I hope everyone had a nice break and enjoyed their holiday. I know I did: I didn’t look at the news once. It was refreshing. I’m still sort of in “break mode”, so I apologize if this is more an “on my soap box” post than usual. New Years Eve used to be my favorite holiday, because it gave me an excuse to drink. Then I no longer needed an excuse, I just drank. Then I stopped drinking about 10 years ago. But I still like to wax-poetic on New Year’s.
But first and last, please allow me to thank all of you who have read and shared this blog and the related podcast over this past year. Your appreciation and participation has strengthened my resolve in times of weariness and despair. I need you. One of, if not the, core aspects of National Socialism is Community. We are not in this alone, and we are not doing it just for ourselves. Thank you for reminding me of that.
Now, originally I thought to do a traditional “year in review” for this last entry of 2024. After all, this is the 75th post of the year, and it’s been quite a year. A few of the things that spring to mind are:
- The Uniparty circle-jerk…er…presidential election;
- The 18% increase in homelessness;
- The $1.9 Trillion budget deficit for 2024 outpacing the $1.7 Trillion from the previous year;
- The 130 Palestinian journalists killed since the Israeli Land Grab started;
- The fact that non-detained illegal immigrants in the United States boast a convicted homicide rate 13% higher than US citizens while the “U.S. Department of Justice suggests that crimes committed by illegal migrants cost U.S. taxpayers at least $166.5 billion, and the severity of those crimes greatly exceeds that of typical American norms.” (source)
- And of course, the drone swarms over New Jersey and the government’s brilliantly absurd response of “We don’t know what they are, but we know they’re not a threat.”
But I’m not going to do that. Frankly, I’m burned out on 2024.
Instead, I’m getting ready for 2025. I hope you are too, because it is going to be a challenging year. “How so?” you may ask. After all, didn’t the American electorate send the DEI-Diversity Hire-Alphabet People Administration packing? Won’t the Biden Crime Cartel® be shut out of Ukraine? Won’t Trump bring peace to the Middle East? Aren’t we going to deport all the non-residents Trump and Elon aren’t currently employing? We won, right?
Um, no. The American Oligarchy knows not everyone dances to the same tune. So, they change the song every four or eight years. It’s a simple Do Si Do: first you pass on the right, then without turning around you step back and pass on the left. And voila! You’re back where you started.
They have two goals in mind: distraction, and complacency. And therein lies the danger for which you must be on guard, because it plays on human nature. When people are comfortable or satiated, they lose sight of the larger picture and the sense of struggle that first motivated them.
This is nothing new. Even our beloved NSDAP faced the same challenge in the 1920s:
Founded in the confusion and catastrophe that was Germany immediately after the end of WWI, in 1918-1923 they started small, really with just a handful of men, and grew during the governmental crisis and hyperinflation to a few thousand members by the time of the Beer Hall Putsch in 1923. In early 1924, the NSDAP held 32 seats in the Reichstag (their version of our Congress), but by the end of 1924, that number had dropped to a mere 14 seats. By 1928 they held only 12 seats. Everyone outside the Party believed the NSDAP was on its way out. What changed? Why were they losing votes? In short: the economy.
Without getting into the weeds about how Germany’s economy and social landscape stabilized from 1924 to the market crash of 1929 (a topic for another time), the fact is, things began to improve for the average German, which lulled them into a sense of, if not outright complacency, the acceptance. Things were improving generally, so why buck the system, right?
The NSDAP, and more specifically, Adolf Hitler, saw through this. He recognized that the German “recovery” was built on a (loaned) house of cards that would collapse at some point, and that globalist forces were eating his Fatherland from the inside out . He and his comrades traveled tirelessly spreading the word, working to build a foundation from which to build a new society once the house collapsed. By 1929, even though they won few elections, the Party counted 100,000 members and stood ready for when the opportunity presented itself— as it eventually, perhaps inevitably, did.
The problems in Weimar Germany were systemic, and Hitler recognized this from the start. And he knew that, eventually, the “truth will out”. Hitler and the NSDAP laid the groundwork in preparation for that time. This is why he called those years the “Years of Struggle”: not only was he fighting against the communists and the extant political system, he was also fighting against the complacency of the average citizen. This is why the slogan Deutschland Erwache (Germany Awake!) was boldly displayed on Party paraphernalia and banners. This is why the 1935 film following the path of Germany and the rise of Hitler and the NSDAP through those turbulent years, culminating in the 1934 Party Rally at Nürnberg is called Triumph of the Will.
To some extent, we are in a similar situation. Having just weathered 12 years of the Barack Hussein Obama administration (that is, an overtly ZOG administration totally 16 years if we include the first Trump administration), many believe we have turned a corner by re-installing The Donald. Happy days are here again!
Don’t bet on it. More importantly, don’t become complacent and take your foot of the gas.
Even if we are about to enter our version of the Roaring 20’s (and isn’t it a little odd that the dates are lining up so neatly?), it only temporary. Just like Germany in the 1920’s, ours system is a house of cards built on a $36 trillion debt and budget deficits pushing $2 trillion each year. The problem is systemic because it was founded not on the core principals of National Socialism, where the needs of the Volk come before self-interest (selfishness), but instead on the most base of human instincts: greed.
The Founding Fathers consulted many sources and considered many ideas when creating this country, and one of their primary references was economist Adam Smith, often called the Father of Capitalism. In his mind, the primary motivation for any person to do good or help others was selfishness, not brotherhood:
“But man has almost constant occasion for the help of his brethren, and it is in vain for him to expect it from their benevolence only. He will be more likely to prevail, if he can interest their self-love in his favor, and show them that it is for their own advantage to do for him what he requires of them. Whoever offers to another a bargain of any kind, proposes to do this. Give me that which I want and you shall have this which you want, is the meaning of every such offer; and it is in this manner that we obtain from one another the far greater part of those good offices which we stand in need of. It is not from the benevolence of the butcher, the brewer, or the baker, that we expect our dinner, but from their regard to their own interest.” Adam Smith, The Wealth of Nations, 1776: Bk. I, Chptr II.
That is our system in a nutshell, and woe befall those who do not have the capital to exchange for that which they need. The motto for Smithian Capitalism is “Self-love before the needs of others”. It is the exact opposite of National Socialism. And he was Scottish of all things, not Jewish.
The next four years, however much fun it is to watch the Liberal Left eat their own, will do nothing to change this.
We must remain vigilant. We must remain active. We must work even harder to get our message out, as the tides of complacency threaten to wash away our motivation. Remember, great storms are always preceded by a comforting calm. Be ready. Make your New Year’s resolution to stay resolved.
Happy New Year, and Amerika Erwache!
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