Tribe Up Or Die?

This article was originally published in The Spectator’s July 2021 World edition. 

The American experiment is fragile. It has always been fragile and always will be fragile because it is so extremely unnatural. ‘Unnatural’ in this context means in conflict with human nature. Jonah Goldberg has described the fragility of the American system by comparing it to a garden hacked out of a tropical jungle. A garden surrounded by jungle is unnatural. The gardeners must tend it with unremitting care lest the jungle return.

Treating our fellow human beings as individuals instead of treating them as members of groups is unnatural. Our brains evolved to think of people as members of groups; to trust and care for people who are like us and to be suspicious of people who are unlike us. Those traits had great survival value for human beings throughout millions of years of evolution. People who were trusting of outsiders were less likely to pass on their genes than people who were suspicious of them. People who were loyal to their tribe were more likely to pass on their genes than people who stood apart.

The invention of agriculture and the consequent rise of complex societies exposed another aspect of human nature that had enjoyed less scope for expression in hunter-gatherer bands: acquisitiveness, whether of money, status or power. Whatever its evolutionary roots may be, the empirical consistency of human acquisitiveness over the eons is impressive. The open-ended desire for more money, status or power has been natural; to voluntarily limit one’s wealth, status or power has been unnatural.

The combination of acquisitiveness and loyalty to the interests of one’s own group (be it defined by ethnicity or class) shaped human governments for the subsequent 10,000 years. The natural form of government was hierarchical, run by a dominant group that arranged affairs to its benefit and oppressed outsiders to a lesser or greater degree, usually greater. The rare attempts to try any other form of government were unstable and short-lived. The American founders’ idealism lay in their belief that an alternative was possible. Their genius was to design a system with multiple safeguards against the forces that had made previous attempts self-destruct.

America proved that a durable alternative to the natural form of government was possible — a constitutional republic combined with carefully circumscribed democracy. The idea behind that alternative eventually spread around the world, but neither the United States nor any other country that has made it work has ever been out of danger. If we decide that our system for tending the garden needs to be replaced, and if the replacement should prove to be even slightly less devoted to keeping nature at bay, the garden will be reclaimed by jungle within a few decades.

The introduction of identity politics into that carefully crafted constitutional system does not simply distract us from warding off the jungle. It is the jungle, the primitive sense of ‘us against them’ pressing in upon the garden. It not only permits but insists that the power of the state be used to reward favored groups at the expense of everyone else. That view of power is the defining characteristic of the natural form of government that humankind endured until the miracle at Philadelphia in 1787.

Many of you were taught about the fragility of democracy in your first high-school civics course and don’t have difficulty accepting the analogy of the garden. But I am sure that many of you also have come to this page unconvinced that the facts of group differences are as important as I have claimed. I suggest that a reason for such a reaction is grounded in another aspect of human nature: the impulse to generalize from our own experience even when we know intellectually that our experience is not representative.

Suppose that your personal experience has consisted of life as a white in an upper-middle-class American suburb. Your black, Latino and Asian neighbors have been as smart, engaging and helpful as your white neighbors. The bell curve of your personal experience does not involve mean differences in cognitive ability or crime rates. It is natural to think your experience invalidates the data about group differences in means.

The mind insists on generalizing. But when mean differences between groups are real, it is absolutely essential to resist generalization; it is essential to accept the reality of documented group differences but to insist on thinking of and treating every person as an individual.

Why? After all, even if you’re technically ‘making a mistake’ with your generalization, it’s on the side of generosity and optimism. How could that be bad? The answer is that if it’s OK for you to do it, it’s OK for everyone else to do it. That way lies unrestrained racism.

Suppose that instead of living in an upper-middle-class suburb you are a white living in a multiracial working-class or middle-class neighborhood in a megalopolis. The great majority of crimes are committed by minorities. Most of the children in the bottom of the class in your child’s school are minorities. These observations are not the products of a racist imagination. They are the facts of your lived experience. There are exceptions, to be sure — your daughter’s super-smart minority classmate, the minority couple down the street who provide loving care for foster children, the minority cop you watched deftly defuse an escalating confrontation. But your lived experience tells you that these are not typical. Is it OK for you to generalize that minorities are criminal and dumb? Obviously not. The obviously correct answer is that a difference in means exists, but that we must insist on treating people as individuals.

If you agree that it’s wrong for whites living in a multiracial working-class or middle-class neighborhood to generalize from their experience but think that it’s still OK for whites in an affluent neighborhood to do so, then I ask that you take two other considerations on board:

  • Advocating double standards for people on top and everyone else is a bad idea
  • A lot more whites live in working-class and middle-class neighborhoods than in affluent ones

These two considerations are politically pragmatic. The elites who run the country would arouse much less hostility if they kept both at the front of their minds.

