Sunday, June 14, 2009

A Conversation About Race: What is Racism? Does Racism Exist? The Long Road to Racial Awakening

.“I freed a thousand slaves, I could have freed a thousand more if only they knew they were slaves.” ~ Harriet Tubman
“A principle of reality is that great secrets are right in front of you. You go right past them, not realizing what you have been looking at.”

When a white person awakens to our race’s peril, the first impulse—and the first duty—is to try to awaken others. But where to begin? Becoming a white nationalist often takes years of experience, reflection, and reading. And one has to find one’s courage along the way too. How does one condense all that into talking points? Big books like Wilmot Robertson’s The Dispossessed Majority may well be the last word on these matters. But what is the first word? How do we begin the conversation? We live in an increasingly post-literate society, so for most people books are not the place to start, big books especially.

This is why I highly recommend Craig Bodeker’s masterful 58 minute documentary A Conversation about Race. It is an ideal first step on the road to racial awakening.
~ A Conversation About Race: What is Racism? Does Racism Exist? ~

"Hate crimes," as trumpeted by the likes of the Southern Poverty Law Center, are a questionable legal construct used almost exclusively against whites.

Hateful or not, interracial violent crime is overwhelmingly black on white or black on Asian. The Department of Justice's figures show that between 2001 and 2003, blacks were 39 times more likely to commit violent crimes against whites than the reverse. Of the nearly 770,000 violent interracial crimes committed every year involving blacks and whites, blacks commit 85 percent and whites commit 15 percent.

You won't hear about that from the Southern Poverty Law Center or see it on the evening newscasts, because the truth is one thing and the liberal agenda is another.
~ Racial Justice Racket: Exploiting Black Pain & White Guilt:: King of the Hate Business | Who Loves Hate Crimes? | Hustling Hate @ Poverty Palace ~

Tailored guilt comes in varying shades; most of it is black on white. Penance being paid can be worn as many garments, be it a Mandela pin, a Bono/Geldoff Save-Africa rock concert, affirmative action, South African black economic empowerment or a Brangelina Black-baby adoption shopping-spree. Uniform in complexion, all are interwoven with a single strand displaying the conscious intention of its Western wearer to placate a troublesome conscience.
~ Die Nuwe Suid Afrika :: "All of these "black brood sows" pumping out baby after baby WITHOUT a father." :: The New South Africa ~

FARMER-IN-CHIEF Guerrylla-Warrior: 'We Need To 'Cull' The Surplus Population'

The First Word - A Conversation About Race

I Luv SA | Occidental Quarterly


When a white person awakens to our race’s peril, the first impulse—and the first duty—is to try to awaken others. But where to begin? Becoming a white nationalist often takes years of experience, reflection, and reading. And one has to find one’s courage along the way too. How does one condense all that into talking points? Big books like Wilmot Robertson’s The Dispossessed Majority may well be the last word on these matters. But what is the first word? How do we begin the conversation? We live in an increasingly post-literate society, so for most people books are not the place to start, big books especially.

This is why I highly recommend Craig Bodeker’s masterful 58 minute documentary A Conversation about Race. It is an ideal first step on the road to racial awakening.

Bodeker posted an advertisement on Craigslist in Denver under the heading “Ending Racism Now,” then interviewed respondents on film. He also did “man on the street” interviews. The interviewees who made the final cut are a very diverse group. About half of them are black, including two blacks in inter-racial relationships. Most of the rest are white, with a couple of Hispanics or Amerindians thrown in.

The premise of Bodeker’s film is that he is responding to Barack Obama’s call for a national conversation about race.

His first question is about the pervasiveness of racism. His respondents all agree that racism is everywhere. He then focuses on the definition of racism, comparing what his sources say to definitions drawn from Wikipedia and standard dictionaries. Initially, I found this concern for definitions and piety towards dictionaries silly. But my objections vanished once I realized that Bodeker was merely trying to show just how astonishingly vague people’s understanding of racism is.

Some interviewees seemed to think that any form of distinction-making is racist, which probably explains why discrimination against women, homosexuals, and poor people was defined as racism, even when no racial distinctions were involved. Others regarded drawing generalizations about groups based on experience and using these generalizations to predict future experience as racism. Still others seemed to think that any judgment that one person or group is better than another is racist—although subsequent questioning yielded significant exceptions. When racism is defined at this level of generality, cognition itself—perception, generalization, induction, evaluation—becomes morally objectionable. On this account, to be a non-racist is to be brain-dead.

