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Europeantomyroots

5th way to help our race

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by , 02-20-2012 at 03:41 AM (312 Views)
[SIZE=4][FONT=times new roman]5) Do not fight for any personal rights whatsoever. Equality cannot be legislated. [This is where feminism is a fantasy. No matter how much women push for their rights, they are still not equal because they have not understood equality among men. Men are not equal with each other until they have earned equality. We, as men, know we don't join a football team legislatively. We join a football team by proving our strength and ability.] What should replace rights? Responsibility. Instead of fighting for your "unionized" rights at work, be the best worker. Get rid of medical rights, pension rights, disability rights, racial rights, religious rights etc. Take care of yourself.
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[SIZE=4][FONT=times new roman]In my present job there are a couple of issues I could go to the government over because I have rights. But I won't do it. I believe that the government should stay out of the workplace. My employer has choices that will make or break the business. I hope and pray they will make the right choices and do the right thing about the issues at present that I have with them. I'm leaving them alone for the moment because they could reverse their actions at any minute. And they know what they are doing that they shouldn't.
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[SIZE=4][FONT=times new roman]Throughout my life I have been fortunate enough to understand these issues and have avoided claiming my "human rights". I am thankful that I go to bed at night with a clean conscience.
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[SIZE=4][FONT=times new roman]But, you say, what is the other option? What do we do if we get rid of human rights? Well - we get back to reality.
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[SIZE=4][FONT=times new roman]One of the reasons, for instance, that at the moment the people I work for are ignoring certain "human rights" that I have is that I don't have anything to negotiate with. I'm in my forties, few skills, having gone from job to job, having dealt with illness for the first half of my working life. I can't just pick up and go somewhere else. Who else at the moment would hire me? I have no degrees. It was hard enough getting my present job and we are in a recession. My bosses are treating other people differently because they are more valuable than I am. This is reality. I've tried the best I can in my life to get to where I am at and am not ashamed of myself and the strides that I have made. Unfortunately, I am going to be treated in a certain way because I am at a disadvantage. What is the answer? The answer is to try to get into a place where I am at an advantage and to negotiate with my bosses at that point for better benefits. Could I try to legislate myself into a better position? I could but I won't.
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[SIZE=4][FONT=times new roman]Legislating rights is possible for any of us to do but these are the following reasons we should not:
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[SIZE=4][FONT=times new roman]1) Human rights cost the government money. It involves lawmakers, lawyers etc. and is a huge burden on the taxpayer. If we are concerned about our governments' debts, we won't exercise our human rights.
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[SIZE=4][FONT=times new roman]2) Human rights were introduced into our countries to destroy us. Research which groups or peoples headed up human rights legislation and why they did so.
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[SIZE=4][FONT=times new roman]3) Human rights ignore options. The problem with options is that they take years to implement and we want what we want when we want it. It will take me another five years to be trained and skilled enough to have something to negotiate with in regards to my present situation. I could go to the government right now and automatically get what I want at work. But I am ignoring the options that I should be taking if I do so.
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[SIZE=4][FONT=times new roman]Do illegal immigrants have options? Do gay and lesbians have options? Do women have options? Do the disabled have options? Absolutely.
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[SIZE=4][FONT=times new roman]4) Human rights ignore human realities. As I said in my introduction, feminism is a joke. Women are not as strong as men. Why are women in positions of authority over men whom they ask to do the harder work? I work at a job that is physically hard. I have to work as hard as the other men, otherwise I am fired. And my immediate boss has to work harder than all of us. That's the reality. Why then is there a woman over him as a boss who cannot do even half of what we do? To get around this though, we have a rule at work that we cannot describe one job as harder than the next. Not allowed.
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[SIZE=4][FONT=times new roman]Another ingored reality is the reality of language skills. A training manager at a company I worked for told me he could not train the employees to read and write properly. The result on the floor was diseaster. The reports that were being written were often unreadable.
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[SIZE=4][FONT=times new roman]The homeless of the inner city are unpredictable. Business' know this. But over and over again, the government foists these people on the private sector. And these people, even in their worst states, know they have rights and will make use of them.
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[SIZE=4][FONT=times new roman]5) Human rights take the focus off of human responsibility. Women will flirt incessantly with men but as soon as the men express an interest, the women take them to court for sexual abuse. What about the woman's responsibility to dress properly and be respectable? This is completely ignored. The disabled have a responsibility to forgive and be patient with those who are not disabled and do not understand their disability. I recently had to watch a video about the rights of the disabled. One cannot even call blindness a disability anymore. The onus is totally on the business establishment to make sure the disabled are not reminded of their disability. Over and over again, personal responsibility is abrogated in favour of human rights.
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[SIZE=4][FONT=times new roman]Do we as white nationalists clamour for human rights? Many want to. I am going to go on record though as saying that this is not a good idea. We are taking the easy way out. After WWII we were still over 25% of the world's population and we had power and influence. Now we are much less.Why? It is not because of the population growth of the other races. We are in decline because of ourselves and what we have done.
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[SIZE=4][FONT=times new roman]I recall a woman who grew up on a farm with nine brothers and who stayed on that farm and continued to work on that farm. She could easily have left and gone to the city or somewhere else. She was an attractive and smart woman who might have really succeeded. She chose to stay and work for her brothers even though it was hard work and smelly. Believe me though, when she went to the mechanic to get her car fixed, the mechanic knew better than to try and scam her. Why? The mechanic knew she had nine brothers he would have to deal with if he screwed up. She was exercising her options and accepting the responsibility of getting along with her family. She didn't need feminism or human rights.
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[SIZE=4][FONT=times new roman]We don't need human rights. What we as white nationists need is marriages and children and higher standards of education and much greater unity and less crime and pro-life laws etc. We need to understand [U]racial responsibility[/U]. In order for us to understand this though we need to really rethink human rights. In my opinion, we need to get rid of them. It is weakening our race, not strengthening it.[/FONT][/SIZE]