The truly grave danger of refusing to confront race differences in means is that it leads in a straight line to thinking that the only legitimate evidence of a non-racist society is equal outcomes. It appears that the Biden administration already accepts that logic. If that’s what the people in power truly believe, and if those equal outcomes continue to elude them, the logical conclusion is that the state must force equal outcomes by whatever means necessary. Once the state is granted the power to engineer equal outcomes by dispensing opportunities preferentially and freedoms selectively, it will be one group versus another, ‘us’ against ‘them’. The garden will give way to jungle.

People on the left understand the danger to the nation posed by those on the far right who applaud violence and racism. People on the right understand the danger to the nation posed by those on the far left who insist that whites are irredeemably racist. But we need everyone to understand that what keeps us all safe is the state’s impartiality. The nation’s commitment to impartiality has been eroding for decades. The most threatening development of all is that whites increasingly seem to agree that identity politics is the way to go.

In retrospect, President Obama’s eight years in office look like a prolonged inflection point for race relations. In 2001, Gallup’s pollsters began asking the question, ‘Would you say relations between whites and blacks are very good, somewhat good, somewhat bad, or very bad.’ Seventy percent of whites and 62 percent of blacks answered that they were either ‘very good’ or ‘somewhat good’. When Barack Obama was elected in 2008, those numbers were almost the same: 70 percent and 61 percent respectively. During his first term, they improved slightly, standing at 72 percent and 66 percent in 2013.

When Gallup next asked the question about race relations just two years later, the number for whites who thought that relations were ‘very good’ or ‘somewhat good’ had fallen off a cliff, from 71 to 45 percent. The black number had dropped from 66 to 51 percent. During the Trump years, the white number stabilized — it was 46 percent in 2020 — but the black number fell to 36 percent. In just seven years, Americans’ perceptions of race relationships had gone from solidly optimistic to solidly pessimistic.

During that time, race also become more closely tied to the nation’s political divisions. You have probably seen electoral maps similar to the pair below, but it’s worth your time to contemplate them in light of the material I’ve presented. They are the 1996 and 2016 presidential electoral maps. The units in the maps are counties. The darker the color, the bigger the margin for the Democratic or Republican candidate (blue and red respectively).

The presidential election of 1996

The presidential election of 2016

When Bill Clinton won a second term in 1996, the electoral map of counties was a mix of red and blue shades, mostly pale on both sides. The deep red counties were confined largely to Bob Dole’s home state, Kansas, and its neighbors. The blue counties showed no obvious correspondence with racial composition — some of them were in counties with large minority populations, but even more of them were in counties where whites constituted more than 80 percent of the population.

***
Subscribe to The Spectator’s World edition here
***

Just four years later, the county map of the 2000 election already showed the basic shape of the coming polarization — blue on the coasts, red in between, but less starkly divided and with mostly pale shades of red and blue. By 2016, the interior of the country was overwhelmingly red. The remaining blue counties in the Mountain West were those with large populations of Amerindians. The blue counties in the South were ones with large black populations. The blue counties in the Southwest were ones with large Latino populations. Outside big-city America, white America had become landslide-red Republican.

Much of that change had nothing to do with race relations or identity politics, but with the alienation of middle-class and working-class whites from the coastal elites. I have written about that alienation at length. But if identity politics did not start the change, it had become part of it. Compare the two electoral maps above with the one below. It is also based on counties. Red counties are ones in which at least 50 percent of the population is white. The darker the red, the higher the percentage. Blue counties are ones in which whites are not a majority. The darker the blue, the higher the percentage of minorities.

This map looks strikingly similar to the map of the 2016 presidential election. The main difference is that light pink counties in this race-based map are often dark red counties in the election map. The polarization continued during the Trump years. The 2020 map is almost indistinguishable from the 2016 map despite the different electoral outcome.

Perhaps the deepening polarization would have continued just because of the alienation between elites on the coasts and the people who live between them. But it is also plausible that the alienation between blacks and whites played a role. Purely on grounds of expediency, the rhetoric about white privilege and systemic racism coming from black opinion leaders has always seemed borderline suicidal. Blacks, constituting 13 percent of the population, are telling whites, 60 percent of the population, that they are racist, bad people, the cause of blacks’ problems, and they had better change their ways or else. Right or wrong, that rhetoric has been guaranteed to produce backlash by some portion of the 60 percent against the 13 percent. So far, this effect has been masked because the strategy has worked so well with white elites. Ordinarily, you can’t insult people into agreeing with you, but white guilt is a real thing. In the summer of 2020, many white college students and young adults agreed that they had sinned, even though they hadn’t realized it until now, and joined in Black Lives Matter marches. The New York Times, the Washington Post, NPR, PBS, CBS, NBC, ABC, CNN and MSNBC gave sympathetic coverage to the protests and, to varying degrees, downplayed the riots and looting.

