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[–] 16383067? ago 

…Waco… horror movie… disconnect… not a fact of the world in which they live, and thus can never affect their daily lives.

A proof is in the violent hatred they pour out for a man to whom Waco was real. Timothy McVeigh did not disconnect, did not evade. To him, the massacre was real, unacceptable, and demanding of a real response. Equal and opposite reaction. His real-world reaction stripped naked their hypocrisy.

Yes, McVeigh had some flaws both strategically and philosophically. This does not elide the fact that he had some qualities unknown to Boobus Americanus: Moral courage — and the humane decency to care more about the victims at Waco than he did about his own life, a decency unknown to moral imbeciles who let mass-murders go unpunished.

Now, observe how much McVeigh is vilely traduced and disavowed by people who claim to remember Waco, claim to be outraged, and even claim to hate the murderous tyranny which committed the Waco massacre. He is to them a reminder that this is real, this actually happened — and somebody actually did something about it, which you never will. His logical, real-world response of meeting violence with violence and not mere words is a piercing reminder of their own cowardice, their submissiveness to the masters they claim to defy, their utter impotence. He is their enemy — worse than the "ZOG", the "Feds", the "Gubmint", or whatever other epithets they toss at their owners, to whom they surrendered themselves without fighting.

By obediently joining their masters' scripted condemnations of McVeigh as a criminal, a murderer, and a "domestic terrorist", they shield themselves against the accusation presented by his very existence — and they irrevocably choose sides. The price for this comfort is their souls, their children's birthright, and the very existence of their posterity. For this, for the convenience of a cowardly evasion, they have sold their own children's freedom, and condemned their future generations to slavery or extinction. For Waco and Ruby Ridge were just the start… >>12429362

Of course, this is only one instance of their consistent pattern of behavior, always and everywhere. They make that devil's deal every day of their lives, just as did their fathers and grandfathers. But it is symbolic. And it is revealing.

The Americans have sealed their own doom — the word "doom" being a Germanic word for judgment.

For that judgment, a government which mass-murders its citizens in broad daylight and does not face immediate insurrection is the greater proof emphasized by the aforestated symbolic exception. What? That sounds dangerous, and even illegal! Somebody might get hurt. Quick, change the channel. For no such thing to have occurred a quarter-century later is a magnitude of proof which words cannot adequately describe. The Americans regard their own lives as worthless, for they regard their fellow Americans' lives as worthless; and they do not know the meaning of freedom. Their condign punishment shall be to receive what they accepted, and thus, what they implicitly wished upon themselves.

Yes, people get the government they deserve.

To those few who wish to escape that terrible fate, the only possible chance is not merely "remembering", but accepting that this is a memory of real events. Accepting that reality without evasion imposes a choice: Either act in reality, for neither justice nor freedom are wrought by mere words — or frankly give up in reality, and honestly forswear your own soul and your own posterity. The latter alternative being a fate worse than death for any man worthy of the word, the only answer is radicalization.

We may never know the true number of Americans who met reality head-on a quarter-century ago. McVeigh was an honorable man, who claimed full responsibility so as to protect his comrades, if any; by taking the fall for them, he also inadvertently received historical credit as possibly the only able-bodied man in the entire United States who was fully awake at that time, not disconnected, and not a base poltroon.

The future depends on there being more with the moral courage to not disconnect.

I thank whatever gods may be

For my unconquerable soul.

— Timothy McVeigh, June 11, 2001 (Final Written Statement of Timothy McVeigh — last words of a free man.)

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[–] 16383069? ago 

McVeigh was an honorable man, who claimed full responsibility so as to protect his comrades, if any;

As did Leo Schlageter. No wonder the Americans so hated Schlageter that they destroyed the major monument to his memory. Meanwhile, they lionize Stauffenberg. Honor is treacherously damned, as treachery is honored.

I call McVeigh the American Schlageter.

Sliders, gas yourselves.