lamp table. This has been very satisfying. No factory-made piece today could ever match the hand-planing and hand-hammered brass work that I did on that last table I made for my kitchen. (I have no training in this field whatsoever and probably could not get hired, for example, as an apprentice in a commercial cabinet shop.) As a plus, these home creations are automatic "family heirlooms" and can have great family stories attached to their making. Unlike in mass production, when you make it yourself, you can make it to last and you
can use better materials than you could ever afford in a retail store. I fondly call mine "Future Antiques Roadshow" pieces!
For those who have found a satisfying way to "make it yourself," please
share your examples, solutions, and ideas with VNN readers and send the personal stories in to the Reader Mail column.
(MORE TO COME...)
GEORGE CRANE
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