This article was submitted to Amerikaner.org by Grant Roberts. If you would like to submit your own content, please email amerikanercontributions@proton.me
The rural-city divide has been a frequent subject of debate within White Nationalist circles for decades before my time. Rural WN’s espouse the benefits of healthy living, high levels of racial homogeneity, and freedom from the restrictions that home owner associations and municipal codes place on their daily lives. On the other hand, urbanite Whites have access to high cultural institutions, greater economic opportunity, and the subject of this article, utilities and public services.
The power of cities is that they are able to provide massive amounts of resources to their inhabitants more efficiently because they are contained within a smaller area. While cities are accurately identified as dirtier than the countryside and source of the majority of pollution, when compared to their rural counterparts, the per-capita levels of emissions and waste products is significantly smaller. The crux of the issue for our future leadership isn’t how to most efficiently glass the cities into a monument of the old world’s sins, but rather to minimize the negative effects of urban dwelling and harness their power to serve our people’s interests.
It is no secret that people who live outside the city are proud of their independence from the system and rightly so. As it stands, policy decisions are made with the express intent of disenfranchising White people of their ability to exercise their will as a collective, and as such is evil. However, we will one day take the reins of power (Inshallah), and we will have to design the policy to best serve the White man and his interests.
Access to broadband internet connections is one of my areas of interest from earlier studies and is illustrative of the systematic disenfranchisement that rural White Americans endure under this regime. Broadband fiber-optic cables consist of “trunks” that run the length of a municipality and “branches” that extend to the individual houses. The rub is that constructing these “trunks” is a massively expensive undertaking, and requires a certain population density to be economically feasible from a civic planning standpoint. Without the access to reliable high-speed internet connections, middle America isn’t able to take advantage of the benefits that online education materials and remote working opportunities that are reserved for urban dwellers.
One of the many benefits that cities are able to supply to the urbanites, is consistent access to cheap and healthy food, not exclusively fast food poison and gas station trash. Keeping populations sedated with unhealthy foods and isolating social media is an obvious way to keep rural populations from expressing their rage in a collective and physically present manner. Organizing farmer’s markets and Co-Ops to counteract the corporate monopoly over foodstuffs is an essential building block to developing a parallel economy. Centralizing economic activity within a small geographic area means that whoever controls these centers gains control over the distribution of the economic products to the rest of the surrounding area.
When White people were forced to flee from the cities during the violent integration process (Happy black History Month), they spread out and surrendered the benefits that cities provided in the interest of keeping their families safe. Now that corporate Jewish power is intent on pushing homosexual deviancy and race-mixing propaganda into the hollers and homesteads of even the furthest removed Amerikaners, there really isn’t an exit down the road that can be escaped to.
If White people are forced to confront the monsters of modernity at their doorstep, they deserve the benefits that are afforded to the dysgenic cosmopolitan “fellow citizens” and should demand such from their leaders. We can overcome the class divide because we share a common blood, and we will do the same when it comes to the rural-urban distinction.
This land is our land, all of it, and I want what is best for our sons when they inherit it.