I know your neighbor….

He’s either a right-wing extremist, a knee-jerk liberal, a yuppie, a gun nut, a Jesus freak, a redneck, a soccer mom, a welfare queen, or possibly even a conspiracy theorist, but regardless of what he actually thinks or feels, he falls into one of many media-defined categories, and without ever speaking to him, you’re fairly certain that you already know his opinions on all political issues. And just as every army teaches its soldiers to use derogatory names for their enemy, you’ve been taught a derogatory name to describe most of the people around you, and there are corresponding television characters that give you examples of how they think, so you never really have to talk to them at all.   

If you’re as old as I am, and you attended public school during the “civil rights era”, you were taught the evils of prejudice, and you might remember the teacher breaking the word into its parts to explain why it was wrong to pre-judge people based on their skin color. Well that word had to be hidden, so it was first re-branded as “racial prejudice”, and then later morphed simply into “racism”, because prejudice is exactly what they wanted to teach. They wanted to instill political rather than racial prejudice, so Americans were divided into new groups by the media, because more groups means more strife, and they can be easily pitted against each other. It’s simply a matter of identifying a segment of society, applying a label, and a stereotype. That’s all it takes for you to despise someone you’ve never even spoken to.

Once the group is defined, it’s membership is insured by human need to belong to a group (or tribe), and be identified with it. This need is just as instinctive in humans as is a dog’s need to join a pack. Most yuppies behave like yuppies because the media defined what a yuppie is, and gave them a behavioral model to aspire to. This provides them with an opportunity to belong to a group, and  “fit in” by behaving accordingly. If you think back, you might remember that none of these divisions existed before the corporate take-over of the television networks in the early eighties. Before then we were all Americans, who were usually identified by the state or region we came from. The groups, their labels, and their behavioral examples were all delivered by the media.

This was a crucial aspect of their overall “divide and conquer” strategy, because it divided communities, and prevented neighbors from presenting a unified front against anything, and forming the bonds that give neighborhoods their strength.  Rather than uniting against a common enemy, like the government for example, neighbors now see each other as the enemy, and they’ve been taught to blame them for all of society’s ills. The yuppies get to blame the red-necks for holding the country back, and the red-necks can blame the yuppies for destroying it, but the members of both groups will rush to their television to find out what the other group has done. They’ll never have a conversation that lasts long enough for them to discover that they share a common enemy.

While those mental fences were being erected via the media, a simultaneous physical assault was unleashed upon all places where people congregate. The drunk-driving frenzy resulted in a police car being stationed near every bar’s parking lot, which severely curtailed the patronage of the establishments notorious for hosting the beginnings of revolutions. The churches were threatened with being taxed for political preaching, and labor unions were subverted, and their members vilified by the media, because they’ve been known to exert political pressure too. None of this happened overnight. There’s been a decades-long assault on American culture, and Americans are kept divided physically and mentally to insure that it doesn’t return.

Before the Zionist media labored endlessly to destroy our culture, Americans both rural and urban would always come to the aid of a neighbor in need, and in fact, they’d be ashamed not to. In cities neighbors congregated on stoops, aeries, and on street corners. Suburbia had their barbeques, bridge clubs, and bowling leagues. In rural areas there were regularly scheduled dances, contests, county fairs  and town hall meetings for political discussion. Little more than a skeleton or a memory of these neighborhood congregations exists today, as most of the country retires to a secluded brainwashing session in front of the tube after work, and in most cases, spends as little time in the company of their neighbors as possible. As the exploits of television characters replaced community news and gossip, neighbors moved further and further away from the family next door.

When this nation was young, neighbors wouldn’t just visit your house, but they probably helped build it. There were community barn raisings, local barter systems, and constant gifts of vegetable garden surplus. Anyone who tells you that “Americans don’t have a culture” is trying to hide our history of neighborhood unity, and replace it with the new catch phrase of “rugged individualism” to leave you with the impression that Americans worked only in their own interests. Yes, they were strong and rugged individuals who earned everything they had through their own sweat and blood, but they also worked together to raise barns and babies, and they put personal differences aside to accomplish what could only be done, or could be more easily done, through their unity. The group they instinctively sought to belong to was their community, as it naturally should be, and this creates an environment where morality is necessary, so it’s expected, respected, and thereby becomes a source of pride for members of the group. People are thus rewarded for being good. It was a culture born out of necessity, but maintained for its nicety, and we were much happier people than we are today.

“That’s all well and good”, you might say, “but how is this discussion of neighbors and human communities relevant to today’s problems?”

It’s relevant because your neighbors are going to become necessary again, and most of your strength was sapped by dividing you from them.

We’ve all made good friends, and found many honorable and dedicated people to work with on the internet, but in my case, Henry’s a thousand miles in one direction, and J.D. is a thousand miles in the other, and although I’d be honored to fight by the side of either of them, the physical distance presents a bit of a logistical problem, to say the least. And as I worked as a 9-11 Truth Crusader from NYC, my comrade in arms Kevin did his part from San Francisco, and although we made great progress toward our mutual goal, regrettably, I never met the man in person.

The internet is great for discussion and sharing ideas, and we’re lucky to have it at our disposal, but when the fan blades are flinging the feces (SHTF), or if the internet is shut down by the enemy, many of us will be left alone without anyone fighting by our side. And because I would hate to see so many fellow freedom fighters lost from the fight due to the lack of people fighting with them, I’d encourage you once again to spend less time involved with internet activism, and most of your time awakening, and organizing your neighbors, because like ‘em or not, that’s who you’ll be left with to fight by your side. And when the dust settles, that’s who you’ll have to barter with for the things you can’t produce yourself, and you’ll need their neighborly help when you can’t afford to hire help.