Because of the vagueness of the definitions, Bodeker asked for concrete examples of racism in day to day life. Again, the answers are astonishing. Whites excoriated themselves as racist for noticing the existence of blacks and drawing generalizations about them based on experience. In short, for whites, racism is simply race-consciousness.

For blacks, however, day to day racism seems largely to be a form of self-consciousness, i.e., feeling conspicuous and out of place in white society. Blacks complained about whites staring at them, being overly friendly and solicitous, giving them compliments, not laughing at their jokes (although some blacks would probably describe laughing at their jokes as racist too), and being afraid of them (because of black criminality). That’s it. No slurs, no lynchings, just feeling self-conscious.

I drew two lessons from this segment of the film.

First, if a large part of the black experience of racism amounts to feeling self-conscious in the presence of whites, how much of this is due to whites and how much is due to blacks themselves? Frankly, several of Bodeker’s black informants seem to have chips on their shoulders, i.e., pre-existing grievances against whites that cause them to view even innocuous white behavior in a jaundiced manner. One might even say they have prejudices against whites.

Second, who are these overly friendly and solicitous whites who make blacks feel so self-conscious? Do these whites think of themselves as racists or as anti-racists? I would lay odds that 99 percent are liberal anti-racists, who think that simply by going out of their way to be nice they can charm sullen blacks into acting like white people, absolve themselves of the sin of racism, and demonstrate their good faith and intentions. It is ironic that such liberal solicitousness is the primary example of day to day racism cited by Bodeker’s black informants. Presumably, whites who genuinely dislike blacks will not go out of their way to be nice to them, and so will not be perceived as racists.

Bodeker rightly dismisses his informants’ definitions of racism as vague and their concrete examples as trivial. From that point on, his focus is not the definition of racism, but the double standards that govern its use. Bodeker shows that all people are “racists,” to the extent the term has any meaning at all, but only white people are excoriated for it. The charge of “racism,” therefore, functions merely as a club to intimidate whites into not looking out for their own ethnic interests. Thus, although A Conversation about Race can be viewed with profit by people of all races, whites clearly have the most to gain from it, and Bodeker frankly takes our own side and does not pretend to be impartial.

His first demonstration of the double standard is quite entertaining. He asks if blacks are better than whites at basketball, on the average. His interviewees do not hesitate to answer yes, [see here for systematic discrimination against whites by college and professional basketball] then asks if whites are better at some things than blacks. (He asks one young white woman if white men are better at keeping jobs and paying bills than black men.) The reaction is very different. Not one of the respondents gives a simple yes. One white woman grants that it is conceivable that whites might be better than blacks at something, but claims she has no idea of what that would be. The double standard is breathtaking: the conventional wisdom on race has no problem with the idea of racial superiority, as long as it is not whites who are superior.

Presumably since none of his informants could come up with a single example of something whites do better than blacks, Bodeker suggests one: whites perform better than blacks on intelligence tests. It was surprising to see how many interviewees explained this away on the grounds that such tests are created by white people and thus culturally biased toward them. Whites, in short, do better only because they stack the deck. Clearly, our enemies are doing a very good job of propagating their ideas.

Bodeker’s follow-up question is brilliant: if white performance on intelligence tests is explained by cultural bias, then why do Asians outperform whites on the same tests? It is amusing to see the gibbering this elicits. Again, the double standard is remarkable: when whites outperform blacks on intelligence tests, this result needs to be explained away as cultural bias, not taken at face value; when Asians outperform whites, cultural bias is never suggested. Again, people have no problem with racial superiority, as long as it is not white superiority.

Another important segment of the film deals with black criminality. When asked whether whites are right to fear blacks, and whether blacks commit proportionately more crimes than whites, the white interviewees are reluctant to agree and tend to avoid the question by making excuses. The blacks, however, readily answered yes. I found this surprising and really rather admirable. Blacks also frankly admitted that other blacks intentionally intimidate whites. But they also made excuses for it, claiming that it is a response to white misdeeds.

