We find ourselves as usual in an epicycle, a cycle within a cycle. The small cycle is the attempt to reclaim America and the West from the Left, but the bigger cycle is our need to fix civilization decline.
Like the Roman Empire, and Athens before it, we are in full collapse and to fix that, we have to triumph in the small cycle and then gradually turn toward the larger one.
That will involved actions both inside of us and outside of us. Inside, we must find the will to be excellent again; outside, we must protect ourselves from unstable forms of government like DEADS — democracy, equality, atomization, diversity, and socialism — which kill off anything good among our people.
Today we commemorate those lost in the wars for democracy. Civil wars wreck nations, and ours set us on a course to promote equality like Communists in every aspect of life under the 14A. This led to two world wars in which almost as many died as in our battle between the Blue and Grey.
In the long calculus, we must make sure that these lives were not wasted by recognizing that democracy is a method, not a goal in itself, and that the real goal has always been the preservation of Western Civilization through Western genetics.
We can view all of our wars for democracy — leaving aside the noble quests against Communism in Korea and Vietnam — as attempts to validate what we did in the Civil War, itself an attempt to fix what went wrong with diversity at the start of this nation when it was Africans and Amerinds only, but got worse once The Irish arrived in the early 1800s.
You may not believe in God or gods. This is fine by me, but we all share one supreme force above us, and that is nature itself, which is more a form of logic than a tangible entity. Nature says that diversity means conquest of the host population and its destruction through trace miscegenation, which will destroy its original traits.
If we want what is best for humanity, we will need to pay attention to what is real instead of what “most people” seem to think is morally or socially (i.e. popularity) “good.” Diversity destroys populations; socialism makes people weak; democracy is mob rule; dualism creates neurosis. We need to move on from these failed ideas.
Only by getting past our hang-ups do we achieve what we should in order to honor the dead, which is to keep moving upward (instead of “forward” in the “progressive” sense) in terms of quality and excellence (arete). This, not individualism, is the essence of the West, and what we each honor with our sacrifices, whatever they may be.
Tags: civil war, korean war, memorial day, remembrance day, vietnam conflict, ww1, ww2