Meanwhile, many middle-class and working-class whites have not been insulted into agreement. They’re just insulted, and to their minds unfairly insulted. I’m not talking about white nationalists and white supremacists — their numbers are relatively small. My concern is the extremely large majority of middle-class and working-class whites who don’t think of themselves as racists and have not behaved as racists.

Tens of millions of these people live in towns that have no black residents or just a few, and racial issues haven’t impinged on their lives. They don’t understand why they are being accused of racism. Still other tens of millions live in large cities where racial problems have been real, but they see themselves as having treated black and Latino neighbors and coworkers with friendship and respect. They believe that everyone has a God-given right to be treated equally. Now all of them are being told that they are privileged and racist, and they are asking on what grounds. They are living ordinary lives, with average incomes, working hard to make ends meet. They can’t see what ‘white privilege’ they have ever enjoyed. Some are fed up and ready to push back.

How widespread might the backlash be? It is one of those topics that the elite media has been unable to investigate more than superficially. But it seems beyond dispute that a growing number of whites are disposed to adopt identity politics — to become a racial interest group in the same way that blacks and Latinos are racial interest groups.

The question asks itself: if a minority consisting of 13 percent of the population can generate as much political energy and solidarity as America’s blacks have, what happens when a large proportion of the 60 percent of the population that is white begins to use the same playbook? I could spin out a variety of scenarios, but I don’t have confidence in any of them. I am certain of only two things.

First, the white backlash is occurring in the context of long-term erosion in the federal government’s legitimacy. Since 1958, the Gallup polling organization has periodically asked Americans how much they trust the federal government to do what is right. In 1958, 73 percent said ‘always’ or ‘most of the time’. Trust hit its high point in 1964, when that figure stood at 77 percent. Then it began to fall. By 1980, only 27 percent trusted the government to do what is right. That percentage rebounded to the low forties during the Reagan years, then fell to a new low, 19 percent, in 1994. It rebounded again, hitting a short-lived high of 54 percent just after 9/11. Then it plunged again, hitting another new low, 15 percent, in 2011. It has been in the 15- to 20 percent range ever since. A government that is distrusted by more than 80 percent of the citizens has a bipartisan legitimacy problem.

When a government loses legitimacy, it loses some of the allegiance of its citizens. That weakened allegiance means, among other things, a greater willingness to ignore the law. The federal government has enacted thousands of laws and regulations. Many of them apply to every family and every business in the nation. They cannot possibly be enforced by the police or courts without almost universal voluntary compliance. When a government is seen as legitimate, most citizens voluntarily comply because it is part of being a citizen; they don’t agree with every law and regulation, but they believe it is their duty as citizens to respect them. When instead people see laws and regulations as products of the illegitimate use of power, the sense of obligation ends.

Events since the summer of 2020 make me think it is too late to talk about if whites adopt identity politics. Many already have. That’s the parsimonious way to interpret the red-blue divisions over wearing masks, the widespread belief in red states that the 2020 election was stolen, and the rage that resulted in the invasion of the US Capitol on January 6, 2021. This is all evidence that the federal government has lost its legitimacy in the eyes of many whites. If that reaction spreads, the continued ability of the federal government to enforce its edicts in the reddest portions of the nation will be thrown into question. The prospect of legal secession may be remote, but the prospect of reduced governability from Washington is not.

The second thing of which I am certain is that Donald Trump’s election and the lessons of his term in office changed the parameters of what is politically possible in America. Someone can win the presidency without having been a governor, a senator, or a general. Someone can win it without any experience in public service at all and without any other relevant experience. Someone can win with a populist agenda. Someone can govern without observing any of the norms of presidential behavior.

Those lessons have not been lost on the politically ambitious of either the left or the right. All over the country, people at the outset of their political careers see a new set of possibilities. They include many who are as indifferent to precedent and self-restraint as Donald Trump was and who are more serious students of the uses of power than Trump was. It is increasingly possible that, the next time around, someone who is far more adept than Donald Trump can govern by ignoring inconvenient portions of the Constitution.

This essay is adapted from Charles Murray’s Facing Reality: Two Truths About Race in America (Encounter, $26). This article was originally published in The Spectator’s July 2021 World edition. 

Click to visit the TBP Store for Great TBP Merchandise

Author: Glock-N-Load

Simply a concerned, freedom loving American.

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
61 Comments
Stucky
Stucky
June 16, 2021 10:22 pm

That was a fantastic read.

Hope to see more articles posted here by that author, Charles Murray.

