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I guess… — 8 Comments

  1. This one really gets me. I can tell you that when this gov’t controls the goods, the goods get distributed to buddies and white guys aren’t buddies.

    I had a friend who broke his back, kept working on pain pills after too short a recovery. This was in the good days of the housing boom and he was a housing contractor. But he was pulled over and got a DUI for pills. Broke probation, couldn’t handle the pricks both of and in the system. Finally, he’s down and out after years of paying into the sytem. How do you think his welfare, his Medicaid, his assistance was handled? By fat husbandless bitter mostly black likely lesbos who delighted in his suffering. That was ten years ago and woke me up to the fact that all my retirement, medical and everything had to be sans gov’t.

    Obama and his grotesque administration have an underside of bullying and hate against white men that longs to be unleased.

  2. Actually, there was a very positive upside to realizing the need for complete and total independence. Coming soon is a conflaguration that will make the 1930’s look wonderful. Simply stated, the U.S. just printed money so everyone else did. The financial people know the game is up and have just said “fuck it.” It will be a world wide financial implosion with a call for gov’t to feed and save people. When that happens, if you’re old and white, you’re expendable. How are them death panels workin for ya?

  3. And yet i had said over n over that they use and have always used coded words to jndicate or as signposts for collective action.

    Name your org the progressive liberation front for peoples [insert fake object here]
    They will then move money your way because they know togive based on code and take based on code

    And you will never find a paper with instructions as its unspoken custom

    As words fall jnn out of fashion the keys change
    So its no linger fashionable to denote commjnism by using league as elanore roosevelt did… or the league of women voters. As the process is to see where things are going, then accelerate them to claim credit for making it happen and the rubes r to stupid!!!!! They never get it as their ego wont let fhem admit it!!!! The end is a fait accopli given that ego would rather die than admit (and so it will)

    The word leaguecwas replaced by democratic which was replaced by poeples n underground which was replaced by commjnity n social

    So the lid became sds which became weather underground and so on… spanning 100 years n name changes to wash each generations much off and dustance from thierprior sheeps skin

  4. Students for a Democratic Society (2006 organization)
    came from
    Students for a Democratic Society
    came from

    The New Left was a term used mainly in the United Kingdom and United States in reference to activists, educators, agitators and others in the 1960s and 1970s who sought to implement a broad range of reforms, in contrast to earlier leftist or Marxist movements that had taken a more vanguardist approach to social justice and focused mostly on labor unionization and questions of social class.[2][3] They rejected involvement with the labor movement and Marxism’s historical theory of class struggle.[4] In the U.S., the “New Left” was associated with the Hippie movement and college campus protest movements. The British “New Left” sought to correct the perceived errors of “Old Left” parties in the post—World War II period

    SDS developed from the Student League for Industrial Democracy (SLID), the youth branch of a socialist educational organization known as the League for Industrial Democracy (LID). LID descended from the Intercollegiate Socialist Society, started in 1905.

    as the weather underground was another arm of SDS

    The Intercollegiate Socialist Society was a Socialist student organization from 1905-1921. It attracted many prominent intellectuals and writers and acted as the unofficial Socialist Party of America student wing. While not an “activist” group in the modern sense, the Society sponsored lecture tours, magazines, seminars and discussion circles all over the US aimed at propagating socialist idea among Americas college population. The group expanded into a more “Fabian” philosophy in the 1920s that did not focus exclusively, or even primarily on college students. To symbolize the shift in emphasis the group changed its name to the League for Industrial Democracy.

    In 1960 the League for Industrial Democracy’s student affiliate, the Student League for Industrial Democracy, reconstituted itself as Students for a Democratic Society. Under that name it would go on to become the most prominent campus activist organization of the 1960s.

    and you can go to marxist.org to read about them

    http://www.marxisthistory.org/subject/usa/eam/iss.html

    The Intercollegiate Socialist Society (ISS) was a national non-party group dedicated to the organization of current and former collegians for the socialist cause and the spreading of socialist ideas on campus.

    The ISS was formally launced at a meeting held in the afternoon of Sept. 12, 1905 at Peck’s Restaurant in downtown New York. More than 50 men and women were in attendance to give birth to the new organization, including such luminaries as Leonard Abbott, Mary Beard, Crystal Eastman, W.J. Ghent, and Gaylord Wilshire, in addition to a young Junior from Weslyan University named Harry Laidler. Upton Sinclair called the meeting to order. The gathering decided to accept the name “Intercollegiate Socialist Society” and to open membership to college students, teachers, or graduates. Students were to be organized into college chapters on each campus and the central organization was to be funded by these local groups remitting a percentage of the dues collected to the national society. Officers were to consist of a President, two Vice Presidents, a Secretary, and a Treasurer — each elected annually by vote of the whole society. Governance was to be handled by these five officers and six additional members of an Executive Committee. Term of office was to begin in April of each year.

    The first slate of officers elected at the Sept. 1905 organizational meeting included the following:

    President: Jack London; First Vice President: Upton Sinclair; Second Vice President: Graham Phelps Stokes; Secretary: M.R. Holbrook; Treasurer: Rev. Owen Lovejoy; Executive Committee: Rev. George Willis Cooke, Morris Hillquit, Robert Hunter, Harry Laidler, Katherine M.Meserole, George H. Strobell. Of this group of socialist worthies, only Harry Laidler was actually a current college student.

    so when you donated to the local branch, the main branch got funded… other things like changing donating laws, and using organizations like IRS and so on to do dirty work

    this is a old history and easy to read on wiki…
    but i recommend it endlessly…

    Organization proceeded slowly, with the group banned from many campuses by conservative administrators, who generally held veto power over the formation of student organizations in this period. Chapters were often small and their names frequently did not emphasize their connection to the national society or even with the socialist cause, as was the case, for example, with the Wesleyan Social Study Club headed by Harry Laidler, one of the first organizaed and affiliated with the ISS. A second chapter was formed at Columbia University in New York City, with a student named Walter Lippmann playing the leading role. Over the course of the first three years, affiliated socialist clubs were organized at Harvard, Princeton, Barnard, New York University Law School, and the Uniiversity of Pennsylvania. In addition to meeting to discuss problems of the day, these groups distributed socialist propaganda and arranged lectures on their respective campuses in an attempt to extend support for the socialist cause.

    In May 1907, Jack London resigned as President of the ISS and Graham Phelps Stokes assumed the post.

    In the fall of 1907, the ISS Executive Committee decided to hire an organizer on a temporary basis, and a young socialist named Fred H. Merrick went to work in January 1908. From 1907 through 1910, the ISS maintained its office at the Rand School of Social Science in New York City.

    and now you know

    is it any wonder that the children of their children act out and do so without getting orders? the whole point of a system without orders is the ability to deny you know whats going on!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! to hide a conspiracy hidden as social tradition, and causes, right in front of the people who work to defend it from themselves!!!!!!!

  5. The arbitrary and capricious application of power is the foundation of tyranny.

    This is the system we’ve created despite Hayke’s warnings. Statutes are overly broad and vague and interpreted and applied by not-so-independent bureaucrats.

    Self-rule is government rule. Good is bad.

  6. Will this get an MSM treatment? Probably not. After all, the brother’s foundation is for helping poor black people in Kenya. Even if it doesn’t really help anyone except Malik, the intentions are there. In the progressive world intentions matter.

  7. The progressive world is a cult world so it follows the cult method of establishing a following completely devoid of understanding of what the inner circle is doing. For the outer circle, intentions matter and that “mattering’ is manipulated by the inner circle. The inner circle could give a shit about intentions. It only has one intention like all cults: death.

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