Archive for June 28th, 2008

Dave on BUGS and Poise

There is a facet of poise (that Robert Whitaker excels at) that is of critical importance, and that is noticing what others do not.There are other facets of poise (excellent performance under pressure) that can be taught, but only with hard training supplemented by real world experience. This is the focus of America’s elite combat teams such as the Navy Seals.

Also, any fire fighter who has not learned poise is going to end up getting burnt. And any police officer that has not learned poise is going to end up involved in unnecessary violence.

But the core of poise, the real essence of it, is noticing what others do not.

It is a special kind of capability that focuses on mental and visual acuity and it goes beyond racial politics and its effective response. Instead, it is almost a “marital art”.

For what is Asia’s absurd obsession with badges of status other than a form of ignorance masking a society in a low state of development and a people who lack poise?

And what is Political Correctness, if it is not that very same ignorance and low state of development?

No one ever tells our school children that being intelligent is a requirement, not an elective, and it is a requirement not of the academic credit granting authority, but of the larger nature surrounding us, a nature that punishes ignorance and stupidity without fail and without mercy.

Learning this special kind of poise is what BUGS is all about, and focusing on it will furnish white nationalism its competitive advantage.

Accordingly, it is what white nationalism should strive to develop and organize itself around.

— Dave

This is a very acute observation.

Consider Dave’s general term poise and look at disciplining oneself to use the Mantra. If you do not have poise, you will go chasing off into any subject the other side brings up that interests or might make you look good with all your knowledge of it.

If you can be lured off that way, you are like any person who can be conned. There’s one born every minute.

Someone who is not a sucker has two questions about any product: “How much does it cost, and what can it do that I want done?”

And the most important word a person seeking poise can add:

PERIOD.

When you think of a person who has poise, you think of someone who has no “pressure of speech.” A poised person is not uncomfortable insisting on a reply. If you keep insisting on keeping talking off the subject, he is perfectly comfortable answering your nothing with silence. The ONLY reply a poised person will give is to remind the bullshitter of what the question was.

Poise is an EXCELLENT term for our approach.

Thanks, Dave!

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