Quote of the week.

Via Social Matter, who correctly noted this is the best blog post of the week, the Dissenting Sociologist.

The disconnect between the elite and the masses has been turned into hatred, and the working class are now seen as Sudra by those who have appointed themselves Brahmans.

The upper classes, then, can be expected to sneer down their blue noses at the Great Unwashed at least a little bit. But it’s quite another thing for those classes- in any society tasked with the duty of care of the social whole- to propose that the plebs should collectively be regarded as altogether beyond the pale. In the West right now, elites are not only doing exactly that, but as though to add insult to injury seek in one and the same stroke to incorporate hordes of various migrants, who are often there illegally, and in any case exhaustively foreign (by birth, race, language, nationality, culture, and religion), as valued members of society while reducing the indigenous organic working class to the status of illegal aliens at best- and enemy nationals at worst- in their own country.

Is this an exaggeration? Consider how, in official (“respectable”) political discourse right now, good form dictates some instance of the following answer to any objection the White working class raises against any of the indignities it faces: They’re just White men who are bitter because they’ve lost their “privilege” to the historical march of social justice. (Significantly, there are no White working-class women or children in the imagined world of official discourse). This rhetoric dates back to the French Revolution, when “privilege” designated the personal rights enjoyed exclusively by the great Feudal landlords in France and elsewhere in Europe prior to the complete restructuring of the legal system through the codes of public law that abolished Feudal customs and replaced them with individual rights for all citizens.

I would add this: within even the learned professions, the bureaucratic and managerial casee — many of whom are not qualified to do the work — look down and micro regulate the professionals: the lawyers, doctors and academics are seen as accountable to the sensitivities of politically appointed dolts.

As in other revolutionary processes, the exclusion from power and privelege will continue. Until it eats at the cadre itself. Then this Babylon will fall.

Better to raise your children, and avoid this elite.

One thought on “Quote of the week.

  1. A quick thought … that’s because the elite expect the migrants to look up to them/have gratitude to them, whereas they’ve been trying to get the “untouchables” to have the proper reverence for the religion of purity for ages, and we just won’t.

    I believe it’s an unspoken article of the new quasi-religion that a generation or two of Western civ and opportunity (not to mention PC training) and the migrants will become completely integrated into “our way of life”.

    No wonder there is so much anger at those of us who refuse to bow to Ba’al and Molech. Not only are we untouchable, we refute this theory by our stubborn preference for the true God.

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