Bodeker cites truly shocking interracial rape statistics: in the United States in 2005, 37,000 white women were raped by blacks, while in the same period “fewer than ten” black women were raped by whites. (The odd locution “fewer than ten” rather than a specific number leads me to think that the number could be zero, but that the statistical margin of error is ten.) Bodeker then makes another brilliant point: according to the conventional wisdom on racism, we are supposed to be worried if, on any given day, a white person somewhere in America is harboring racist attitudes towards blacks; but if one is concerned that, on the very same day, one hundred white women are being raped by blacks, that is racism most foul.

Bodeker also deals with the question of collective racial guilt. He shows handily that blacks and whites are willing to impute collective racial guilt to whites for enslaving blacks and ethnically cleansing American Indians, even through many white Americans, like Craig Bodeker, are descended from people who never held slaves or fought Indians. Yet none of his interviewees were willing to give collective credit to whites for the good things about the United States, even though this society was founded by whites and for whites. Moreover, Bodeker points out that the same people who assign collective guilt to whites for black slavery and the ethnic cleansing of American Indians, tend to ascribe collective innocence to their putative victims, even though blacks also practiced slavery and American Indians also slaughtered one another for land. Finally, Bodeker points out that Whites today are assigned collective guilt for what other whites did long ago, but if one suggested that blacks are collectively guilty of the crimes committed by blacks today, that would be branded racism.

Another double standard Bodeker explores concerns racial advocacy. In America today, Mexican mestizos, united under the banner of “La Raza,” advocate the ethnic cleansing of whites from vast areas of the United States. This is not condemned as racism. Instead, that epithet is reserved for whites who object to their ethnic displacement. Bodeker points out the existence of black advocates like Jesse Jackson, but none of his interviewees can name a white advocate. When Bodeker asks a white woman about white nationalists, she says she does not appreciate such groups, but pauses to say that she can relate to their sense of loss. Clearly any form of white advocacy would be branded racism.

Bodeker deals squarely with the long-term consequences of this double standard: white dispossession. If whites, and only whites, are intimidated by the charge of racism from protecting their own ethnic interests, while other ethnic groups are emboldened to pursue their interests at our expense, we will eventually lose what we have: our wealth, our power, our culture, our values, our country, and eventually our very existence, once we become a minority in the land our people created and scapegoats for the failures of the non-white majority.

When Bodeker asks his interviewees about the possibility of their own group being displaced by newcomers, the answers are remarkable. When a white woman is asked what she thinks about whites becoming a minority, the only alternative she can envision is outright white extinction through miscegenation, the creation of a completely homogeneous mongrel race. In short, if one wants to avoid the charge of being a racist, whites must meekly consent to subordination or extinction. Anything else would be immoral. From a biological point of view, such suicidal moralism is a sickness that might indeed doom our race to extinction. Do these people think that a warm feeling of moral superiority will survive their physical annihilation?

When Bodeker asked blacks about their displacement by immigrants from Mexico and Central America, however, their answers surprised me: “Send them back!” “Close the border, build a wall.” “They’re here bleeding our social services, using our hospitals, without contributing anything to our society.” “They come here and don’t even speak English. If we went to their country, we would have to adapt.” “Cinco Dos Adios. They’d be gone. No problem. They’d be gone. Oh Lawd!” Say what you like about black IQ, these attitudes indicate that blacks may be better adapted for survival than we are. As a friend who viewed the documentary with me quipped, “Maybe it won’t be so bad to have a black president after all!”

Clearly the prospects for a harmonious multicultural rainbow utopia are quite dim. More diversity just means more conflict and hatred.

Bodeker’s powerful conclusion is the story of how he himself became a believer in the toxic doctrine of white guilt. He does not describe how he freed himself from it, but I am confident that for many years to come, white people will point to A Conversation about Race and say that their awakening began here.

It is interesting to study the faces of Bodeker’s white interviewees, particularly a young woman named Tina and an older woman named Mary Ann: one can see their minds opening; one can see the cognitive dissonance between the facts and arguments offered by Bodeker and the conventional wisdom about racism.

A Conversation about Race is all the more impressive when one learns that this is Craig Bodeker’s first film—the first, I hope, of many. It was created on a shoestring budget and put together almost entirely on a home computer. It does not look expensive and slick, but neither does it look cheap and amateurish. It is well-edited, well-paced, and consistently engaging, with simple, hip-sounding music. It is proof that while money is no substitute for good taste, good taste can often substitute for money.

Bodeker also has an appealing onscreen persona. He looks like the recovering liberal that he is, which allows a large target audience to relate to him. He comes across as self-assured but laid-back and non-threatening, personable but not glad-handling, serious but not forbidding. He is proof that one can talk about uncomfortable facts and defend radical positions as long as one is soft-spoken and reasonable. It is encouraging to see people of this caliber openly questioning the racial dogmas of our time. This is a talent to be encouraged and emulated.

I have two suggestions. First, I hope Bodeker makes the raw interviews available online. Not only would they be entertaining and informative, but it would also deflect any charges that the interviews were cherry picked and edited to slant or change their meaning. This film is too important to allow anyone to sow doubts about its credibility. Second, how about A Conversation about Diversity?

You can order A Conversation about Race for $20, including postage in the United States, at www.aconversationaboutrace.com. The website also contains excerpts from the film, reviews, and interviews with Craig Bodeker.

By Greg Johnson, Ph.D., editor of The Occidental Quarterly and TOQ Online.













Source: I Luv SA

FARMER-IN-CHIEF Guerrylla-Warrior: 'We Need To 'Cull' The Surplus Population'

Geo-Eco :: SQWorms

Thursday, June 11, 2009

Food, Inc. Documentary Movie Removes Shroud of Secrecy

.“I freed a thousand slaves, I could have freed a thousand more if only they knew they were slaves.” ~ Harriet Tubman
“A principle of reality is that great secrets are right in front of you. You go right past them, not realizing what you have been looking at.”

To give the reader an idea of the energy intensiveness of modern agriculture, production of one kilogram of nitrogen for fertilizer requires the energy equivalent of from 1.4 to 1.8 liters of diesel fuel. This is not considering the natural gas feedstock.

In a very real sense, we are literally eating fossil fuels. However, due to the laws of thermodynamics, there is not a direct correspondence between energy inflow and outflow in agriculture. Modern intensive agriculture is unsustainable. It is damaging the land, draining water supplies and polluting the environment. And all of this requires more and more fossil fuel input to pump irrigation water, to replace nutrients, to provide pest protection, to remediate the environment and simply to hold crop production at a constant. Yet this necessary fossil fuel input is going to crash headlong into declining fossil fuel production.
~ Eating Fossil Fuels, by Dale Allen Pfeiffer ~

The related terms, "sustainable" and "sustainability" are popularly used to describe a wide variety of activities which are generally ecologically laudable but which may not be sustainable. An examination of major reports reveals contradictory uses of the terms. An attempt is made here to give a firm and unambiguous definition to the concept of sustainability and to translate the definition into a series of laws and hypotheses which, it is hoped, will clarify the implications of the use of the concept of sustainability. These are followed by a series of observations and predictions that relate to "sustainability." The laws should enable one to read the many publications on sustainability and help one to decide whether the publications are seeking to illuminate or to obfuscate.
~ Reflections on Sustainability, Population Growth, and the Environment: Carrying Capacity & Denial of Population Problem ~

“Food has something in common with energy — they're both commodities that you use up. And they're both worth fighting over. Naturally, if food is a problem that could blow up in our faces, the smart thing to do would be to think strategically.”
~ AgriWarfare & Strategic Food: The Agriculture Ticking Time-Bomb: F-O-O-D, is a Fighting Word, like OIL ~


FARMER-IN-CHIEF Guerrylla-Warrior: 'We Need To 'Cull' The Surplus Population'

Food, Inc. Documentary Movie Removes Shroud of Secrecy

Keith Rockmichael || Sustainablog




For those in America who have yet to read The Omnivore’s Dilemma, Fast Food Nation or even The Jungle, the new docu pic Food, Inc. smoothly stirs the boiling pot of food production controversy while allowing those not familiar with the dark secrets of the food production industry to enjoy a film in bite size nuggets.

With Fast Food Nation author Eric Schlosser a co-producers and Omnivore’s Dilemma writer Michael Pollen one of the consultants (in addition to being on-screen participants) the film offers a solid, well presented structure that offers not only scary, gut wrenching even stomach turning scenes in meatpacking plants, chicken coops and but offers a silver lining into the future of food.

Producer/Director Robert Kenner weaves the film through the various food landscapes from the cramped chicken coops of Maryland to the aerial CAFO vistas to the open grasslands of Polyface Farms. Inside one of the chicken coops live chickens that wallow in their own filth and barely have room to move. Factory farm shots show downer cows being uplifted by forklifts to be transported to the slaughterhouse. The film makes a point of showing people how dangerous and unregulated our food system remains.

Besides showing the torturously nauseating animal conditions, the film doesn’t forget the human factor and the social justice issues. Food, Inc. follows undocumented factory farm workers being arrested while making the point that the huge company that they work for should be the ones under the squad car lights. Kenner also captures the human element in the case of one California family that must decide between fast food hamburgers and broccoli as a result of economic hardship. (Guess which they choose?) Food, Inc displays the bigger-breasted chickens, the perfect pork chop, insecticide-resistant soybean seeds, and even tomatoes that won’t go bad, but also shows the new strains of e coli—and the deadly results.

But the film is not all about “dishonest food” and the “ugly truth” as Kenner captures lively footage of environmentally progressive owners such as Stonyfield Farms’ Gary Hirschberg and Polyface Farms’ Joe Salatin who both proudly declare and demonstrate how food can be produced honestly and without a wall of secrecy. Like the Wizard of Oz, Food, Inc. reveals that cow behind the curtain.

Already this docu pic has several large food conglomerates just a tad worried with companies like Monsanto and the American Meat Institute creating their own websites in response to the film. It’s curious why it took till now to get a response from these food giants because according to the filmmakers representatives from Monsanto, Tyson, Perdue and Smithfield, declined to be interviewed for the movie.

Food, Inc. comes off less like a documentary and more like a food based 1984 where the food conglomerates act like Big Brother. Parts of this film appear to be as scary as any recent horror film. But consider, most horror films are works of fiction while this film deals with stuff that sits on your dinner plate.

Source: Sustainablog

FARMER-IN-CHIEF Guerrylla-Warrior: 'We Need To 'Cull' The Surplus Population'

Geo-Eco :: SQWorms

“A principle of reality is that great secrets are right in front of you. You go right past them, not realizing what you have been looking at.”GEO-ECO GREEAN FARMER Documentary Resources Archive: ***** Orwell Rolls in His Grave (01:45:18 min) ***** Hero of Our Time: Milton William Cooper, USAF & US Navy (Ret), author: Behold a Pale Horse ***** Final Warning: History of the New World Order; by David Allen Rivera, before the Prophecy Club (02:42:31 min) ***** Gods Banker & the Black Friar Secrets of Terror: The Vatican, Mafia's Millions, Gelli & P2 Masonic Lodge's Tyranny.. ***** Lords of the Mafia: The Chinese Triads Secret Societies, & their Role in World Heroin Drug Trade ***** Gold Derivative Banking Crisis: Gold Rush 21: GATA's warnings to Senate & House Banking Committee, Fed. Res. Bank & Treasury Sec. ***** Big Brother's All-Seeing Eye Surveillance Grid: Orwellian Ubiquitous Computing Builds Ultimate Surveillance Society.. ***** Iron Mountain Blueprint to Tyranny Full RARE Documentary (02:20:55 min) & Iron Mountain Report ***** Zeitgeist & Addendum Documentaries: Theosophy, Socialism, new NWO Perspectives & Reviews ***** John F. Kennedy Assassination & Kennedy's Prespective on Secret Societies Geopolitical Influence ***** Waco: Rules of Engagement, Fifth Estate Production ***** Compromised: CIA, Drugs, Black Ops, White House, Wall Street, Drug Money & Wall Street Debt Refinancing, and the Economy... ***** CIA Black Ops: From Jonestown to Waco, by SpirituallySmart ***** Black Ops Marine & (MKLULTRA Project Talent's) The Ultimate Warrior ***** History of Freemasonry: The LightBringers (The Emissaries of Jahbulon), by Juri Lina ***** Vatican Assassins: History of the Jesuit Order, by Eric Jon Phelps ***** Wake Up Call!! ***** The True Story of the Bilderberg Group, by Daniel Estulin ***** The Money Masters: How International Bankers Gained Control of the Federal Reserve ***** Nick Begich: HAARP History | Angels Don't Play This HAARP: Advances in Tesla Technology | Psychotronic Mind Control & Weather Modification ***** "Zero": An Investigation into 9-11, by Guillietto Chiesa ***** Discovery Science: Owning the Weather, DossierOnlineUK ***** Owning the Weather, by A Head Above the Clouds Production ***** Playing God with the Weather, Science of Superstorms, by Fiona Scott, BBC ***** Committee of 300 & Illuminati, by Dr. John Coleman ***** Gladio ("the sword"), by Allan Francovich, BBC Timewatch ***** In Lies We Trust: The CIA, Hollywood & Bioterrorism, by Dr. Len Horowitz ***** I.O.U.S.A., by Patric Creadon ***** Advertising and the End of the World, by Media Education Foundation ***** 911 Ripple Effect, by William Lewis & Dave von Kleist ***** Fabled Enemies, by Alex Jones ***** Why We Fight, by Eugene Jarecki ***** WACO: Rules of Engagement, by William Gazecki ***** The Trap: What Happened to Our Dream of Freedom?, by Adam Curtis, BBC ***** Israeli Lobby: Influence of AIPAC on US Foreign Policy, by Tegenlicht ***** Secrets of the CIA, by Danny Wallace, SkyOne ***** The Secret Goverment, by Bill Moyers, PBS ***** Secrets of the CIA ***** The Power of Nightmares, by Adam Curtis, BBC ***** An Inconvenient Truth, by David Guggenheim ***** The End of Suburbia: Oil Depletion & the Collapse of the American Dream, by Barrie Zwicker ***** The Century of the Self, by Adam Curtis, BBC ***** A Crude Awakening: The Oil Crash, by Basil Gelpke & Ray McCormack ***** Population, Arithmetic & Energy, by Prof. Albert A. Bartlett, Boulder Co ***** Loose Change, by Louder than Words ***** Iraq for Sale: The War Profiteers, by Robert Greenwald ***** The Oil Factor: Behind the War on Terror, by Free Will Productions ***** Oil, Smoke & Mirrors, by Ronan Doyle ***** Iatrogenocide: The Biotechnology, Politics, and Economics of Modern Pandemics, by Dr. Len Horowitz ***** Healing Celebrations, by Dr. Len Horowitz ***** Denial Stops Here: From 9-11 to Peak Oil & Beyond, by Michael C. Ruppert ***** Power of Community: How Cuba Survived Peak Oil, by The Community Solution ***** Crude Impact, by James Jandak Wood ***** Healing Codes for the Biological Apocalypse, by Dr. Len Horowitz ***** Anthrax, Smallpox, Vaccinations & the Mark of the Beast, by Dr. Len Horowitz ***** Truth & Lies of 9/11, by Michael C. Ruppert ***** 911 In Plane Sight, by Dave von Kleist ***** LOVE: The Real Da Vinci Code, by Dr. Len Horowitz ***** The Corporation, by Mark Achbar ***** Star Wars Weapons & End Times Warfare, by Dr. Len Horowitz ***** SPIN: The Art of Selling War, by Josh Rushing, USMC & AlJazeera ***** Winter Soldier: Iraq & Afghanistan, by David Zeiger ***** Sir, No Sir!, The GI Revolt, by David Zeiger ***** The Future of Food, by Lily Films ***** America: Freedom to Fascism, by Aaron Russo ***** Emerging Viruses: AIDS & Ebola: Nature, Accident or Intentional?, by Dr. Len Horowitz ***** DNA: Pirates of the Sacred Spiral, by Dr. Len Horowitz ***** Disclosure Project: National Press Club & Witnesses Testimony ***** Death in the Air: Globalism, Terrorism & Toxic Warfare, by Dr. Len Horowitz ***** Beyond Treason, by William Lewis ***** 911: The Octopus & Military Strategy ***** The Great Conspiracy: The 9/11 News Special You Never Saw, by Barrie Zwicker ***** CIA & Pentagon Perspective: Overpopulation & Resource Wars *****