Depending upon which of our stations you are hearing, we are soon coming
upon or have just passed the holiday called Memorial Day here in the United
States of America. I think that most Americans have forgotten what Memorial
Day is all about. It is now usually thought of as "Memorial Day Weekend,"
and like so many holidays today, the actual date of its observance is shifted
each year for the maximum convenience of holiday bathers and boozers and
the commercial establishments that serve them.
Talk to Americans about Memorial Day and you are likely to receive comments
on the sales to be had at the car lots and appliance emporia. If you ask
them what the holiday is really supposed to mean, half of them would answer
that it signifies the first day of summer. Even those who well know that
Memorial Day is meant to honor the soldiers who died in America's service
for the most part do not understand why those soldiers had to die. If you
only knew, ladies and gentlemen, if you only knew you would not be partying
and picnicking on this most terrible and somber of days. You would
be weeping for our nation, and if you had any guts at all you would be
working every day of your life to make her free again. There is so much
that you do not know.
Revolutionary War
Let us honor the dead of the Revolutionary War. They fought against
a tyrannical government, which gave Americans very little voice in government
policies, and which taxed them oppressively, though not as oppressively
as the productive segment of American society is taxed today.
Today, we may not be taxed to support a King and a few dozen idle courtiers,
but instead we are taxed to support the violent and degenerate lifestyle
and ever-increasing breeding of an underclass which can be called American
only in the geographic sense. If this process is carried on long enough,
the descendants and kindred of the men who fought our Revolutionary War
will become extinct in the land called America.
Is this what those men died for? They fought -- they died -- so that
their people could be free. If we must work the first five months out of
the year to support the destruction of our culture and our people, if we
must smilingly tolerate the invasion of our nation on our southern border
and in every port city, then are we truly free? Are we not squandering
the blood of our forefathers? Remember, the patriots of 1776 were called
the "extremists" of their day.
War of 1812
And remember that the royal tyrant called himself the "legitimate
government" in those days. When Washington and Jefferson and the other
"extremists" were successful, the tyrant was not pleased. Like
the federal tyrants of our day, he thirsted for the blood of men who wanted
only to be free. In the War of 1812, as in Waco 1993, fire was his weapon
of choice and the rebel capital of the time, Washington, DC, was burned.
For three years Americans died in this little-remembered war. Remember
those who died for our people's freedom.
Indian Wars
The authors of the Constitution never dreamed that non-Europeans would
be considered citizens. Had you suggested to them that Africans or Indians
be called Americans because a number of them happened to be inside our
borders, they would have called you insane. But in the last few decades,
what our founding fathers would have called insanity has now become public
policy. I ask you now to remember the dead who fought against Mexico in
the Texas War of Independence and in the Mexican War.
I ask you to remember those who died in the Indian Wars, to secure safety
for their families on the frontier. What do you think they were fighting
for? Multiculturalism? Open borders? Affirmative action? My friends, if
they were alive today they would fight again against all of those things,
against the Third World invasion that we are not allowed to call an invasion.
Just a few miles away from here is the charming city of Lewisburg, West
Virginia. It was named for General Andrew Lewis, who was the man who finally
defeated the Indians around these parts over 200 years ago. On the other
side of the state in Point Pleasant, just across the river from Ohio, is
an imposing monument to General Lewis, who, the inscription states, in
defeating the Indians at the Battle of Point Pleasant, struck a decisive
blow in the battle between "the forces of civilization and the
forces of savagery on this continent." How long will it be before
the forces of Political Correctness consign that inscription to
the trash heap?
If you listen to my words today and then do nothing, then you are giving
your permission for the trashing of our heritage and history. You are spitting
on the graves of General Lewis and all those who fought and died to secure
your very existence.
War Between the States
The Civil War is perhaps the most terrible conflict in American history.
One hundred thirty years later, we have still not recovered from it. Its
divisions still split our people apart along political and geographic lines.
The legacy of slavery and abolitionism lives on in our intractable racial
problems which fill our newspapers from front to back every day. The legacy
of Federal tyranny that made war on those states who only wanted their
freedom and independence is still very much with us today, in Ruby Ridge,
in Waco, and in the army of carpetbagger-like bureaucrats who fence us
in on every side with regulations determining who we can hire, associate
with, and soon, it seems, what we can say or write or believe.
