12 September, 2014

WN Graphics

Posted by Socrates in graphics/toons, Socrates, WN graphics at 2:51 pm | Permanent Link


  • 9 Responses to “WN Graphics”

    1. Tim McGreen Says:

      White American tourists ought to avoid traveling to Europe any more. I’d love to visit Vienna and Rome too but I’m not giving my money to any EUSSR countries that allow Muds to invade their borders and Jews to rule over them. My tax dollars are already paying for that kind of shit over here in the Kwa. Without American tourist revenue the European economy will be ruined. Too fucking bad. Get rid of your Jews and Muds. And start having more White European kids, you decadent liberal faggots.

    2. fd Says:

      Tim McGreen, Your statement that Europeans are decadent is a big true. I noticed they like to sit around talking intellectual bull s**t, especially in a dark atmosphere with the beverage/tobacco of their choice. It enhances their sense of well being. A kind of smug arrogance. They could wake up dead. We have room to ride; they don’t.

    3. CW-2 Says:

      fd, that’s a good description of Parisians, however many Europeans have a good grip on reality, it’s just that we feel so helpless and castrated. We have no visible leaders. Le Pen was ok in his time but he is now retired and his daughter is a bit of a sell-out.
      However, there is some encouraging underground activity. The late Jonathan Bowden was a top speaker at many ticket-only WN meetings.
      There are two problems in Europe; the intellectual position which tends to rationalize our displacement, and a religious sentiment which saps will power. What we need is a raw emotional appeal of folk unity and sacrifice for racial survival with less talk and much more action.

    4. fd Says:

      CW-2, I agree.

    5. Tim McGreen Says:

      Like fd or any other normal, red-blooded all-American man I too enjoy sipping a fine claret and discussing Sartre, Foucault and Wittgenstein with my bohemian comrades in Greenwich Village cafes. Hey, it’s a guy thing. But those cafes could be put to better use as places where underground “cells” of White resistance fighters clandestinely meet to discuss strategy. No big, noisy rallies full of informants and troublemakers, no charismatic Great Leader who’s secretly working for the FBI, is a dope-fiend, owes $1 million to the IRS or is knocking up 14 year old runaways, no giving interviews to FOX and MSNBC so they can edit the tapes and make fools out of us….

      No, we must avoid all of those traditional traps and temptations. The NSDAP learned a lot from how the Bolsheviks got things done, even though the two movements were, at least superficially, in total opposition to each other. Likewise we should study the tactics of OUR enemies, the Social Marxists. They almost always get their way, thanks in part to their ability to persevere, manipulate and maintain control of their image. And they don’t rely on any charismatic Great Leader who has feet of clay.

      Something to think about when you and your good-time, honky-tonk buddies attend that Jean-Luc Goddard film festival at your favorite art-house tonight.

    6. fd Says:

      Although different subcultures, the beat generation and the musicians who took part in the revival of folk music centered around Greenwich Village in the early 1960s made coffee houses popular as a cheap comfortable place to consort with each other. Throw in some communists and you have a salty recipe.

      I read that some anglo beatniks saw the perversion in the writings of Jew beatniks.

      The folk musical revival took a wrong turn. Folk music is uplifting and positive, free from the contamination of politics. The music coming out of Greenwich Village collapsed into civil rights dogma. Years later, Neil Young released “Alabama” and “Southern Man.” LYNYRD SKYNYRD fired back with “Sweet Home Alabama” hurling Neil Young to the world stage. But I like Neil Young and Dylan too.

    7. fd Says:

      Don’t get me wrong about the folk music of Greenwich Village in the early 1960s. It was a talented music scene.

    8. Tim McGreen Says:

      I like Neil Young’s work with the Buffalo Springfield. An itinerant ex-con street musician named Charles Manson used to hang out with Young in those days, perhaps in Laurel Canyon. Spirit was another L.A. group that attracted Manson’s attention. Those were the all-too-brief good old days.

    9. fd Says:

      I had both the 8 track of Buffalo Springfield and Steppenwolf–The Pusher