Copyright (c) 1997 - Ingrid A. Rimland
"I observed with horror how some words have the capacity to paralyze people and force them on the defensive. These words are used as a weapon which creates sympathy for the user and forces the accused on the defensive, regardless of the fact that most of the time he/she is not "guilty" of being at all the character described by the accuser.
These "magic" words are: 1) Fascist; 2) Nazi; 3) Anti-Semite.
I observed that numerous times, such accusations are used to cower people, to drag them into courts, to arrest and to deport them or worse.
Now, since it is impossible to defend against such words, why not go on the offensive?
How about accusing high profile people on the Political Correct side of being Anti-Gentile, Anti-Gentilic or some other catchy combination such as Anti-Goy, Anti-Goyim etc.
The next step is to slap some discrimination law suit on them on the basis that they discriminate against employees of Goyim extraction, or that their colleges are discriminating against other races and ethnic groups by accepting only people of a particular racial or ethnic group etc.
Then should come law suits against the defamation of character of Goy people - for which their own publications can be used as evidence in court for incitement against people of other creeds/color/religion/nationality.
Their publications are full of incitement against the Palestinians, for instance; also for hateful and demeaning speech against Christians.
Why run for cover, when the same means used by them to enslave us can also be used by us to regain our freedom of expression and the freedom from malicious and groundless prosecution."
I have thought about this a lot - and I will tell you here and now that,
in the not-too-distant future I will, like Rosa Parks, get up from the back
of the bus, stare down my opposition and say to the rest of the world:
"Next time you call me a 'Nazi' - you will do so with genuine respect!"
What's more, I know precisely how. Will it be all that difficult? I don't
think so. Here's what one poet said:
"I can bear scorpion's sting,
tread fields of fire,
in frozen gulfs of cold eternal lie,
be tossed aloft through tracts of endless void,
but cannot live in shame."
Ingrid
Thought for the Day:
"While he is being elbowed out of his own home, the American looks calmly abroad and urges on others the suicidal ethics which are exterminating his own race."
(Madison Grant in "The Passing of the Great Race.")