Stucky
Stucky
June 16, 2021 10:26 pm

Looks like half the counties in the South have a majority Kneegrow population. Wow, didn’t know that. Maybe Kansas ain’t that bad.

mark
mark
  Stucky
June 16, 2021 10:47 pm

Stuck…major difference from many city blacks and many country blacks.

I know that for a fact.

flash
flash
  mark
June 17, 2021 7:04 am

You can keep telling yourself that lie, but it doesn’t become less so, ever.

Joe Blow
Joe Blow
  flash
June 17, 2021 11:45 am

I grew up in rural Louisiana and the public high school was roughly 50/50 white/black. In ’77 and ’78 they started with the black history stuff and we ended up have race riots both years. Literally called the police in and separated the student bodies for a couple of weeks until things cooled off.

I worked a summer in college delivering beer into the speakeasies (yeah they were legal but run out of peoples houses etc) on the other side of the tracks. Would catch shit daily for being the white boy but fortunately the driver that I was helping was black and had my back.

Yeah, no different in rural area…

overthecliff
overthecliff
  mark
June 17, 2021 10:55 am

Niggers are niggers. Ignore that at your own peril. Never ever never trust a nigger. Race trumps all.

mark
mark
  overthecliff
June 17, 2021 12:44 pm

flash, overthecliff,

First, I made a statement based on my own known and proven experiences having lived in multiple cities and rurally in multiple regions of the country. Penn., Jersey, Texas, Georgia, Louisiana, Florida, and North Carolina. I despise cities and love living in the country (the more rural the better and in the South!) for many reasons…the differences in the culture and ‘many’ of all the people being paramount.

The culture is vastly different in in the country then in the urban cesspools, and so are ‘many’ of the people when not packed in on one another like sardines.

Second, I trust no one of any race until I have rock solid known and proven reasons to.

Third, I said there are major differences with ‘many’ rural vs. city blacks not all. I have no illusions about the defining power of race and tribe or the danger of wolf packs of blacks…or for that matter any wolf pack. Shit, there is a pack of white Hells Angels not too far from here that are the greatest danger in the area. I was raised around a pack of white bikers…my sister dated the leader, I was a bartender in a bar they arranged to take over one day a month, I know what they are capable of.

Fourth, I have been fed up, sick and tired of ‘many’ blacks for many decades. Their gangster rapper culture is in the toilet, their families are destroyed, too ‘many’ live off the government teat, too ‘many’ are professional victims, failures, and living off the race card…and that significant number ‘many’ can all go to hell (along with all the ‘many’ white members of BLM).

Fifth, I am part of a small white rural tribe…I have no illusions about what is coming or who I can trust and or depend on when TSHTF.

Sixth, I am probably alive because of what an older experienced black Marine went out of his way to teach me, and he has been dead for 51 years…of course there are exceptions to every race, color, creed yada, yada, yada, rule…and he was a city black…but a hellva Marine.

This is from the 2017 link below:
“There also are significant divisions in small-town America between whites and minorities. One in 5 rural Americans are nonwhite, according to census data. In short, the sense of shared identity that connects many rural Americans – which factors into rural America’s sense of fairness and estrangement – is less intense among rural minorities than among rural whites. While 78 percent of white rural residents say other rural residents share their values, that falls to 64 percent among Hispanics and to 55 percent of black residents.

Still, the vast majority of rural Americans judge their communities favorably as a place where people look out for each other, which in follow-up interviews was cited a point of pride and distinction they say they cannot find in large urban centers. “It ain’t nothing like living inside a city,” said Clyde Hampton, 72, of Vienna, Georgia. “I’ll say this: Rural areas are a place where you can depend on your neighbor next door. And the town is so small everybody knows something; if something happens on this side of town and an hour later it’s all over the whole town.”

I stand by my post.

New poll of rural Americans shows deep cultural divide with urban centers

GNL
GNL
  mark
June 17, 2021 12:52 pm

Mark,

My issue is that when all hell breaks out, there’s no time to figure out who are the exceptions.

Your skin will be your uniform.

mark
mark
  GNL
June 17, 2021 1:26 pm

Donkey,

I have no illusions…I covered that in my post:

“Fifth, I am part of a small white rural tribe…I have no illusions about what is coming or who I can trust and or depend on when TSHTF”.

I posted an incident in a thread I had in the small town barber shop a while back.

Three or four guys were waiting and two in the chairs in my small town barber shop. A lively discussion broke out about TSHTF. I was silent just listening.

One guy, big dude, 45ish, looked like he could run through a wall says: “I an’t worried about it, I got a shotgun…I get hungry I know where to go to get what I have to…to feed my family”.

Everybody got real quiet.

