Thorvald Eriksson
08-21-2009, 05:21 AM
I live in a small town outside of Charlotte North Carolina, and I have a college Physics class that has 20 students in it. The demographics based on race are: 4 Whites, three Southerners, one Russian; 4 Asians, two Koreans (born in South Korea) and two Asian-Americans; 7 blacks, one from Zambia, one from Nigeria and five Afro-American variety; & 5 Hispanics, two from Brazil, one from Mexico, one from Nicaragua and two from Costa Rica. 25% of the class is White. I looked around and I thought I was in a United Nations meeting. Yet I am seeing the future of the South as we know it.
My first reaction was disdain that the South did not keep the values of racism that would alienate these people to stay in comfortable places in the west and northeast. The Southern leaders after the Civil War and the subsequent Reconstruction changed everything that the South once represented. The government reacquisition of our lands did not entirely squelch our rebel spirit, but I am wondering if it is already dying, for I believe it is in me.
I grew up with Southern values of that we should have own the war and kept the chains on black people, yet taking the slave title away has revealed the truth of the people my ancestors had enslaved; they are the same. Which leads me to my second reaction to those foreigners in this classroom, culturally they are the same as me. If they weren't why are they at this college getting a degree and planning to use it to make money? They ideally want a big house, fancy car, and a solid career to raise kids. They want all the same things everyone I know including myself want, how can I judge them for pursuing capitalism?
I question a lot and this conflict of values has hit me in such a way that I feel humiliated by the reality that the South is for everyone. No matter what the skin tone/religion a person has they are welcome to pursue materialism same as anybody. I do tend to find myself blaming the Jews for making it so clean and open for this quandary in my land, but it wasn't the Jews that made the country only interested in capitalism and the lack of White values that was supposed to keep us strong. The Jews weren't to blame for us, Whites losing our culture, power and control in our lands; we were at fault for letting it get this far. The South used to be a place where Whites could be proud of their heritage and racism was just another power word that got things done. Yet, now it all seems like we are living in the past and that the fight was settled before many of us were born.
My final reaction to my class circumstance was acceptance. I have come to realize that this is where the South's future is and there isn't a damn thing I do to stop it. Yes, I can try to influence my neighbors to see the non-White criminals threat to their livelihood, but there is no White party that my concerns/feelings will be voiced; only internet websites and forums. 25% of the class is White and of 4, 2 of them like rap, so it is actually 12.5% are White. Love it or hate it, this is the future of the South and there is no changing the tide that we or our previous generation let happen, so we had better get use to it. Realistically if there was a White party it would be full of outdated conservatives that would want to turn the clock back and deny that blacks generally aren't trying to make money in society and need to put back in chains or killed. Nothing turns off sound minded people faster than trying to make things linear once again.
For me I think this is a positive thing that the South is changing of the guard and replacing it with similar decadent non-White needs. I am glad partly that us, White people in previous generations let loose the non-Whites on America, because it just goes to show that under threat of minority status that even us, great Whites will cower and adapt, yet flee to the internet to squabble over everything petty and frivolous. The South is for everyone and now race related things feel outdated and treading water without going anywhere. :)
My first reaction was disdain that the South did not keep the values of racism that would alienate these people to stay in comfortable places in the west and northeast. The Southern leaders after the Civil War and the subsequent Reconstruction changed everything that the South once represented. The government reacquisition of our lands did not entirely squelch our rebel spirit, but I am wondering if it is already dying, for I believe it is in me.
I grew up with Southern values of that we should have own the war and kept the chains on black people, yet taking the slave title away has revealed the truth of the people my ancestors had enslaved; they are the same. Which leads me to my second reaction to those foreigners in this classroom, culturally they are the same as me. If they weren't why are they at this college getting a degree and planning to use it to make money? They ideally want a big house, fancy car, and a solid career to raise kids. They want all the same things everyone I know including myself want, how can I judge them for pursuing capitalism?
I question a lot and this conflict of values has hit me in such a way that I feel humiliated by the reality that the South is for everyone. No matter what the skin tone/religion a person has they are welcome to pursue materialism same as anybody. I do tend to find myself blaming the Jews for making it so clean and open for this quandary in my land, but it wasn't the Jews that made the country only interested in capitalism and the lack of White values that was supposed to keep us strong. The Jews weren't to blame for us, Whites losing our culture, power and control in our lands; we were at fault for letting it get this far. The South used to be a place where Whites could be proud of their heritage and racism was just another power word that got things done. Yet, now it all seems like we are living in the past and that the fight was settled before many of us were born.
My final reaction to my class circumstance was acceptance. I have come to realize that this is where the South's future is and there isn't a damn thing I do to stop it. Yes, I can try to influence my neighbors to see the non-White criminals threat to their livelihood, but there is no White party that my concerns/feelings will be voiced; only internet websites and forums. 25% of the class is White and of 4, 2 of them like rap, so it is actually 12.5% are White. Love it or hate it, this is the future of the South and there is no changing the tide that we or our previous generation let happen, so we had better get use to it. Realistically if there was a White party it would be full of outdated conservatives that would want to turn the clock back and deny that blacks generally aren't trying to make money in society and need to put back in chains or killed. Nothing turns off sound minded people faster than trying to make things linear once again.
For me I think this is a positive thing that the South is changing of the guard and replacing it with similar decadent non-White needs. I am glad partly that us, White people in previous generations let loose the non-Whites on America, because it just goes to show that under threat of minority status that even us, great Whites will cower and adapt, yet flee to the internet to squabble over everything petty and frivolous. The South is for everyone and now race related things feel outdated and treading water without going anywhere. :)