American White Separatist Finds Shared Values with Israel

David Sheen writes:

In an interview I conducted in March 2014 at his home near Washington, D.C., Jared Taylor, a prominent proponent of a White United States of America, stressed this point:

“American president after president… talks about the importance of maintaining a Jewish state of Israel. And yet, they don’t seem to have the slightest notion that… the population policies of Israel, are in complete contradiction with the ones that they proclaim for the United States. As I recall, [former Israeli Prime Minister] Yitzhak Rabin, not too long before he was assassinated, he said that he had done many things that he thought were good for Israel, but what he cared about most was that Israel remained at least 80% Jewish… People take this absolutely at face value, they see absolutely nothing wrong with this. But if an American politician were to say, ‘What I care about most in my policies is to maintain a United States that is at least 80% white,’ that would be considered hate mongering. That would be considered Nazism. And yet, frankly, I don’t see the difference.”

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Rabbi Aaron Rakeffet-Rothkoff Says YICC Wanted To Record His Shabbat Talks

In this 2014 talk, Rabbi Aaron Rakeffet-Rothkoff says (about 37 minutes in): “I had this shaila (rabbinic question) at Young Israel of Century City. They wanted to record me [on Shabbat]. This way they can hear it again. They have a janitor there. He loves Jews. He would do anything they say. They said, we will arrange it during the week. I said no, you can’t do it.”

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Dennis Prager ‘No Tzaddik’

The only leading Orthodox rabbi who frequently cites Dennis Prager is Aaron Rakeffet-Rothkoff. In this talk, Who Can You Trust?, he says: “Dennis Prager, who is not a tzaddik (righteous man) considering the education he got and the home he came from, but he is very insightful. Dennis Prager says that when he went to high school [1962-1966], he went to Flatbush Yeshiva, but if he had gone to a general [public] high school, he would have gotten the same values.”

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I Don’t Expect Muslims To Care About Non-Muslims

I don’t spend much time thinking about Muslim suffering so I don’t expect Muslims to spend much time thinking about non-Muslim suffering.

The Los Angeles Times reports today:

French Muslims resent scrutiny after Charlie Hebdo attack

“To be honest, most people [prisoners] were happy about what happened at Charlie Hebdo,” Sofian said. “I felt much worse about the children killed in Gaza, their bodies placed in plastic bags — that made me cry. But no one marched in support of those kids here like they did for those journalists.”

That makes perfect sense. Muslims side with their own, such as fellow Muslims in Gaza.

Given that most people tend to side with their own (be that bond genetic or religious or otherwise), it is a disaster to increase diversity in a society.

Chaim Amalek: “I have attended lectures at a local Scandinavian Church where the Norwegian pastor extolled African and Muslim immigration into Scandinavia and demanded more. This pastor was no crypto-Jew or Zionist, he was a pure-blooded WASP. And not one of the other WASPS in attendance even rolled their eyes. So it is with sunset peoples.”

Jason Richwine wrote for the American Heritage Foundation Aug. 12, 2009:

Science is telling us that ethnic diversity causes significant problems by diminishing valuable social capital. What then should we do about it?

It was not the kind of message a Harvard seminar expects to hear. Ethnic diversity causes a lot of problems, our guest speaker told us. It reduces interpersonal trust, civic engagement, and charitable giving. It causes us to disengage from society, like turtles shrinking into their shells, reducing our overall quality of life. The more diversity we experience in our lives, the less happy we are.

I came to Harvard to study public policy in the fall of 2004. All of the first-years like me had to take a special seminar class where we would discuss the philosophy of science and the nature of good research. The best class days featured established scholars who would come to present their own papers, which were real-life examples of good research.

The guest speaker who came to discuss diversity was political scientist Robert Putnam, who is something of a celebrity in academic circles. With the publication of his 1995 article “Bowling Alone,” Putnam helped bring the issues of social trust and civic participation to the forefront of social science. His article became a popular book, also called Bowling Alone, in 2000. Written for a general audience, the book chronicled the rapid decline in civic engagement that had taken place in the United States since 1950, and argued that communities without strong social ties are less happy and less successful. The article and the book garnered Putnam numerous media appearances and spawned reams of response articles in academia.