Man, that pissed me off.

I said real loud: “Hey, you come down my road with that shotgun and I’ll put a 7.62 round into you…and you’ll never me”.

Man, you could hear a pin drop.

We just stared at one another (then he realized I wasn’t joking). He got red in the face, cleared his throat, then changed the subject and everyone else did…everyone was white.

GNL
GNL
  mark
June 17, 2021 2:31 pm

I understand. Definitely some shitty white people out there. Hell, I have some in my own family. I do think, for a while though, that skin color will rule.

falconflight
falconflight
  GNL
June 17, 2021 10:34 pm

Shirts and Skins

flash
flash
  mark
June 17, 2021 1:14 pm

I was born and raised in the South and traveled it extensively for work. I attended forcibly integrated public schools since 1965 and have lived and worked with both rural and urban blacks and I say you are full of shit. Yes, they are exceptions, but that is not the rule….not all orcs vote democrat…reeeeeeee.

https://citizenfreepress.com/breaking/proud-boys-leader-is-broke-selling-black-lives-matter-t-shirts/

Tribe up or die .comment image

Stucky
Stucky
  flash
June 17, 2021 1:33 pm

“I say you are full of shit. “

Wow. I don’t think you’re being reasonable.

Mark gave a good account of HIS experiences. Just because they don’t match YOUR experiences doesn’t mean he’s full of shit. It just means both of you have had different experiences that shaped your views. Neither one of you is wrong, imho.

P.S. I hate being the voice of reason here. Generally not my fucken style.

flash
flash
  Stucky
June 17, 2021 1:53 pm

I don’t give a rat’s ass about feels or virtue signaling anecdotes. I know for a fact that rural blacks are just as prone to crime and violence as urban blacks. I’ve witnessed it many times , my entire life.
Hell, I ran a plant where the majority were black and from rural areas , but the gangbanging, drug dealing and murder was just a prevalent as any urban area. I had thievery, shootings and stabbings on the factory floor on a regular basis. I carried a .38 in my pocket at all times.

BTW, my neighbor, an ex-Congressman went to Zimbabwe to tour a diamond mine and the Indian supervisor was telling him about how hard it was to work blacks because of layouts, violence, alcoholism and money issues and my neighbors says , ” you an’t telling me nothing. They’re just like that back home.

For whatever reason , Mark is blowing smoke up your ass . Don’t believe the bullshit. You do not want to be in the black infested South when TSHTF . I’m trying to get out now, but my wife doesn’t want to move because ” famileeeeee”

Thomas Chittum covers the reasons here:

https://archive.org/details/CivilWar2_201804

mark
mark
  flash
June 17, 2021 4:32 pm

So I’m full of shit, blowing smoke up Stucky’s ass, and virtue signaling because I think the vast difference between rural and urban cultures affects many blacks? (It does with many whites too by the way).

So you think I should ignore my life experiences on the subject and just listen to yours?

I’ve posted the link to Civil War 2 at least three times, and read it cover to cover twice.

So you think Civil War 2 supports your point and not mine?

Go to page 45 and read how the future black militias come out of the urban gangs and the ‘urban culture’…not the rural area or the ‘rural culture’…it reinforces my point.

I don’t know who pissed in your Wheaties today flash, but it wasn’t me.

Why don’t you try de café?

flash
flash
  mark
June 17, 2021 6:47 pm

Did I mention you’re a boomer cuck idiot too and possibly a fed poster, shitstain ?

mark
mark
  flash
June 17, 2021 7:31 pm

Ha!

Please…no substance for a comeback, used your own argument against you so it’s shit flinging insult time…weak flash…laughable…but weak.

GNL
GNL
  Stucky
June 17, 2021 2:36 pm

I dumped a black friend of over 20 years last year. I realized he never called me a friend AND he supported BLM. He was, what ghetto blacks would call, an Uncle Tom. He was white except for the color of his skin or until he was around other blacks.

Dropped him like a hot potato.

mark
mark
  GNL
June 17, 2021 5:48 pm

Donkey,

Haven’t had a black friend since the miltary…and very few white ones.

Outside my wife of 44 years, always been a loner.

But the few friends I do have are golden.

GNL
GNL
  mark
June 17, 2021 8:32 pm

Mark,

I believe you to be a good Christian. Yes, there are good blacks. Good people of all colors and stripes. My problem is human nature. People lash out at the “others” if things go crazy. I’ll stick with white, heterosexual Christians if possible.

