January 7, 1997

Good Morning from the Zundelsite:


The text below was part of a book review of Buechner's, "The Avengers," and it speaks to a topic dear to Ernst's heart and fervently hoped for - the awakening of the American conscience.

It was submitted by one of the most widely read dissident writers, J.B. Campbell, author of "The American Man".

Here is Part One. Part Two will come tomorrow:

"The nature of the American government has become clear to those who have studied its conduct during and after its wars.

The reasons for Sherman's sadistic campaign in Georgia and the Carolinas, authorized by Grant and Lincoln, which began this country's descent into a perpetual state of total war, were revealed during the twelve years of Reconstruction, during which everything of value was stolen from the surviving Southerners, who were reduced to destitution.

The reason for our seemingly inexplicable participation in World War I was revealed in the terms and execution of the Versailles Treaty, under which everything of value was stolen from the surviving Germans, who were reduced to starvation levels of existence.

The reason for our participation in World War II was revealed by the fact that we bombed millions of German civilians to death and slaughtered more millions of them after the war than during the war. In addition, there has never been a peace treaty with Germany in all these years. It is clear that the objective of our government is the liquidation or subjugation of the best of the White race.

Our young people participate in periodic orgies of death and destruction, the gruesome details of which are suppressed by journalists in league with the government. Without exception, the Washington government is always the aggressor. It is always the warlords behind our government who cause the wars to happen, who prolong the killing beyond comprehension and who profit from the spending of our taxes on the most terrible weapons of mass murder.

600,000 (killed) in Lincoln's War. Ten million in Wilson's War. Forty-five to sixty million in Roosevelt's War.

The ones who fought and died in (these) wars were better genetic material than the ones who were kept out for physical reasons, which seems to have been the whole point. Observe England, which had 450,000 casualties just in the Battle of the Somme! You can't kill and maim the best of our young men in these horrible numbers and expect life to go on as usual. Of course, the warlords didn't expect that it would.

There is something flawed in the American mentality which permits our young men--and now our young women!--, decade after decade, to drop megatons of high explosives on other people who have not threatened us in the slightest.

This must include the Japanese, who were in December, 1941 our number one trading partner and who had, after the Battle of Midway in April, 1942, as I quoted the US Strategic Bombing Survey in my 1989 book, The New American Man, tried in vain to surrender to us right up until we dropped two atom bombs on them.

Even the Pearl Harbor "sneak attack" was a natural (and expected) response to Roosevelt's deliberate diplomatic and economic provocations and military adventures such as his illegal Flying Tigers in China and his illegal naval operations in the Pacific. We are so provincial and self-important that we simply cannot imagine how other people see things. Such an idea never even occurs to us.

It is one of the reasons we are hated so around the world."

Much more could be said, and will be said, in 1997 about that topic. Meanwhile, consider this, taken from Houston Steward Chamberlain's "Political Ideals", which shall be your Thought for the Day:

"Ideas work with natural necessity and with elemental power as soon as they have found their way really into the head and heart of millions: and so the field-cry 'freedom' produced the guillotine, the field-cry 'equality' proscription, the field-cry 'brotherhood'. . . the entire devastation of the Palatinate, where indeed not only castles and religious institutions, but especially all the property and possessions of the farmers were obliterated to the last stock; and where the 'comrade in command' of those who implored him that the world betterer should however at least spare their poor, cried out: 'Everything belongs to us! We leave you only your eyes to cry with!'"

Ingrid


Comments? E-Mail: irimland@cts.com

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