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Getting the Back Down Generation Into Perspective

Posted by Bob on November 5th, 2010 under Coaching Session


I talked before about the guys who wear their paper hats when they’re seventy and brag about their War Against Racism.

What they are demonstrating is that they haven’t had a life since.

I knew that my boss, John Ashbrook, spent three or four years in the Navy.

I didn’t know until twenty years after his death that, as a young Navy man, he was on a polar expedition with Admiral Byrd.

I had done a lot of research on him. I knew all there was to know about his father, who had been a conservative Democratic congressman. But his Polar trip just never came up.

Why should it? John died mysteriously when he about to win the Republican primary and was leading Senator Metzenbaum in the polls. I went to his funeral, but he didn’t. The police were still examining his body.

In other words, we had hell of a lot to talk about, and he had more to do than run around in a paper hat.

My uncles, who were with the marines in the Pacific, never said a WORD about it, and I must have talked to them a thousand hours over the years.

I was at a meeting to keep the Confederate flag over the South Carolina Capitol. I remember one of he guys talking about an old guy who wouldn’t commit himself. Someone said something about old guys and he replied, “No, he’s not one of the World War II crowd.”

I quote that because I remember it as a specific quote, and it showed that a lot of people besides me were aware that the World War II Generation was the Tough Guy Back Down Generation.

They would say things like, “I fought a WAR. I don’t want to get mixed up in little crap like this.” They backed away from any fight for principle, but they did it as Tough, Experienced Types.

They couldn’t be cowards, you see. They had had on costumes and one in three of them had heard a hostile shot fired. They watched the John Wayne movies and decided they were heroes.

As I said, when people like Carleton Coon parachuted into North Africa or John Ashbrook went to the Antarctic, it just never came up. Marines in the Pacific didn’t talk about it.

But now that I am not in one crisis or another day after day, things like this are falling place for me. I, too, was a bit too busy to philosophize. BUGS makes it possible for me to do so.

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  1. #1 by Dave on 11/05/2010 - 9:38 am

    The paper hat types are sheltered, kept, and naïve people.

    They include a big segment of society. In truth the old duffers that populate our deteriorating and few remaining VFW halls represent very little when it comes to paper hat types.

    It is a basic competency of politicians to milk money from the paper hat types, who inevitably think they are contributing to something meaningful. The paper hat types are easily manipulated emotionally, easy targets for intelligent con artists. The con artists work them incessantly.

    Jewish artists built WWII memorials celebrating Jewish themes, got the paper hat types to pay the costs, and the paper hat types were so stupid they thought these memorials were celebrating WWII soldiers and didn’t even realize they were Jewish memorials.

    This is perfectly logical when you think about it.

    The paper hat types are so vulnerable, they hold little appeal to me as targets.

    I like to keep the cunning, tuned up, street smart, and ruthless bullies in my sights. The natural reaction of the paper hat types when confronted by one these bullies is to fall to their knees, copiously grovel, and plead for mercy.

    In WWII the paper hat types did this cowering so routinely that they came to believe that their obsequious groveling defined them as a generation. They felt the humiliation, but somehow thought it was patriotic.

    But in truth the paper hat types are just as weird today, and if anything more preponderate today in America than in the past. If you don’t think most of the Baby Generation are not paper hat types, you don’t understand the Baby Boom Generation.

  2. #2 by Simmons on 11/05/2010 - 1:43 pm

    They are there to tell you as subordinate bullies do to tell you how powerful X authority is. And they believe it, after WWII they were brainwashed into a cult that actually paid them well once they took off the green uniform, but that is over now

    Anyway some anti-white freak named Tim Wise shot his mouth off and finally numerous whites that we know are using “anti-white” and “genocide”, how soon before our semi-respectables feel obliged to jump in front?

  3. #3 by Dick_Whitman on 11/05/2010 - 5:09 pm

    It’s really unhealthy to define yourself by any one event in your life. Life should be about your whole body of work, and not just one song or album.

  4. #4 by AFKANNow on 11/06/2010 - 1:51 pm

    PLEASE don’t tell H. Avenger that Ashbrook went on a polar expedition with Admiral Byrd. Just trust me on this.

    I look at the Paper Hat Crowd in their Latter-Day cariation, as I have been paying attention to the 99ers.

    I am amazed at how many of them begin their beggings with a demand that we acknowledge their moral superiority; it seems, whenver possible, they begin their statements with the term – pronounced almost belligerently – “I’M a VETERAN, and/or I SERVED!”

    The Beat Down Generation, and their Posterity, can be seen daily in the “beaten dog” look in the eyes of people drviinig to jobs they hate in the morning, and homes where people hold them in low esteem at night.

    ALL of their self-esteem, their Other-Self dervied Identity, came from Outside, and reduced to mastery of the One Principle the Army enforced upon them – “OBEY AUTHORITY FIGURES WITHOUT QUESTION.”

    The Authority Figures were The Systems substitutes for their organic familial Patriarchs.

    Where have we seen this before?

    Great Britain, following WWI – the Somme did their gene pool little good – and WWII. After WWII, homosexuality became fashionable, it remained so, after WWII.

    Such a social order stops the organic development of Racial Leadership, creating the mechanistic followership Orwell saw so clearly in 1984, with their “acting out” limited to pre-defined models of behavior.

    The problems they face are:

    One, what they did does not matter in the current economic system, and…

    Two, no body cares.

    For nobody caring to open contempt is a short distance, indeed.

    This is why we must focsuing on, among other things, the formation of the organic Founding Aristocracy of what is to come.

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