Act Out
In desperate times, people are forced to do desperate things.
But not in America. The typical American will embrace drugs and homelessnes rather than fight the system that drives them into the jaws of drugs and homelessness. Apathy and homelessness are virtual virtues in the deranged corporate warehouse of Seattle.
Unlike most wannabe activists, I am not anti-violence. I cheered when I leanred that Luigi Mangione had gunned down a corrupt CEO, just as I cheer when I hear about someone blowing up a synagogue. (My favorite was that wackjob Jew in Florida who opened fire on a passing car carrying fellow Jews, who he mistook for Palestinians. LOL!)
However, I am not in the habit of blowing things up myself, nor would I be quick to urge someone else to, not necessarily because it’s wrong but because it’s dangerous. Ted Kaczynski (aka the Unabomber) died in prison, and Leonard Peltier wasn’t released until he was 80, even though he may not have been guilty of the crime he was accused of. His faililng health prompted “Genocide Joe” Biden (who pardoned hundreds of people, largely Jews and people whose last names were Biden) to commute his sentence to house arrest.
U.S. soldiers who gang rape 14-year-old Muslims typically get off easier than people who fight for the environment. On May 21, 2001, arsonists associated with the Earth Liberation Front (ELF) firebombed the University of Washington’s Center for Urban Horticulture in Seattle. The fire caused roughly $7 million in damage and destroyed research facilities, offices, archives, and plant collections. The attackers believed the facility was involved in genetic engineering research. (I wish they had blown up Bill Gates’ home.) Five participants were tracked down by the FBI and prosecuted except for one who committed suicide.
The Earth Liberation Front was also implicated in the destruction of four multimillion-dollar homes (“McMansions”) in the Echo Lake/Woodinville area north of Seattle in 2008. Fortunately, no one was convicted for the Street of Dreams arson. However, the FBI has vigorously pursued ELF and other environmental activists while ignoring Jewish scumbags who are far greater criminals.
In 2002, Seattle Mayor Paul Schell was assaulted with a bullhorn by James Garrett (a.k.a. Omari Tahir-Garrett) as Schell campaigned for re-election near the spot where a Black motorist had been murdered by Seattle police officers. Garrett was sentenced to 21 months in Seattle, while Schell lost his re-election and died in disgrace. I cheered my ass off when I heard about Schell getting clobbered.
The Power of One ↑
Moral of the story: if you want to be a hero, you know what to do, but think about it carefully. As they say, the pen is mightier than the sword, and you might have an impact by simply speaking out. After perusing my campaign website, you’ve probably noticed that I speak out more boldly and forcefully than any other ten candidates combined. I like to think of it as verbal warfare, a war of ideas.
Have I had the same success as Luigi Mangione, the Unabomber, or the Earth Liberation Front? No. In all honesty, I’m jealous. But at least I’m alive and not in solitary confinement. Moreover, my warnings and predictions ring truer with every passing year. I have an enormous feeling of vindication.
If a civil war ever erupts in the U.S., I already have a list of targets I want to blow up. However, it seems somewhat pointless for one person to go on the warpath while the rest of society sits on its collective fat butt.
In summary, if you have an urge to fight back, good for you. If you feel like you’re surrounded by hypocrisy and injustice, and you wish someone would put a bullet in Donald Trump’s head, nuke Microsoft’s campus, or round up every Jew in America, good for you.
Now take your righteous anger and channel it into words and ideas. Learn how to be a powerful speaker (a skill I sadly lack), writer, or thinker.
Always remember that you’re a free moral agent with the capacity to embrace violence, and don’t be intimidated by those mashed-potato-brained liberals who endlessly gush over non-violence. Think of yourself as locked and loaded, waiting for the right time, the right opportunity.
One of the saddest chapters of World War II was the Rape of Nanking. If you’ve never heard of it, it might be because the media is controlled by an army of Jews who will spend the rest of eternity crying over their imagined persecution, even as they have Holocaust welfare checks coming out of their assholes. The atrocities of Nanking are preserved in The Rape of Nanking, by Iris Chang, who I regard as a kindred spirit.
Below is a quote that sums up Chang’s guiding philosophy. Don’t just read it. Study it. Analyze it. Think about it.
“Please believe in THE POWER OF ONE. One person can make an enormous difference in the world. One person—actually, one idea—can start a war, or end one, or subvert an entire power structure. One discovery can cure a disease or spawn new technology to benefit or annihilate the human race. You as ONE individual can change millions of lives. Think big. Do not limit your vision and do not ever compromise your dreams or ideals.”
If you could have prevented the Rape of Nanking by killing one hundred Japanese soldiers or bombing Tokyo, would you have done it? What would you do to stop the carnage in Gaza, free the children trapped in Seattle’s derelict public schools, or save the planet?
Ironically, Chang ultimately made the same choice so many people on the streets of Seattle make—suicide. However, that’s another story, one part medical investigation, one part conspiracy. In my book, Iris Chang, Luigi Mangione, Malcolm X, and Che Guevara are all heroes. Mangione and El Che killed people, Malcom X dreamed of killing people, and Chang killed herself. We live in a strange world.