Two traditional American Heroes: Davy Crockett, who gave his life in the racial liberation of White Texas from Mexican rule, and Col. Charles A. Lindbergh. Lindbergh showed heroism when he risked his life to be the first person to fly solo across the Atlantic Ocean. Later, he showed heroism of a different sort, when he stood up to the Jews and the Roosevelt regime who were conspiring to bring the US into the war against Hitler.
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Of Heroes and Celebrities
I AM NO LONGER a
young man.
I remember what it was like to grow up in White America in the 1950s and
1960s. One of the many things that was different in those days is that
we had heroes to look up to.
I define a hero as
someone who gives or risks his (or her) life to defend others or to
advance a worthy cause.
In those days, every young boy
aspired to be a hero and every young girl wanted to grow up to marry
one.
Some heroes are famous. Back
in the days of my youth, we idolized Davy Crockett (who gave his life at
the Alamo in liberating Texas from a Mexican rule). On a different
level, we admired George Washington, who led men on the field of battle
to give this land its political independence. Southerners likewise
adored Robert E. Lee. But there were also everyday heroes (as some might
call them) such as the firefighter who rushes into a burning building to
save a family trapped inside, or the soldier who throws himself on a
live grenade to save his comrades. Of course, women could be heroes,
too, such as the mother who puts her body between her child and a mad
dog, or a nurse who risks her life treating plague victims.
But as the '60s blurred into
the '70s, we heard less and less of heroes (whom the Jewish-controlled
media began to depict as "boring" and "corny") and instead heard more
and more about "anti-heroes." The anti-hero combined behavior that was
often admirable with actions that sometimes contravened traditional
White morality.
At some point in the '70s, we
began to hear that, in the Black community, the pimp was a "cultural
hero." Later it became the gangster who was the idol of Blacks. Remember
the oversize tattoo that Tupac Shakur had on his torso, proudly
proclaiming "THUG LIFE?"
The controlled media also
began to describe certain overpaid professional athletes as "sports
heroes" - although there is little about playing baseball or basketball
that is truly heroic! The female version of the sports hero was the
"supermodel," who was held up as an aspirational ideal for young White
girls. Do you remember Kate Moss and "heroin chic?" These women, many of
whom were genuinely beautiful, were known to be unnaturally thin (and
hence infertile), using cocaine to suppress their appetites. They were
also famous for their sexual promiscuity and were frequently praised for
being race-mixers.
But all that is behind us now,
for the new idol in popular culture is the "celebrity." And what is a
celebrity? Well, it is simply someone who is famous for being
well-known. One does not have to actually
accomplish anything to be a celebrity - much less risk their life!
Simply accumulate followers on social media and get mentioned on TMZ,
and voilà - you are now at the pinnacle of
the social pyramid.
The word "hero" is almost
never used these days, except maybe in a perverse sense, such as when
the Negro petty criminal and drug addict George Floyd died of a fentanyl
overdose while in police custody.
But I sense the winds of
change in the air: I predict that there will be a rebirth, both of the
Hero as an idol to be admired, and of heroism as behavior to be
emulated. For heroism is innate in the
racial soul of the Aryan.
And as our other racial instincts also will be reawakened in the hard
years that lie ahead, so the mighty fighting spirit and courage of the
White Man will again come to the fore!
– Martin Kerr
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Author: Martin Kerr is the Chief of Staff of the NEW ORDER and Secretary General pro tem of the World Union of National Socialists.