Putnam began by telling us about one result he encountered that was thoroughly upsetting to him—the more ethnically diverse a community is, the less social capital it possesses. When a person lives in a diverse community, he trusts everyone less, including those of his own ethnic group.

So how did Putnam come to conclude that ethnic diversity is so problematic? The answer begins with the notion of “social capital,” which Putnam defines in simple terms—“social networks and the associated norms of reciprocity and trustworthiness.” Social capital turns out to be an exceptionally valuable commodity. Building complex networks of friends and associates, trusting others to keep their word, and maintaining social norms and expectations all grease the wheels of business by enabling cooperation.

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IQ Correlates With Goodness

Not all high IQ people are moral, but high IQ people are more likely to empathize, to understand the benefits of cooperation, and to the see the future more clearly.

In the 2014 movie, A Most Violent Year, about an immigrant family in New York in 1981, the protagonist goes to buy valuable property from a high IQ Orthodox rabbi who displays considerable empathy: “My people have gone over your books. I know this is a great deal of money for you. Why do you want this polluted dirty piece of earth?”

“I inherited this property from my uncle… This place can do nothing for me. I offered to lease this property to you for a fair price but you’re not interested. Why?”

“You have only 30 days to close the transaction. No extensions, no contingencies. If you fulfill the contract, the property is yours. If you don’t, we keep the money… I like you but the only reason we choose you is because of the favorable conditions of the contract.”

I’ve never had a shul rabbi with a lower IQ than me. You’ll notice that in all priest, minister, rabbi jokes, the rabbi always comes off the smartest and most pragmatic.

Morality depends upon empathy which depends upon the ability for abstract thought. Higher IQ people have more ability to think abstractly and empathically. They have more ability and inclination to place themselves in the shoes of others. They’re more likely to look for win-win solutions.

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Israel As An Ethno-State

Chaim Amalek: “Israel’s fundamental problem with Western elites is that it is to them an embarrassing anachronism, an ethno-state that is a throwback to a time when nations like the United States and Great Britain had a racial sense of themselves that carried over into exclusionary immigration policies. The elites have abandoned this world view, so how can we expect them to favor a nation – Israel – that was founded on such views?”

Steve Sailer writes: “But gentiles aren’t really supposed to mention the word hasbara. Jim Clancy, a three decade-long on-air talking head at CNN, got into a Twitter dispute over Charlie Hebdo with people he accused of being hasbara. And now, pour encourager les autres, he’s gone.”

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The Battle For Australia

I’m reading Bob Wurth’s book on WWII, The Battle for Australia. Apparently:

* Australia was completely unable to defend itself. Japan could have invaded anywhere in Australia and taken control. The country was theirs for the taking. They simply decided not to take it. Australia depended on the Americans to rescue them.

* When the Japs bombed Darwin, Australian military looted the town after the raid. I find it hard to believe that Japan and Germany’s military would have acted similarly in their home countries. Japan and Germany enjoyed more group solidarity than did Australians.

* Australian unions, including vital coal miners and wharfies, repeatedly went on strike when the nation needed their labor the most.

* Australia’s prime minister told the press that the Allies had broken Japan’s communication codes.

* General MacArthur said in 1942: “This war would be a lesson to Australia. She must never again engage in valiant, cavalier expeditions overseas, leaving herself unprepared for the shock of battle on her own shores.”

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Islam Does Not Believe In Freedom Of Speech

Free speech and a multi-racial, multi-cultural society are at odds with one another. Lots of different groups are going to have different life results and lots of resentments against other groups. Free speech will allow them to express those resentments and then different groups will get riled up and you’ll have riots.

Here’s a Muslim perspective:

After yesterday’s Paris shooting, in which four journalists on satirical publication Charlie Hebdo were killed, Muslim activist Anjem Choudary has written an open letter entitled ‘People Know The Consequences’. In the letter, which was published by USA Today, Choudary says: “Contrary to popular misconception, Islam does not mean peace but rather means submission to the commands of Allah alone. Therefore, Muslims do not believe in the concept of freedom of expression, as their speech and actions are determined by divine revelation and not based on people’s desires.”

