Thursday [9 to 13]

(1118) Elevenses, folks. (1319) Afternoon, folks. (1357)

 

13. Nil desperandum carburundum illegitami

Obviously I’ll not say who but it was one of our polit-warriors (I’m the one in blue):


No, not just you … these bstds, globopsycho, the Wokerati, the SJWs, other countries … all are combining to break us down, depress us, run us down, kill us off by slow torture, not unlike TR in solitary or Tina Peters.

People unused to it, who really did not grow up fighting as boys of my gen did growing up … well they’re easy victims, as are the vulnerable elderly, ill and ultra-poor. Not to mention the real enemy in a physical way sitting in posh accommodation at taxpayer expense, violent killers and rapists.

So one must practise organisation and discipline … John 3-16 is a foolproof start but it carries with it the tag of pariah … if you don’t mind people avoiding you, quietly passing you by, passing you over, ignoring you … then are huge benefits, not least being courage … far better than from a bottle or from substances.

Now I don’t mean in an obnoxious form of crazed evangelism which has even me crossing the road to avoid or hiding in a back room if I hear the tap on the door … I mean you can be perfectly near-sane and just living … by disciplne I mean developing the ability to shut something out … readers here know that I do shut out images, nasty things, atrocity … I mean that which cannot be unseen.

The most vulnerable are the overthinkers and those without an off switch. These are the ones who need our assistance. The opposite end of the spectrum … not giving a damn at all … well, that’s another thing … not good.

12. The destructive MSM


11. Euro supertrawlers hoovering up Brit fish


10. 💐



9. Vox on the US but looks back at old Britain

HERE

A brief perusal of the relevant economic statistics betrays a clear and sustained erosion of British supremacy. In 1880, Britain still accounted for nearly a quarter of global manufacturing output and was by far the leading industrial nation of the world. By 1913, it had fallen in absolute terms well behind Germany and especially the United States, which now boasted nearly 2.5 times Britain’s output. Already by 1910, Britain (formerly the world’s premiere steelmaking nation) produced only half as much steel as Germany and barely a quarter of American steel output.

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