I know you’re more comfortable with your “awakened” internet friends, because you probably have few people near you with whom you can discuss real news and political issues, but you’re going to have to do some activism closer to home if you want to properly prepare for an uncertain future. Soon you’re going to need your neighbors, regardless of how useless they seem today. Host parties, barbecues, or any other activity that brings you in closer contact with the people near you, and have fun. Don’t concentrate on political discussion with the sleepers because you’ll drive them away from you if what you’re saying scares them (and it probably will).

Political activism isn’t for everyone. Some people are outspoken leaders, and some of us are a bit shy, and we’ve all hit brick walls when we’ve tried to explain reality to the victims of Zionist brainwashing, but there are ways to make progress locally without getting up on a soap box and making a speech.

Personally, I don’t have a problem with telling my neighbors they’ve been brainwashed by the tube*, and I think I’ve become pretty good at waking people up, but you can remain completely anonymous and have your whole neighborhood discussing the same issues by putting a DVD in the right mailboxes late at night, and it’s not very expensive.  http://www.onedollardvdproject.com.

If you can’t buy DVDs, you can print up flyers, and if you’re not sure you can write a convincing message, you can copy and paste things you like from the net,  (you’re perfectly welcome to plagiarize anything I’ve written, for example) but awakening your neighbors is going to be essential to your survival, so it’s something you should begin working on right away.  — Jolly Roger  

“Better is a neighbor that is near than is a brother far off”
—  Proverbs 27:10

*telling someone they’ve been brainwashed by the tube is not very effective, and that’s the last thing I say before giving up on someone. The best way to wake someone up is to ask them questions that make them think about the issue, and allow them to “discover it for themselves”. This allows them to take pride in their discovery, rather than feel insulted for being fooled for so long. Don’t waste too much time on anyone, and try to pick influential targets who are likely to tell others. 

12 thoughts on “I know your neighbor….

  1. Wow, Jolly Roger that was an excellent article. I will send this to all of my contacts, oop’s I mean neighbors!

  2. once upon a time neighbors in a small area changed 30 times in four years. Most of them were not a problem , it was their scumbag friends and relatives . They stole 20 five gallon gas cans over that time period. Somehow there were two gallons of water in every single can .
    Still wondering how that happened many years later.

    Plus I am no longer waiting for people to “get it” , today I am waiting for “it” too get them.

  3. The people that are trying to change how the world spins on it’s axis all live in the D.C area, east coast north, and Israel obviously. These are the scum bags that have their tongues stuck down the Zionists throats. Amazing how such a pathetic few pond scum can basically sheepalize our country such as they have. Still amazes me how all hell hasn’t broken loose yet. So many goddamn lies about how our economy is picking up and growing again. etc..

    Europe has fallen as well as basically the rest of the world and they are saying that America is hanging on. Well, no shit, we are printing ourselves into the black hole of hell.

    Great article.

  4. Good article, JR.

    While I agree with you on the getting the word out, the use of flyers can become difficult at times (as I have tried), seeing as how many people have the “No soliciting” signs (Not like that has stopped people before or anything) and even if you do happen to put it up on your apartment area, the owners of the complex just tear it down the next day before anyone can really see it, because they are corporate cowards who don’t like solicitations unless it has something to do with moving or selling something apartment-related. Plus everyone has their infamous “Neighborhood Watch” programs/streets which chew you out the moment you go near them because they are all for looking good for their HOA’s and corrupt neighborhood police departments that they don’t even know who’s side they should be fighting for and who they should be fighting against.

    But hey, keep the faith. Don’t give up. I don’t know how effective a DVD would be. I would think a flyer with a picture is more effective than a DVD, as most people, (unless really interested) just don’t have time to pop in a DVD to learn something that they know nothing about.

    I don’t know. These are my experiences. Maybe I’m targetting the wrong people or live in the wrong area. Of course it doesn’t help when half of my community/apartment area in Austin, TX is made up of Mexicans and most of them look like the illegal kind.

    I continue to try, although the ignorance of people is astounding, but hey, what do you expect when “Ignorance is Strength” in an Orwellian world.

  5. Great article Jolly. In the days ahead many of us will regret not being close to our neighbors. When I was a kid the parents had “block parties” several times every summer. The mothers knew who was sick or ailing and brought food and home remedies over. Everyone knew each other. Neighborhoods like that are hard to divide and conquer. With effort we can rebuild those types of relationships. We are going to need them.

  6. Unfortunately, the neighborhood I live in is about 80 – 85% mexican. It wasn’t always that way, but gradually, over the years it evolved. They live in their own private Idaho, and intrusion into their separate cultural matrix is unwelcomed by them.

    There are only three neighbors that I have conversations with. Two are clueless, but the one I get along with best is NRA, gunned up, hates the so-called ‘government’ as much as I do, and ready to fight once the SHTF.

    So much for living in Mexifornia.

      1. You live in one of the few states that can claim to have as bad of an illegal alien problem as we do, NC.

        Disgusting, ain’t it?

  7. Very good piece. Before TV were the cinema and radio, more or less simultaneously; before that, newspapers; before those, books and encyclopedias; before that, sermons. We all know who controls present-day media. Maybe it’s as important to regain media control, or in fact just gain it, as to talk. Top down can work as well as bottom up. Boycott the press, for example. Boycott TV ads etc.

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