As the global society strains underneath its own bulk due to its incompetent response to the coronavirus and with millions out of work, we are witnessing a resurgence of “home agrarianism” on a micro scale. In addition, we are seeing a revolt against the global structure and attempted power grabs by the cretinous cosmopolitan elites. They are terrified that their project is falling apart. As usual, we are also subjected to the knee-jerk reactions of the morphing Alt-Right, as it becomes increasingly hostile towards Heritage America and embraces run-of-the-mill progressivism.
The grassroots protests against various overbearing government lockdowns are an indicator that your average working man is exhausted. He is exhausted of the system, of empty bank accounts, of maxed out credit cards, of shuttered small businesses, and empty grocery stores. All of these disruptions foisted on the citizenry have been implemented to save the global order and to shore up additional power for the Empire’s domestic control. The people are realizing this virus, while deadly, cannot be responded to in such a way. This is not sustainable. Destroying the working class, the middle class, and small business sector of the economy is not the answer.
Federal power grabs during a crisis are a given. These always occur, but this time whether it helps or hurts them remains to be seen. This cannot last because the people will not have it. The burning of 5G towers may not seem entirely related and the likelihood of them having anything to do with the coronavirus is probably nothing. But, these are still minor revolts against the global superstructure and the elites. I don’t mind one bit seeing a 5G tower get destroyed; after all, the towers are detrimental to our environment, wildlife, and potentially our health. The response to them is more important than these absurd ideas that the 5G towers help spread the virus.
We are also seeing a rise in community involvement and people interacting with their neighbors. People are recycling more of their glass and plastic for storage containers, growing their own food, and demonstrating self-reliance in a way not experienced in decades. The fragility of the system has been out on full display and the elites are terrified. Our people have known this was a house of cards waiting for a stiff breeze. It’s good that our people are still able to work with one another to make it through this crisis.
Unfortunately, some of those who claim to be in the Dissident Right have responded to this pandemic terribly. This has been an opportunity for us to make connections in our communities, churches, encourage regionalism, and, most importantly, demonstrate to our detractors that we genuinely care for our people. The thought leaders, with their OnlyFans accounts and leeching off their fanbase, have been reduced to lazily opining on Twitter, deriding fed up conservative (Heritage) Americans as both callous and dumb. These “leaders” have never really had any skin in the game. They’ve never struggled in a way we can relate to. None of these people have intact families, run a small business, or care about their community.
These thought leaders complain about the people not revolting over multiculturalism or other concerns of the White Nationalist movement (many of them valid, to be fair). However, being “white” in the American Empire means nothing, as it actually reduces and erases identity. The wignat hustlers have no people, or identity, outside their online echo chamber. And, they’re remarkabley similar to their urbanite cousins with respect to their contempt for the provincials. Their connection to working class Americans is practically nonexistent.
The Spanish Flu may have killed more people at this point, but the potential for COVID-19 is high due to urbanization and cramped cities. A return to the agrarian and rural life are entirely possible and reduce your chance of contracting such a virus. The labor you contribute on your own property, in order to sustain your family, is far more valuable than legal tender for your labor. It’s the way humanity interacted with nature for millennia and is the future for those who wish to thrive.
“The regular act of applied science is to introduce into labor a labor-saving device or a machine. Whether this is benefit depends on how far it is advisable to save the labor. The philosophy of applied science is generally quite sure that the saving of labor is a pure gain, and that the more of it the better. This is to assume that labor is an evil, that only the end of labor or the material product is good. On this assumption labor becomes mercenary and servile, and it is no wonder if many forms of modern labor are accepted without resentment though they are evidently brutalizing. The act of labor as one of the happy functions of human life has been in effect abandoned, and is practiced solely for its rewards.”
The Southern Agrarians
In much of the South, it isn’t too late to begin planting gardens. Chickens require little upkeep and obviously produce eggs you can use for protein. Pigs require relatively low maintenance and need very little space to rear. These are all things someone with a bit of property can do and, while there may be a bit of initial expense, it pays dividends in time. Right now, goods are flying off the shelves at the grocery stores. Seeds at many hardware stores are still fully in stock. Top soil can often be purchased for less than $2.00 for a square foot. 100 square foot of this soil can easily produce many pounds of beans, potatoes, carrots, and corn. Organic heirloom seeds can be purchased cheaply from these stores, and will continue to produce for years if you learn how to do so. With materials from that same store, you can easily purchase the materials to build your own chicken coop for less than $100.00 and keep four (4) chickens. They can live in a space little larger than a doghouse. Egg crates can be used to help start certain seeds. Much of what we have and throw away is easily reusable for such tasks.
We carry super computers in our pockets daily and we should use them to advance ourselves and create our independence from the crumbling global system. Secede in your mind and ignore those that would rather berate their people then help them. Resistance is fertile.
-By Dixie Anon
O I’m a good old rebel, now that’s just what I am. For this “fair land of freedom” I do not care at all. I’m glad I fit against it, I only wish we’d won, And I don’t want no pardon for anything I done.
I’m old enough to remember a day when my great grandmothers saved coffee cans full of buttons they’d salvaged from old, worn out clothing to sew on the new clothing they made themselves. They also raised large gardens year-in, year-out, produced their own dairy products, canned their own vegetables and had their own chicken farms, etc. A very good (female) friend of mine I’ve known … forever asked me the other day, “what is the future; what are we going to do?” My answer to her was simply this: “We’re going to reach back in time and re-learn and re-establish those lost arts our great grandmothers and fathers took for granted. We haven’t lost that knowledge altogether, it’s just been in hybernation for a few decades.”
Excellent answer Mr Morris, most of us are certainly trying to re-learn such skills now.
Yeah. Me and mine have been doing the same, to be perfectly honest. I have mentioned before that my MiL used to plant and harvest a garden that was an entire acre in full. She is the mother of four daughters (my wife being one, of course), and that we have plowed up and begun planting a section of the property amounting to 1/3 an acre this year. Which is approx. three times the size of my wife’s usual garden.
I have several friends and relatives (one of which is the woman I mentioned in the above comment) who raise chickens. Lots of chickens! We don’t have any chickens here at the house, but I am seriously considering getting some. In any case, there are no eggs being broken or thrown away in my little neck of the woods, I can assure you of that. My preference is for fresh eggs in any case, but like I’ve predicted before, they’re quickly becoming the preference of everyone around me too. Hence, our chicken coop is probably fixing to go up.
I also know lots of people in the cattle business. And again to include the woman (and her husband) mentioned above. I joked with them the other day that if ‘worst came to worst’ I’d be poaching some of their young cattle off their property. The husband instantly replied, “no need for that; there is a heifer out there somewhere on the property that, if you can catch her, I will gladly give you!” Hahahaha! Cattle are good to slaughter and eat and all, but they are also easily the stupidest animals on the planet.
I have been saying for years that one day in the not-too-distant future we would be forced to reach back in time to rediscover some of those lost arts and lost habits our great grandparents engaged as a matter of practice. Pretty sure we have arrived at that moment. Thanks be to the Lord!