Imagine a white family that believes they have a good group of friends who are black, or mostly black and shit goes bad. Any black group they meet up with will automatically not trust “those white folk”. Like goes with like and skin color is the quickest and easiest signifier of likeness. Fortunately or unfortunately.

mark
mark
  GNL
June 17, 2021 8:59 pm

Donkey,

My original point was on the vast differences between rural and urban cultures (to Stucky – Plainfield NJ – I grew up in Edison NJ next door) and the difference between ‘many’ blacks (and I added ‘many’ whites later because that is true too) who come out of these two culturally different environments.

I have observed that difference having lived in 6 states owning 7 houses and renting 7 apartments/houses in both urban and rural areas over the last 50 years.

If that causes spittle to fly out of flash’s mouth…I could care less.

My simple observation doesn’t cover every complex racial ‘what if’ in the coming Shitstorm.

I’m not trusting anyone, white, black, brown, red or yellow I don’t know well and have good solid reasons to trust.

I will be an equal opportunity shooter.

Stucky
Stucky
  mark
June 17, 2021 9:54 pm

I know Edison. My seester lived off Old Post Road …. between the GM plant on Rt.1 and that huge air conditioner factory on Rt 28. The GM plant is now a shopping mall. The air conditioner plant is now an Amazon distribution center. So goes America …

mark
mark
  Stucky
June 17, 2021 10:31 pm

Stuck,

The last time I was there I had a hard time recognizing the Edison of my miss spent yout!

flash
flash
  mark
June 17, 2021 10:04 pm

You’re a lying POS jerkass Fed poster…of this , I’m sure.

flash
flash
  mark
June 17, 2021 10:01 pm

Prolly cuz’ you’re a lying SOS Fed poster and none of your comments are based on reality.

mark
mark
  flash
June 17, 2021 10:30 pm

Get a grip dude…you sound loony tunes.

falconflight
falconflight
  mark
June 17, 2021 10:30 pm

That divide has just about always been the case.

flash
flash
  falconflight
June 17, 2021 10:38 pm

Mark is Flightard is Fed poster .. Not surprised .

falconflight
falconflight
  flash
June 17, 2021 11:09 pm

Can you clarify?

falconflight
falconflight
  mark
June 17, 2021 11:05 pm

I remember driving through Tuskegee, Alabama circa 1995. It is a small town that is overwhelmingly black like many small towns in the South. While driving through, just before entering the town square, I spotted a sign promoting Louis Farrakhan’s upcoming event in said town. As we entered the town square, there were mostly black men in the grassy square, and as we slowly (speed limit) drove by, you’d think they were observing a Klan parade. The looks were demonstratively sullen toward us. (The only other time that I experienced such a reaction was my father driving our Chrysler Newport into the French town of Strasburg, circa 1968.)

I then stopped for gas at a station on the outskirts of town. Just like in the Amerikan Urban Utopias, there was a plexiglass partition between the cashier and the customer. There were several blacks (me the only white) inside, and the vibe (maybe my own bias) was menacing. I’ve experienced several hostile encounters from blacks…from blacks that I solicited services; a lawyer, a barber, a doctor, and a college instructor. Much of my career involved being the minority, sometimes the only minority among blacks. There were blacks that I liked, even supervisors, but there were many more vicious co-workers and supervisors that were obviously cruelly racist.

Upon retiring we purposely moved to a very predominately white populated (94%) county. Just about all of the blacks live in the county seat (I wonder why) of about 1600 people. Most of the Indians live on tribal land. In the county I might go weeks without noticing a black person. Even in the county seat, I could go days without noticing a black. When the SHTF (already here, just not blood running in the streets)…it won’t be an obvious need to take immediate action to thwart their animal drive like in the diverse areas. Not that I would trust the average white person in such a scenario. They are making me a racist. They are.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Stucky
June 16, 2021 10:50 pm

Eastern Oklahoma and the north and west parts of Arkansas are fine. Tulsa is the only black s-thole. The five civilized tribes or nations own eastern OK and are nice people. Llpoh’s kin are from there. Land is still cheap and it’s only a little hotter and more humid than Jersey but winters a mild. Go a little further south and shake hands with MGM.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Anonymous
June 18, 2021 11:29 pm

Search North Dakota Quarter black. Hardly any blacks.

Ken31
Ken31
  Stucky
June 17, 2021 12:01 am

I trust the census like I trust the BLS to give it to me straight. Like I trust the legitimacy of federal elections. Like I trust the CPI.

KaD
KaD
June 16, 2021 10:32 pm

“They don’t understand why they are being accused of racism.”
Because race grifting pays well. JMM- Jew Money Matters.

Ken31
Ken31
  KaD
June 16, 2021 10:49 pm

This concept of racism is build on a foundation quicksand. Once you concede that racism is a legitimate concern, you have lost.

GNL
GNL
  Ken31
June 17, 2021 5:13 am

It’s not about whether or not YOU think race matters, it’s what others think if race matters. And there are lots of people who do and will, especially if the democrats continue with their race baiting.

