Archive for December, 2011

Way to GO, Busy BUGS!

Responses to my “If You Need Something Done…” were so good they kicked ME in the pants!

“If you need something done, ask a busy man.” The reason a man is busy is because he gets things DONE, so more people ask him.

And responses came in from our BUSIEST bugsers.

In our case, “ask a busy man” has another advantage. Those of us who have been fighting out in the field can cite EXACTLY where we are REALLY weak, as opposed to theoretically.

One of them pointed out how critical it is for one bugser to greet another if he can out in the field. This is especially important to help out NEW bugsers.

I never thought of that.

Another thing I discovered anew was how well Truck Roy, White Rabbit, and I are working together. I may be falling down on that, and need to remedy it, especially in the case of Truck Roy.

If you look at a book by one the 1930’s anti-whites, like Franz Boas or Ashley Montague, you will see that almost all of their footnotes cite each other. This is not just because they tend to back each other up, but each book would point new anti-whites to buy or check out other anti-whites.

It was a team effort.

Previously a commenter said a common notation on the web is something like TL-DR, meaning “Too Long, Didn’t Read.” You get a real education in INTERNET AGE writing here.

One comment said that my statement, “A book is a LOT cheaper than an advertising slogan” should be one of our Mantras in dealing with other pro-whites. All the work changing Coca-Cola’s “The Pause that Refreshes” into “Mach Mal Pause” cost far more than writing and printing a hundreds bound volumes.

These comments, though, hit on one huge mistake Bob made. Once the Swarm got started, I put a red-letter link to it at the top of the page. That was good.

But I haven’t thought about it since, which is not good. Commenters have changes they want to make.

I want to do it the BUGS way: Go ahead and TRY the most SPECIFIC suggestion.

BUGS wants to MOVE. You get into the fight and THEN you find out what works. Those comments could not have been better.

BoardAd is busy. So I want this done and we give it to him.

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From Comments

This site is a very unusual one, and it can be very unclear what is going on here to someone who stumbles across the site while surfing from one pro-White site to another (as I did several years ago).

So let’s make it clear on every page with a statement such as the one I just suggested that links directly to the action!

#11 by Harumphty Dumpty on 12/10/2011 – 2:07 pm
When I realized this site was a bunch of pro-Whites posting “collectively,” I was overjoyed and jumped right in immediately! After a few posts, someone nudged me, uh, we’re working from a Mantra here! Lol!

I felt very welcomed, and I thank all of you for that. I think we should be wildly welcoming…I think we all feel a natural trepidation about people jumping in and getting it all wrong, but it doesn’t matter if they get it all wrong at first!! Let’s not let our concern seep out and activate people’s insecurities just enough that they don’t give it a try, and they go on to something else and don’t circle back. I’d like the new sub-form Adelheim is starting on SF to be a place where SF’ers feel WELCOME to drop in and try their hand at dropping a few bugster posts here and there!

Once a newbie has located or been directed to a thread where there’s a number of us active, just seeing our own posts there is ALL THE DIRECTION A NEWBIE NEEDS TO GET STARTED, in my opinion!

The way to get people involved is to make involvement as easy as possible. People are already under a lot of strain.

Our considerate and enthusiastic help as they progress will be given. If some of them turn out to not be bugsters, there’s no loss in having made it easy for them to try their hand.

I would like to see bugstering (and tram ranting) become new White amusements, widely practiced, like suduko

#12 by Harumphty Dumpty on 12/10/2011 – 2:27 pm
#8-Genseric:

I’d shorten your mission statement to something stark and simple:

“BUGS is dedicated to putting an end to White genocide by spreading the Mantra EVERYWHERE.”

#13 by Harumphty Dumpty on 12/10/2011 – 2:31 pm
Genseric, I’m thinking an entire page with nothing at all on it but that short one-sentence version of your mission statement.

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Hardy’s Law

Oliver Hardy learned about people from growing up in his mother’s little hotel in Augusta, Georgia.

Of the Laurel and Hardy team, it was Laurel who did most of the intellectual work and it was Stan Laurel who talked in the interviews about it.

So when they pressed him about the secret of his character’s popularity, he put it in one sentence:

“Nobody is as dumb as a dumb man who thinks he’s smart.”

That one comment was worth everything that his talented partner ever said.

I learned Hardy’s Law in detail before I reached my teens, because with my brother in med school we had a lot of medical histories around. In the mid-50s the entire history of modern medicine could be summed up in one sentence:

“When it comes to medical practice over the last thousand years, what made sense came up all the time against Scholars and their Latin and Greek texts of Ancient Wisdom, and what made sense ALWAYS lost.”

