Cultural Marxism Demands a Sacrifice
Frank Borzellieri
It has been nearly a hundred years since Sir James Frazer completed his tremendous work of anthropology The Golden Bough. The book scandalized many Christians, suggesting as it did that the theme of a divine person sacrificed and then reborn has been common since deep antiquity and across all agricultural societies. That theme, argued Frazer, often found expression in the annual killing of a kingat harvest time, his spirit then resurrected in the spring.
Cultural Marxism, the current state religion of the West, seems to be reverting to that notion of an annual sacrifice, though with only two percent of us employed in agriculture nowadays, we’re not adhering very strictly to the proper seasonal schedule. Nor, alas, have we yet figured out the resurrection feature.
All that came to mind while I was watching Jared Taylor’s interview with Frank Borzellieri. .. .
If only these defenestrations were limited to once a year.
Although someone would need to be either independently wealthy or to practically take a vow of poverty, we need a few people who are willing to seek our support as our political leaders--serious leaders. It takes courage for anyone to run for office as a white-identity candidate, even as a colorful political gadfly, but we are beyond that now.
Rapidly changing demographics will make it almost impossible to win anything beyond the local or congressional level, but the purpose would be to educate and organize for the time ahead when the multicultural empire increasingly unravels.
We also need an organization like the SPLC. Not like their lying moneymaking scam, but one that reveals those who are trying to and succeeding in destroying Western civilization. This organization would pursue the facts instead of spreading innuendo and lies. It would also support individual victims of the War On The West and counterattack their attackers.
In the meantime our new leaders will not be the type who simply want to make droll remarks and continually acknowledge that they are not going to win anyway. No matter how seemingly hopeless, leaders run to win. Winners run to win. Someday we will win.
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Charles Martel