Sunday, June 9, 2013

Tony Bain on Ed West and 'The Diversity Illusion' - and why white Britain is rapidly dying

The Diversity Illusion

Tony Bain, American Renaissance, June 7, 2013
LondonFlood
One Briton who sees clearly.
Let us start with the facts as author Ed West sees them:
The latest projections suggest that white Britons will become a minority sometime around 2066, in a population of 80 million, which means that within little over a century Britain will have gone from an almost entirely homogenous society to one where the native ethnic group is a minority. That is, historically, an astonishing transformation. No people in history have become a minority of the citizenry in their own country except through conquest, yet the English, always known for their reticence, may actually achieve this through embarrassment.  . . .

     Sounds like a very worthy book. Have not read it yet, but my reaction to the review is that there are two missing elements:

     First, No doubt the British character had to have played a significant part in all this, but if this is the major explanation, why is virtually the same eager lemmings-off-the-cliff behavior taking place among whites in all Western nations?

     Second, does the book, as the reviewer seems to indicate, neglect trying to explain why the charge of 'racism' ever became such an atomic bomb in the first place? Again, not just in Britain, but all across the West? Has the entire West come down with a case of British 'embarrassment' disease? Seems doubtful. Along the same lines, we hear that Enoch Powell was such a colorful and divisive character that he pretty much singlehandedly ended the possibility of any calm and rational discussion of race. But why then are there no such significant discussions in all of the West? Or was it that Powell was made to be the perfect foil, as was George Wallace or David Duke in the United States. Again, if these personages appeared throughout the West, something bigger was probably afoot having to do with the control of the media and what various elites had already preordained as acceptable. 

     For the best understanding of how the foundation for all of this was set down in the United States I would recommend 'The Culture of Critique' by Kevin MacDonald. Of course every nation has some unique characteristics. Here in America we had the 'Civil Rights Movement' and the radicalization of a generation due to the Vietnam War, both of which really helped lock open-borders anti-'racist' Cultural Marxism into place after it had already been intellectually deeply prepared by the West's prime destroyers (which they would probably see as actions of vital preemptive self-defense in the ongoing clash of civilizations with the West).

 

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