When they bled George Washington to death to cure his pneumonia, it was because he had EDUCATED medical care, men familiar with Galen, the Great Ancient Wise Man in the Roman Empire.

They acquitted rapists and damned young girls for two thousand years because Galen Himself had said that a girl could not become pregnant unless the sex was consensual.

Contrary to everything you read in regular history, Medieval hospitals were extremely clean and the germ theory of disease was VERY widely believed in. Everything we READ from those days ignores germ theory, except for one quote I have where it was condemned because “no Authority” had endorsed it.

Authority meant Greek, Latin, and University Medicine.

That particular quote, by the way, was made by Louis XIV’s chief physician, but the most interesting thing about it is that he names some twenty German physicians who attributed syphilis to “tiny beings too small to be seen that multiply rapidly and are spread from person to person.”

Pretty good description of a germ by someone who didn’t have a microscope.

But I repeat, real people knew about germs for hundreds or even thousands of years before that.

They used to bathe regularly before the Intellectuals told them that bathing was unhealthy.

Whitaker’s restatement of Hardy’s Law is that “Nobody is as dumb as the person people THINK is smart.”

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People Who Live History Don’t Remember It

I really like historical fiction.

It is more accurate than regular history because a book on history is read by a few thousand bored academics while those of fiction have hundreds of thousands of history fanatics, and since the development of Google, they are really stinging.

The kind of crap you find in the average history book would be cut to shreds by hisfic fans.

You would think that it is critical to get history while the generation being spoken of is still living. As one who lived through seventy years of it, I assure you that it is NOT the case.

A I have pointed out, the story of World War II as told by the young guys who fought it in the early fifties, bears not the slightest relationship to what the old guys say now.

They say that in politics, a year is forever. The same is true in terms of recent history. No one but me remembers the Permanent Meat Shortage, and that is just one example. If a G.I. talked about being on the European Front, he invariably said that his real enemy was not the Germans, but the cold and the rain and other misery.

You will never hear that from any of the Weakest Generation today. Every one of them was John Wayne. Every one of them liberated Death Camps.

In a real war you almost never see the enemy.

But these observations about the Weakest Generation apply to every age.

So it makes very little difference whether the generation that lived it is alive or dead, because they will believe everything everybody else believes.

This is a realization I came to in my early teens. I would be talking to people who were obsessed with something that was big deal and they absolutely forgot it when I brought it up a month or so later. Now this is routine for me. But back then, before the Twilight Zone, it was the Twilight Zone.

As a new teen, I could not believe that the person I was talking couldn’t even remember what was considered a national event, much less his own fanaticism about one side of it.

It is literally true that the Weakest Generation was not actually IN the War they fought. But the lesson is MUCH more general.

Very, very few people remember even their own reactions to the history they lived through.

I got paid for my predictions. I made accurate predictions because of the fact that one learns the future from what has already happened. My secret was that I remembered what REALLY happened.

But to do that you have to remember what happened.

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Nasty Guard Mistakes

A commenter made an intelligent remark abut the National Guard, called the Nasty Guard by those who served in it — soldiers love to bitch.

This comment reminded me of a professional propagandist’s idea of what is killing the establishment.

They used to be New York provincials. Now they are totally out of it, not even Harvard provincials any more. The establishment based its attack on Bush, Jr., on the statement that he “dodged Viet Nam by being in the National Guard.”

There are millions of voters who served in the National Guard during the Vietnam War. There are hundreds of thousands of voters serving in the National Guard right now. That was the sort of political gaff opposition advisors dream of!

But Obama and the media don’t KNOW a single person who ever served in the National Guard. It is a Middle American institution.

Another time, remembering the Vietnam days when college was the way of avoiding the draft, Presidential nominee John Kerry made the hilarious comment at a college that if the students didn’t do well they would end up in Iraq.

There were several hundred thousand voters in the armed forces at the time and they had several million relatives, none of whom appreciated the idea that anyone serving in the military did so because he was a dunce.

It reminds me of something that was on Family Guy, when the speaker before a yacht race said “We will now have moment of silence for those of you whose sons are serving in Iraq.” There was moment of surprise, and then everybody laughed.

There is a lot of truth that is expressed in humor.

President Obama declared that a billionaire told him that he paid less income taxes than a lot of millionaires. Obama declared him a hero and wanted to name a tax increase after him.

To Obama and his billionaire and Hollywood buddies, this was True Politics. But the thing was, at best, a dud. Nobody outside the Democratic Party’s limousine liberals considered a multibillionaire bragging abut much taxes he can pay without noticing it to be sign of admirable sacrifice.

They really are drifting out into LaLa Land.

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