Opposing the influx...
 
Notifications
Clear all

Opposing the influx of non-White owned businesses - is this a worthwhile option??

1 Posts
1 Users
0 Reactions
1,874 Views
(@robert-ransdell)
Posts: 188
Honorable Member
Topic starter
 

A common sight in too many majority White areas of the country are these businesses, often restaurants, that are owned and operated by non-Whites. These are these non-chain restaurants that are run by non-White invader families and are often staffed by non-White invaders who are not even legally in this country.

I am not sure about how it is where you are but where I live it is almost like a deluge, the amount of Mexican/Asian/Indian restaurants that spring up, actually they usually move into buildings where another business once existed that went out of business, seriously one Asian restaurant here in my area now occupies a building that was once a bank, and they do really no renovations they just move in.

Many might wonder, how do we fight this, how can we oppose it. Some might suggest not going and encouraging others you know not to go, others might say have flyer distributions in and around the business to highlight the issue to patrons. Probably would have minimal effect though I would urge those inclined to do that to certainly pursue it, I already assume none of you would patronize these places.

So here is my idea.

Many in the public now often use various consumer review websites to help them choose which hotel they will stay at on a trip or which restaurant they will dine out at on a weekend get together.

Well how much of an effect could a coordinated effort to bombard businesses owned by non-White invaders with bad reviews online have on their ability to do business and thus stay in that community? WN could write reviews that tell the consumer reading them that the service was crappy and the food was lousy, just give them one star if any. I think this would lead the consumer to consider another place to eat, don't you?

In all actuality those who would take up this idea would possibly be doing the prospective patron a service in the end, I have heard numerous accounts of these minority owned businesses being shut down or fined because of some incident where they made patrons sick, they bring their third world standards of cleanliness here with them to the White world.

Valid criticism would be that it was not exactly the most ethical way to go about things, we however face an enemy that is anything but ethical in their practices and has and will continue to use any and every dirty and underhanded tactic they can against us and our people.

One thing that is appealing about the idea I can see is that those who take part can remain anonymous, it is not like a public protest of some Mexican owned bar that is causing all kinds of unrest and calls to the police to break up fights.

What do you make of this idea??


"We say this, you don't have to be red and you don't have to be dead, not red, not dead, dead reds."

- George Lincoln Rockwell concluding his speech at Brown University in 1966

 
Posted : 22/03/2014 7:42 pm
Share: