Restoring Identity through Fragmentation
THE collective amnesia that characterises much of contemporary American discourse often degenerates into pure dementia. Those descended from European settlers conveniently forget that there were other people living on the Continent long before their ancestors began to arrive in significant numbers. Not content with disrupting the tribal order of those people and systematically herding them into 'reservations', the incoming ruling class set about filling the country with Black Africans and using them as slaves. These shameful episodes do not prevent many writers from complaining that America has since become a multi-racial quagmire, or ignoring the fact that America itself was always going to end up as a giant melting-pot into which the colours and creeds of Europe, Africa and Asia are discarded like outdated fashions.
In the larger towns and cities of America, not to mention Europe, this process has become completely irreversible and whilst it would clearly be unreasonable for anyone to suggest that inter-racial families should be torn asunder, there is no reason why those on the periphery cannot revive their authentic identities and raise aloft the standards of an organic and fully-differentiated humanity.
Whilst the expression of one's cultural and ethnic pride is one thing, if people are to keep their heads above the swirling waters of forced miscegenation then it stands to reason that the ultimate collapse of the repressive nation-state is absolutely essential. Break the distorted image of the globalist jigsaw and rediscover the fragmented pieces of your own identity.