He adds: “Although Muslims may not agree about the idea of freedom of expression, even non-Muslims who espouse it say it comes with responsibilities. In an increasingly unstable and insecure world, the potential consequences of insulting the Messenger Muhammad are known to Muslims and non-Muslims alike.”

The post asks: “Why did France allow the tabloid to provoke Muslims?” and Choudary adds: “Western governments are content to sacrifice liberties and freedoms when being complicit to torture and rendition — or when restricting the freedom of movement of Muslims, under the guise of protecting national security.”

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How Do You Deal With Racism?

Prominent British journalist Andrew Marr proposed:

And the final answer, frankly, is the vigorous use of state power to coerce and repress. It may be my Presbyterian background, but I firmly believe that repression can be a great, civilising instrument for good. Stamp hard on certain ‘natural’ beliefs for long enough and you can almost kill them off. The police are first in line to be burdened further, but a new Race Relations Act will impose the will of the state on millions of other lives too.

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People Often Serve Their Genetics More Than Their Host Nation

Chinese in the diaspora often act with more loyalty towards China than to their host nation. The same type of things often goes for Jews, Muslims, Blacks, Mexicans, Japanese, etc. It’s a tribal mentality.

I’m reading Bob Wurth’s book on WWII, The Battle for Australia.

He writes about Japan’s vicious 1942 air attack on Darwin, Australia’s biggest city up north: “For years Japanese agents, including members of the Japanese population living in Darwin, had sent home intelligence and had photographed and mapped the Northern Territory coastline, especially near Darwin.”

That a nation such as the United States, while at war with Japan, would want to remove its Japanese citizens from the West Coast during that contest, is entirely rational.

In 1942, Australia’s prime minister, John Curtin, cabled America’s president, Franklin Roosevelt: “We are now, with a small population in the only white man’s territory south of the equator, beset grievously.”

It was natural then to point out the white solidarity that existed between Australia, America, England, Canada, and New Zealand. These were white countries of British origin that spoke English and rallied to each other’s aid. Australia was then 99% white and America was 90% white.

Britain’s first lord of the Admiralty, Albert Alexander, said in 1942: “We have a duty towards out kith and kin in the Commonwealth.”

These ties were not just ideological but also genetic.

The late psychologist J. Philippe Rushton proposed genetic similarity theory:

Most theories of ethno-political conflict and nationalism focus on cultural, cognitive and economic factors, often with the assumption that modernisation will gradually reduce the effect of local antagonisms and promote the growth of more universalistic societies (Smith 1998). However, purely socio-economic explanations seem inadequate to account for the rapid rise of nationalism in the former Soviet Bloc and too weak to explain the lethality of the conflicts
between Tutsis and Hutus in Rwanda, Hindus, Muslims and Sikhs in the
Indian subcontinent, and Croats, Serbs, Bosnians and Albanians in the
former Yugoslavia, or even the level of animosity between Blacks, Whites and Hispanics in the US. Typically, analysts have also failed to consider the ethno-political repercussions of the unprecedented movement of peoples taking place in the world today (van den Berghe 2002).

One of the hallmarks of true science is what Edward O. Wilson (1998)
termed the unity of knowledge through the principle of consilience, in
which the explanations of phenomena at one level are grounded in those at a lower level. Two prominent examples are the understanding of genetics in terms of biochemistry once the structure of the DNA molecule was worked out and, in turn, of chemistry in terms of atomic physics. Anthony D. Smith’s theory of ethno-symbolism unifies knowledge in the consilient manner through its integration of history and psychology, thereby solving the problem that nationalism poses for purely socio-economic theories – the phenomena of mass devotion and the belief that one’s own group is favourably unique, even ‘chosen’ (e.g. Smith 2000 and 2004; Guibernau and Hutchinson 2004; Hutchinson 2000). With its emphasis on a group’s preexisting kinship, religious and belief systems fashioned into a sense of common identity and shared culture, however mythologised, Smith’s theory explains what purely socio-economic theories do not, why the ‘glorious dead’ fought and died for their country. It is more robust than other theories because its research analyses show that myths, memories and especially symbols, foment and maintain a sense of common identity among the people
unified in a nation.

Japan’s Navy wanted to invade Australia in 1942 but Japan’s Army was “wary of the fighting spirit of the Australians.” (Wurth, pg. 103)

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