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Dave and Al

Posted by Bob on November 13th, 2007 under Coaching Session


ME:

I love comments that describe ACTION on your part.

Dave says:

There are certain very important facts in the basic plumbing of social life that will not and cannot change ever. And I have lived enough to realize that only the “street smart”, only the “feral dogs” among us, tend to know this.

“Feral dogs” avoid the adoption of sterile goals and beliefs. That is why the Mantra, being virile, is a big “dollop” for a tame dog.

But odd thing that is perennially misunderstood is that the most privileged venues have the largest counts of “feral dogs”, exactly the opposite of what is ordinarily believed.

This is because the strongest competitors tend to land in the privileged venues.

And personally I have access to privileged venues. Also, I am working at insinuating the Mantra into these venues. These venues are more amenable to the receipt of the Mantra than most participants in this seminar realize.

However, this takes clear sightedness and I use BUGS to assist me in obtaining that clear sightedness.

ME AGAIN:

Al is in action, too. He describes problems he has with people finding holes in the Mantra. I have seen this attempt in action, but it is answered by quotes from the UN Genocide Treaty, which covers exactly what is being done to the white race.

But as one of us three who is speaking from experience IN ACTION, I noted something just now. Nobody ever hits ME with these exceptions. They seem to know I’m ready for it. They can tell Al is more ready to listen to the other side, so they feel he can more easily be distracted.

If I were a Tough Guy, you could hear nothing from me here but the sound of beating my hest and the Tarzan scream which is the motto of the crowd that calls itself The Greatest Generation. But, in being willing to listen, Al, BY BEING IN ACTION, gives us a perspective we NEED.

One Al is worth a dozen armchair Tough Guys.

So I see Al and Dave in a different perspective. Both are REPORTING FROM THE FRONT, as am I.

Al is USING the Mantra, and has a different perspective on it, from, BEING THERE. EXPERIENCE in the field is ALWAYS worth listening to.I don’t a uniform group of Bob Whitakers out there, bull-headed old men. If there is only me and Al and Dave, discussing our actual experiences from slightly different viewpoints, that is as big a team as I am used to working with and getting astounding results from.

I always have one big advantage: You can’t truly realize how powerful you are. I know that from fifty years of experience.

In terms of understanding the exact battle we are fighting, my group of commenters is a HUGE group to have hammering on the very point that the enemy cannot afford. It was a big risk for me to give up every pretense of respectability in favor of the hope that I could get this down-to-the-nub ACTION group together.

I WON.

Thank God for Dave and Al and the rest of you.

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  1. #1 by Simmons on 11/13/2007 - 12:39 pm

    I would love to have Dave actually describe in more detail those venues and the people he thinks amenable to our ideas. I’m stuck with the rubes who won’t remember what I’ve told them till the TV tells them what I told them to begin with (don’t laugh this happens everyday with me, with the tube zombies it ain’t true till its on TV)

  2. #2 by richard on 11/13/2007 - 1:00 pm

    I read in a music magazine today an interview with Malcolm McLaren. He’s the guy who ‘created’ the Sex Pistols and the whole punk rock movement. Half-jewish, as you might guess.

    This is the bit I found interesting from our point of view –

    “You know, people everywhere, all the time, want to be cool. They say they don’t, but they need cool, it’s used to sell things. If you can get in the definition of that, that’s how you change everything. That’s how you change culture. That’s it.”

  3. #3 by Dave on 11/13/2007 - 7:47 pm

    Simmons,

    I am often in settings where what I call the “local command” shows up (e.g., judges, city and State officials, senior bureaucrats), but also through my family I have sometimes have access to senior oil company executives, key industry lawyers, etc.

    But through my professional work I also often find myself with C-level people of prominent foundations and charities and NGO personalities and figures. For example, recently I was able to meet the senior executive heading up the NGO providing America’s contribution to relief of the refugees from the fighting in Dafur.

    These are lily-white venues. The occasional nonwhites in them do not mean anything. These venues are full of aggressive, interesting, and competitive people heavily involved in doing real things.

    My conversations are heavily Whitaker influenced which makes for impressive conversations. Armed with Whitaker, you cut through the bullshit quick.

    By the way, it has been a while but I was actually able to have a chat with a former CEO of America’s largest oil refinery and I picked his brain on the oil business. Invaluable information.

    Here are facts he related to me (you will never get them from the mainstream): Because of the huge advances in geological imaging, the risk of the development of new properties has declined significantly. Economically extractable oil is running 1% ahead of the increases in demand, one of the greatest rates in history (demand is increasing 2% annually, new discoveries 3% annually).

    Because of financial innovation, there is far more participation by the speculators in the futures markets. The difference between cash prices and futures prices has for last several years been unprecedented. This has been a bonanza for the oil giants. They have been more than happy to sell to the speculators on the most advantageous terms they have ever had.

    The distributors have been buying any container, any ship, any form of warehousing they possibly can because of the high spread between oil cash and oil futures.

    Our high gas prices are due to speculators (hedge funds and bank trading desks), not oil shortages. Oil is in great abundance and will be, absent general war, for the foreseeable future.

    The refinery industry and oil giants love it. They get to book record profits at the expense of dumb speculators and blame it all on “peak oil”. Like any other commodity, oil is usually in oversupply. The commercials (oil giants) know their bonanza can’t last. It never does.

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