Anonymous
Anonymous
June 16, 2021 10:57 pm

He claims “Someone can win the presidency without having been a governor, a senator, or a general. Someone can win it without any experience in public service at all and without any other relevant experience. Someone can win with a populist agenda.”
Should we wake him up. I heard if you wake up a sleep walker they go crazy. He must have been jarred awake because he’s nuts if he thinks you can win without being selected.
This is just cleverly packaged false Hopium.
When the time is right, sheriff Mack and his free county posse will be selectively Arkancided.

starfcker
starfcker
June 16, 2021 11:04 pm

If you take the “Western”, and the “Civilization”, out of Western Civilization, what do you get? If you answered, you get the feel good video of the day, you are correct. https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9691991/amp/Seething-customer-rains-blows-two-McDonalds-workers-Ohio.html?__twitter_impression=true

Ken31
Ken31
June 17, 2021 12:00 am

You could not make a lower trust society than the USA currently is, if you designed it that way.

Horseless Headsman
Horseless Headsman
  Ken31
June 17, 2021 7:43 am

I don’t think we’re at the bottom yet.

TampaRed
TampaRed
June 17, 2021 12:44 am

“The 2020 map is almost indistinguishable from the 2016 map despite the different electoral outcome.”
hmm,what was the difference?

Unconnected
Unconnected
June 17, 2021 12:51 am

comment image

flash
flash
  Unconnected
June 17, 2021 7:14 am

If an enemy wants you dead, there is no neutral ground. Individuals can’t survive outside the tribe. Tribe up or die.

Happy Juneteeth bruh.

“You are living in a post-ideological age. Understand this. Accept this. It is time to stop thinking in terms of Left and Right, of Liberal and Conservative, of Democrat and Republican, and think in terms of identity instead…. Ideology politics are dead. Idea wars are reserved for homogeneous societies, not multiracial, multiethnic, multireligious, war zones. The culture wars are intrinsically interidentity, and anyone who is still babbling about Left and Right, or Liberal and Conservative, is simply demonstrating the extent to which they fail to understand their own reality. Social Justice is Satan’s Justice. “
Vox Day

“In multiracial societies, you don’t vote in accordance with your economic interests and social interests, you vote in accordance with race and religion.”
—Lee Kuan Yew

Becoming a modern society is about industrialization, urbanization, and rising levels of literacy, education, and wealth. The qualities that make a society Western, in contrast, are special: the classical legacy, Christianity, the separation of church and state, the rule of law, civil society…People define themselves in terms of ancestry, religion, language, history, values, customs, and institutions. They identify with cultural groups: tribes, ethnic groups, religious communities, nations, and, at the broadest level, civilizations. People use politics not just to advance their interests but also to define their identity. We know who we are only when we know who we are not and often only when we know whom we are against… There can be no true friends without true enemies. Unless we hate what we are not, we cannot love what we are. These are the old truths we are painfully rediscovering after a century and more of sentimental cant. Those who deny them deny their family, their heritage, their culture, their birthright, their very selves! They will not lightly be forgiven.
Samuel P. Huntington, The Clash of Civilizations and the Remaking of World

Stucky
Stucky
  flash
June 17, 2021 7:29 am

“There can be no true friends without true enemies. Unless we hate what we are not, we cannot love what we are. “

I hate to admit it …. but, that’s probably quite true.

It is also a very sad commentary on the Human Condition.

Maybe we really do need a Savior?

========================== =

Have you ever asked a question 30+ years ago … that you still remember today? I do.

I was a 19 year old teenager, in the USAF, and I was attending a Bible Study off base in Kansas conducted by what I can best describe as what has since been labeled ‘Jesus Freaks’. (Long haired hippie types wearing bell bottoms, tie dyed t-shirts, and leather headbands.) Other than the Jehovah Witness lady who came to our house during my junior year of high school, it was my first ever Bible study.

Anyway, the group leader keep talking about … Getting Saved … over and over. After about half an hour I sheepishly raised my hand and asked; “You keep talking about ‘getting saved’. Saved from what exactly?” Those were my exact words that I still recall today. I really didn’t know what the hell they were talking about. Today, I do.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Stucky
June 17, 2021 12:06 pm

You were smarter at 19 than you are now.

There’s nothing sad about it, it is Nature. What would be sad is if it was any other way. Imagine a hypothetical mixed pack of hyenas, wild dogs, and a few lions pretending to be hyenas or who were raised in a zoo so they don’t know they’re lions. Imagine the mongrel pack going around attacking the healthy prides of normal lions, killing them or taking their prey, stealing their cubs to raise them as degenerates.

