There was a TV program that showed a blond girl seducing a football player. There were objections.
The objections were all about “pornography,” but there had been less objections to more of that. It was pretty clear that the objection was to the blatant blond woman-black guy bit.
There was a lawyer show a couple of years ago, and when the blond star started dating a black guy on the show, her regular fans raised hell and he was dropped.
Naturally she was seen slavering over black guys to show they weren’t skeered of “racists,” but never came that close again.
This Christmas I got a shock. For decades I have watched “Season’s Greetings” take over “Merry Christmas,” but I was the ONLY person who mentioned it publicly.
One of the first WOLs in 1998, which is lost to the archives, was called “A Christmas Rebel,” and I discussed the enforcement of “Happy Holidays” and “Season’s Greetings.”
But I challenge you to find public references to that in 1998, and it was just as prevalent then.
Then suddenly this year, one store chain was given the “Scrooge Award ” (second place) for ordering its employees to say, “Season’s Greetings” instead of “Merry Christmas.”
In the 1980s, there were black guys and blond girls on television as much as they are now. But NOBODY, let me repeat that, NOBODY objected. If anybody said “racist,” everybody but me would fall on the floor and slobber.
I am NOT exaggerating. I said fall on the floor and slobber. They were just a little less dignified than that.
In the 1990s Alan Dershowitz, who demands the preservation of the Jewish race, objected to the evil OLD prejudice against white girls kissing black guys in the PAST on television. Pat Buchanan was sitting right there. He said not a word.
Even Dershowitz said that sort of prejudice no longer existed. But a couple of years later it surfaced again, as I show below.
NOBODY in the 1980s objected to “Season’s Greetings.” If somebody mentioned anti-Semitism, everybody but me hit the floor slobbering, or did something slightly less dignified.
NOBODY in the 1980s, including Pat Buchanan, would dare write what Buchanan wrote about the disappearance of the white race or about the Jewishness of neoconservatism.
In fact, it was in the early 1980s that Buchanan mentioned the disappearance of the white race and a Mexican-“American” writing in the Moonie-conservative Washington Times ripped him to pieces, saying his Daddy was in World War II and Hispanics breed like rabbits and BUCHANAN was the racist.
Naturally, Buchanan backed down totally.
No, things were NOT easier in the 1970s and 1980s, when only Joe Sobran and I dared say things like this right out there in public.
Buchanan ALWAYS made a brave face and then backed down.
I hate to tell you this, but in this respect things are BETTER now. “BETTER?” That is the one word no right-winger allows anybody to use.
Everybody on the right is so busy dedicating all their time to being depressed that they do not want to hear this.
They want to lie around and whine about how brave they WOULD be, but everybody around them is betraying them, so why bother? They want to surrender and look brave doing it.
Let me tell you something up front. The most complete moral cowards ever born were those who call themselves The Greatest Generation. Somebody can say their buddies died to get rid of white people and they won’t say a word. They object to NOTHING.
The dying out of the Greatest Generation made things INFINITELY better.
You can whine and cry about today’s young people all you want to. They have been indoctrinated, but they are not the absolute moral cowards I was raised around.
No, things were NOT easier in the ’70s and the ’80s, and I’m sick of hearing it.
#1 by Don on 12/30/2004 - 5:19 pm
You got it.
There was actually a Poster on Stormfront the other day who was observing that his parents were the politically correct fools and he the voice of common sense and reason. Why does this sound right rather than bass ackwards? Cause when reality smacks you upside the head the rantings of the Boas Camp sound like world class bs – which they were.
The Greatest Generation indeed. The Greatest Generation of _________ the world has ever seen. I will not fill in the blanks, as I am thought to be an opinionated person.
#2 by Jay on 12/30/2004 - 6:52 pm
Damn skippy. I’ve always found a lot more racially aware kids of my generation than of Baby Boomers. Outside of my grandparents, I don’t really know too many Greatest Generation types (actually mine are Korean War era, is that the same thing? I don’t think so) so I can’t really comment on them. And even if kids don’t consider themselves racially conscious, a lot of ’em are at least willing to talk about it. All the leftist affirmative action/multiculturalism of the Baby Boomers affects my gerneration. They’ve already got their pensions.
Check out: http://www.thephora.org for some younger/non-skinhead types
#3 by Don on 12/31/2004 - 10:13 am
Any 10 pages of Why Johnny Can’t Think are far more valuable then William Buckley’s entire life work.
#4 by Don on 12/31/2004 - 10:26 am
I am not trying to be nice. I am just tired of rearranging the deck chairs. I want to focus on real solutions, not endless drivel.
#5 by H.S. on 12/31/2004 - 11:07 am
Coming alongside Don and Mark.
Again,
I’ve gotten a good start, even before I ever heard of Bob Whitaker.
HAPPY NEW YEAR all… time, a commodity we will never get back.
#6 by Don on 12/31/2004 - 1:43 pm
Well said, H.S.
Let’s make this one count!
#7 by Elizabeth on 12/31/2004 - 5:05 pm
Back in the ’70s and ’80s, I would get a very interesting reaction from liberals when I mentioned that I enjoy having the opportunity to pick out Hanukkah cards for Jewish acquaintances rather than sending everyone “Happy Holidays” or “Seasons Greetings” cards.
Utter disbelief! I always went to a great deal of trouble to pick out _nice_ Christmas cards: having been brought up to have good manners, I felt it was only decent to take as much trouble with any Hanukkah cards I felt required to send.
When and if I had the time and the money, I’d mail out up to a hundred or so Christmas cards in December.
I’ve essentially given up on mailing Christmas cards — it’s WAY too expensive. I might mail a couple to absolute diehard anti-emailers: for everyone else, if I feel like sending a card, I’ll check a couple of e-card sites and, if I can’t find anything I like, I might dig up one of my own photos and attach it to a seasonal message.
#8 by Peter on 01/04/2005 - 9:46 pm
This one of your best, Uncle Bob.