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  1. negative3's Avatar
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    For me, there are Human Rights, and then human "rights". Everybody has certain rights, and these are provided for by the constitutions of most western nations. But the concept of rights gets abused. The Right to free speech is important, the "right" to never have your feelings hurt is just silly...and conflicts directly with free speech.

    We already have our Rights. We don't need more laws. Any time they pass a law ensuring more "rights" they're really cutting back on our real Human Rights.
  2. JamesinUSA's Avatar
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    I can understand the enumeration of certain rights, as in our Bill of Rights for instance, but ultimately acquiring and maintaining ones rights is, and should be, a matter of natural struggle, whereby you win some and you lose some.

    Today, we're often faced with Radical feminist, Homosexuals, and illegal Aliens demanding rights that I for one, don't believe they deserve, mainly because in the short and long run, these rights will be had at the expense of my own.

    I believe that Nationalist shouldn't find themselves too caught up in the many abstract arguments about supposed 'Rights', and should focus more upon what is 'Right', FOR US, as opposed to everyone else! The White masses must change their ideas and perceptions of what they've often considered 'Moral', 'Fairness, and ' Rights', if we're to survive.
  3. Europeantomyroots's Avatar
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    I guess my question is, what "rights" do we need. For centuries many civilizations have never had "rights" per se in any of their constitutions. Things just happened normally. For instance, if a girl wanted to marry a guy at 15 years of age and it wasn't the "done thing" at the time the parties involved would still look at the situaition and figure out what was best for everyone and usually there would be a consensus. The realities of life surrounding the situation often dictated what would happen. If the girl's family was poor with many other children, the girl would most likely have gotten married. If the man was wealthy or had a chance to make much money, again, the marriage would be considered. Maybe the girl would run away from home. If she were pregnant and the guy was not married, they would probably get married. There was almost a common sense answer to the whole thing. There is almost always a right or wrong that is obvious to everyone. If someone in one of those communities decided not to pay his bills he would usually find himself isolated because the people of those communities had no compunction against warning each other of people who engaged in such behaviour so even bad behaviour was punished.

    The money of the bankers financing "rights" has been complicated greatly through the financing of social workers and welfare and "human rights commissions" etc. Without this money, we would get back to common sense.