Isn’t that clearly an unnatural state of affairs? Wouldn’t the disgust you feel be greatest for the lion ‘traitors’? Shouldn’t the healthy lions feel hate? They don’t need to feel hate for their prey, only those that threaten their existence.

Freddy Uranus
Freddy Uranus
  flash
June 17, 2021 7:43 am

I’d take anything Vox Day says with a grain of salt. Nothing but a very provocative shit flinger. He was the the guy claiming Trump was going to “Cross the Rubicon” and Biden was going to concede after elected!

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Freddy Uranus
June 17, 2021 12:07 pm

Isn’t he a mexican that moved to europe, who tells Whites what to do in america?

flash
flash
  Anonymous
June 17, 2021 12:45 pm

Too much gamma in the comment section , I’ll take it ? Show me where the ban hammer hurt you.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  flash
June 17, 2021 12:51 pm

I have no idea what that means. I take it you’re one of his followers. Feel free to correct my statement if I was wrong.

I haven’t given him more than passing attention since… something or other about the SJWs in scifi, I just remember there was some male author who like to wear dresses.

flash
flash
  Anonymous
June 17, 2021 4:02 pm

Lying sack of steaming turds…gamma much do you ?

flash
flash
  Freddy Uranus
June 17, 2021 12:43 pm

Apparently you can’t discern from hope from despair. Sad for you.

GNL
GNL
  flash
June 17, 2021 8:09 am

I do believe Flash gets it. I’ll add…the whole reason for diversity is to divide and conquer.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Unconnected
June 17, 2021 12:21 pm

‘Divide yourselves, goyim’

Ginger
Ginger
June 17, 2021 6:27 am

Why use the language of the opposition? I refer to the use of “Tribe Up”.
The use of Tribe is to denigrate.

Horseless Headsman
Horseless Headsman
June 17, 2021 7:39 am

Great article that points out what is obvious to many of us. That last line is a choke point for me, however.

“It is increasingly possible that, the next time around, someone who is far more adept than Donald Trump can govern by ignoring inconvenient portions of the Constitution.”

To ignore the knowledge that the party currently in power views the Constitution as an impediment to their aspirations and something to be rewritten to suit their biases throws a shadow on the rest of this fine article.

‘Diversity’, as currently practiced, has always been a racket to warp the culture of the country into a form that pleases the Left. Diversity is only an asset to a culture if the culture itself is strong enough to maintain it’s character while coexisting with other cultures, and the foreign cultures aren’t strong enough to force change upon it. That has never been the plan for us.

There are genetic differences between the races of men besides the gross physical that are visible. If you don’t like it, tough. Life isn’t fair. Try searching “IQ and Civilization” on the web, and read the results. Ignoring this fact won’t upset nature, it will just adjust your ability to survive to be in accord with your beliefs. The facts don’t care.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Horseless Headsman
June 17, 2021 8:17 am

Yes really, next time around? Isn’t a stolen election and a demented president enough? Not to mention a GLOBAL FAKE PANDEMIC.

Stucky
Stucky
June 17, 2021 7:49 am

“White Americans, acting collectively as a racial bloc, will defeat Globohomo.”

In other words, probably ….. never.

Unless you can tell me how to overcome the roughly HALF of White Americans who are Self Loathing White Americans.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Stucky
June 17, 2021 8:24 am

True but that self loathing derives mostly from extreme comfort (i.e. food, shelter, sex etc). Pendulums swing and civilizations collapse as regularly as clockwork. When comfort disappears survival instincts and racial awareness will reactivate faster than you can believe. Just think Weimar Germany in the 20s

subwo
subwo
  Stucky
June 18, 2021 11:39 pm

If they pick the wrong side they sleep or dirt nap in the bed they made. If it comes to that.

Stucky
Stucky
June 17, 2021 8:19 am

“The question asks itself: if a minority consisting of 13 percent of the population can generate as much political energy and solidarity as America’s blacks have … “

Fortunately, I believe that this so called Black Solidarity is beginning to crumble. More and more blacks are seeing the real value of the Jackson’s, Sharpton’s, BLMs, Democrat panderers, etc …. that is to say, worthless pieces of shit that actually keep blacks enslaved.

Sure, the numbers may be small. But, they are growing.

Old School Counselor
Old School Counselor
June 19, 2021 5:53 am

The American Experiment was always a myth. Ours was largely a homogenous nation that never handled diversity very well without force. Our greatest mistake was slavery because it brought in a lot of parasitic and unintelligent beings who cannot be governed without force. The Experiment worked as long as we could hold the Anglo-American culture together. It is failing as that culture fragments. Ideas did not hold this place together. Culture did, and culture is largely a function of ethnicity. Ethnicity encompasses race.