Thursday, December 13, 2012

A Nation is a Home


Many people oppose the idea of racially based governments/nations. These people object to this form of government because it is ‘global segregation.’ What these people do not know is that they actually agree with the nation-state position even though they have an instinctive abhorrence of it inherited from their multi-cultural society.

In order to demonstrate their true beliefs to them one should ask three questions:

(1) Do you believe that families (Mother, Father, Children) should all live in the same house?

(2) Do you believe that families should have the right to make their own decisions without interference from other families (where to go on vacation, what color to paint their house, or whether to go to church on Sunday)?

(3) Why is it that you look more like other White people (insert whatever race they are) then Black, Asian, or Aboriginal?

The answer to the third question is: ‘You look more like your own race because you are more closely related to everyone within your own race then you are to anyone of a different race.’

The White race is just one big extended family. The Black race is just one big extended family. The Asian race is just one big extended family. Just as each nuclear family should live with one another, and make certain decisions on their own behalf, each race of people should live with their own ‘type,’ and make decisions that govern their own race, rather than the members of another family-race.

No man would ever think to march into his neighbors house one day and tell the members of that family that he was now living there, and going to consume the food, and redecorate the home. That would be ludicrous! However, many people believe that racial/religious minorities have a right to enter the United States, demand the vote, demand welfare checks, and demand equal religious representation.

The country is to a race what a home is to a family. The racially based nation-state is the most natural organic government because it arises from the family institution.

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