NEXT VICTIM 2
Look at some recent
examples of victims. Real victims, not
some Me Too bullcrap fake victims for cash because I’m a loser at the lottery
of life Social Justice Warrior. The
Japanese are a rather homogenous group, and they went from a bunch of rice
farmers to a industrial economy within a few short decades, showed those Russian
bastards who had a superior military right after that, and joined in the
colonial power game with all the other Big Boys. They were far more impressive than the
Chinese currently are in their playing geopolitics. Well, unfortunately, while the Brits were no
match for them, they made the mistake of clashing with the US over its newly
targeted colonial stomping grounds and to put them in their place we used them
as a nuclear testing ground to warn off the Soviets.
*
The Japanese went from
lords of most of what they surveyed to victims is short order ( I don’t view
Japanese expansionism as any more evil that what we did. We stole the oil rich lands from Mexico and
other resource areas from the Indians.
No different than their occupation of coastal China or Indonesia ). The Germans, despite the oceans of ink
spilled by hacks pimping for the US military industrial complex to vilify them,
killed no more Jews than the US killed Indians.
And it wasn’t like Americans made a few innocent mistakes by a few over
enthusiastic soldiers such as at Wounded Knee.
It was genocide for centuries against all indigenous folks. I’m not saying this as a LibTard hugging the
poor suffering peoples. Indians killed
other Indians to steal their land, so screw them. Just don’t judge others like you are some
pure of heart angel.
*
The Germans had a pretty
good run for a few decades at the top of the economic and military heap, but
that made them a threat to everyone else who was far less efficient or
talented. Hitler was right about the
role of the bankers being a threat to the Volk.
Whether they were all Jews is another matter. And to this day, seventy years later, Germans
are the shining example of victims ( because they never do anything half assed
). As are the former imperialists who
started the two world wars directed against the Germans, the English. Taking it up the ass by Uncle Sam, screaming
in orgasmic delight, Please Sir, May We ‘Ave Another?
*
Americans are, beyond
obvious, the next failed empire and the next victims. Not necessarily because a new world empire
will emerge ( empires need excess energy, and China is a coal empire, not an
oil empire and to extract energy-say, from Africa-you need things to be
relatively peaceful. The decline of oil
is going to see the whole world at low intensity conflict levels, eventually ),
but because we will fall so far from our perch.
It is already baked into the cake.
We think we are the Exceptional Empire ( as did all the rest ) because
of democratic resource sharing ( to a small extent overall, but still rather generous
historically ), but most of THAT was little more than propaganda anyway.
*
We’ve always been small
cogs in a large machine. The small
Celtic freeholders who thought they were free of the lowland slave aristocracy
were really just allowed to farm the resource poor highlands ( until coal was
discovered there ) if they cleared out the Indians at personal expense and risk
first, and then were eventually subsumed into The Machine ( Pink Floyd
reference ). One wonders if the primary
motivation of Southern rural soldiers wasn’t to combat industrialization which
they knew would enslave them as debt serfs.
Anyway. For a short time, Union
workers were allowed more than slave wages, but only because the machines were
too vulnerable to sabotage ( and profit loss from work stoppages-one would
assume a factory giving in to Union demands would quickly out profit one that
was idle from strikes, hence business owners screwed themselves giving in to
the demands as a competitive advantage, after the National Guard Maxim gun
attacks failed to resolve things in the robber barons favor ).
*
We might have given in to
demands ( implicit, obviously ) of WWII returning veterans to partake in the
spoils of colonial war by throwing them a bone with free college and guaranteed
mortgages, but that wasn’t exactly sharing by the elite. The colleges were already paid for by land
grants and taxes, and tuition wasn’t the primary decision maker at the time as
much as the entrance exams and workload ( completely the opposite of today
). The government spent rather little in
the endeavor compared to what the war just cost. And guaranteeing home loans was just welfare
to the bankers who no longer had war profits to count on.
*
So, even as the working
class never had it so good, really they were still just cheap cogs in a big
machine. And white male professional
workers are an endangered species. Their
reign economically was barely over thirty years. Now the only Union type of profession still
remaining is the military, and that doesn’t have much longer before being
completely excluded to white males. The
day we can no longer control the oil supply overseas is the day the military
dies. The only good news there is that
it will make our military occupation forces rather inefficient.
*
Does anyone here recall
the basic consensus of the company Heckler & Kock, the German arms
company? Mostly, it involves a form of “those
guys are such a rip-off”. There are a
lot of factors involved there, but a big one is that the way German companies
are structured is very similar ( or, at least WAS very similar-I don’t live
there, obviously ) to how the US Union employee companies were sixty years
ago. Workers were NOT cheap. They were also skilled professionals. They were paid what they were worth, and the
Union forced the company to do so, while enforcing fair work conditions. Our culture has completely lost track of that
aspect of work, and only price is used as a metric of a product. You are buying a rather overpriced gun
because you are paying workers a fair wage ( all of this is rather amusing,
since the roller block system was used as it saved money initially. The G3 is far cheaper to produce than the
FN-FAL or M-14 ).
*
With the offer of cheaper
shiny trinkets, the US worker screwed themselves out of a good job ( there is
far more to it than that, obviously, but in essence we were bribed to not make
a fuss as we became victims ). Concluded
tomorrow.
( .Y. )
( today's related link https://amzn.to/2N1wXbG )
*
Please
support Bison by buying through the Amazon ad graphics at the top of the page (
or from www.bisonbulk.blogspot.com ). Or PayPal www.paypal.me/jimd303 *** Unless you are in extreme poverty, spend a buck a month here, by the above donation methods or mail me some cash/check/money order or buy a book. If you don't do Kindle books, send me the money and I'll e-mail it to you in a PDF file. If you donated, you may request books no charge.
*** My e-mail is: jimd303@reagan.com My address is: James M Dakin, 181 W Bullion Rd #12, Elko NV 89801-4184 ***E-Mail me if you want your name added to the weekly e-newsletter subscriber list.
* By the by, all my writing is copyrighted. For the obtuse out there
Most history taught in school is propaganda by the victors. Trying to peek past the curtain and get the real picture is a fascinating hobby.
ReplyDeleteThe reason we gave into the demands of the WW2 vets was to prevent a repeat of the Bonus Army fiasco.
Unions were a good thing when they first started, but now are just an intermediary both the workers and the companies feed.
I dunno if the Rebs were against industrialization, but it was a huge factor in their loss. Although they had superior calvary and good shooters, cannon ripped them apart. If industrialization was the threat then South is finally winning the battle, thanks to the unions.
I don't think it was ever a question of NOT rewarding the WWII vets. Every swinging dingus male of the generation had served. Who would have stood up against them at the behest of the elite, Rosie?
DeleteLol, not if the women I served with were any indication. Sure, there were a few that could do their jobs well, but most of them was too dang busy getting pregnant to get out of sea duty, and the guys were only too happy to accommodate. At least it rotated the deadwood out out a faster pace.
ReplyDeleteDon't get me started :)
Delete"You are buying a rather overpriced gun because you are paying workers a fair wage"
ReplyDeleteMaybe saying that you're paying the real price is more accurate?
Yes, you are correct. "Unreal" prices are what we pay at the expense of the whole economic system.
Delete