The greatest loss from that war, however, was the final and perhaps
fatal loss of that most precious possession of our nation -- the genetic
inheritance of our best men. Truly, we may never recover from it. A far
greater proportion of the American population was slaughtered in the Civil
War than in any war before or since. The bravest and the best were cut
down in their prime, and the maternity wards in following years were filled
with a greater percentage of the offspring of shirkers, cowards, and deserters.
We will never know what America might be like today had those nearly 400,000
young men not died in that insanely suicidal conflict.
World War I
As we turn our eyes toward the twentieth century, we see a new kind
of war emerge. It is a kind of war fought not for American purposes, be
they good or bad, wise or mistaken. It is a kind of war fought by Americans,
to be sure, but not for America in any sense. It is a kind of war
fought for foreign interests, interests which are often diametrically opposed
to American interests, but which are "sold" to the American sheep
by lying propaganda so that the sheep will docilely allow their lambs to
go the slaughter.
Every war America has fought in this century conforms to this description,
and if your car is adorned with an "I support our troops" sticker
it merely proves that you were fooled. At least you are alive. The 116,000
American dead in World War I are not. Nor are the over 400,000 who died
in World War II, the 54,000 who died in Korea, the 58,000 who died in Vietnam,
nor those who have died imposing the New World Order in Iraq, Kuwait, Somalia,
or Haiti.
There was no reason for America to enter World War I. America was manipulated
into that war by Zionist interests who manufactured phony atrocity stories
and even the entirely fictional sinking of an American ship to stampede
their American cattle into rescuing the British Empire, which in payment
was to procure Palestine for the Zionists for the future establishment
of a Jewish state. President Wilson, because of blackmail by these same
interests, danced like a marionette on a string and signed a death warrant
for the American boys who died in those stinking trenches. Remember those
boys today. Remember also the political heirs of Wilson and the Zionists
and the power which we still foolishly allow them to wield in America today.
World War II
Franklin Roosevelt and his successors have also danced on the same stage
with the same stringpullers behind the curtains. With his administration
came the organized Jewish interests, the Communists and the pro-Communists,
the accession to state power of America's enemies, a power which, although
briefly challenged by Joseph McCarthy, they have never relinquished. The
Roosevelt administration marks the beginning of what we know so well today:
a federal government which regards ordinary White Americans as its enemy.
World War II was a war between the forces that created Communism on
the one side, and Western Civilization on the other. When it started in
Europe, Americans were solidly against entering the war, having learned
a terrible lesson in World War I.
If you woke up tomorrow and found your next-door neighbor was fighting
a battle with a drug gang that was trying to kill every home-owner and
take over every house in your neighborhood, would you join with your neighbor
or would you join with the drug gang? Would you join with your neighbor
even if he had had some property disputes with other neighbors, and you
thought him wrong? Would you join with your neighbor even if he had some
peculiar beliefs about the way to run his household that you didn't necessarily
approve of?
By allowing the Japanese to attack Pearl Harbor, See "East Wind,
Rain" in Free Speech, Vol. 1, No. 1 which the Roosevelt government
knew of in advance, and by insuring the greatest loss of life possible
by not warning the American commanders there, the aliens who came to power
with Roosevelt were able to trick the American people into fighting on
the side of my hypothetical drug gang, on the side of an ideology openly
dedicated to the downfall of America: on the side of Soviet Communism.
If there is truth in the doctrine of the survival of the human soul after
death, those 405,000 betrayed men are not resting in peace. They were told
they were fighting for American freedom, but that was a lie. They didn't
know it, but they were fighting to impose the tyranny of Communism on our
blood kindred of Eastern Europe, even as a not dissimilar yoke of tyranny
was beginning to be imposed in our land. Let us remember them. And let
us remember who it is who is responsible for their deaths.
Korean War/Vietnam
Let us remember the Americans who died in Korea and Vietnam. Over 110,000
died in those wars which gained precisely nothing for America. How many
died because traitors in high places in Washington would not allow them
to defeat the Communist enemy? How many died because traitors in high places
in Washington were trading with and aiding that enemy, providing money
and materiel for an international conspiracy that was killing young Americans
every day? How many died because they believed the lying bags of garbage
in Washington who assured them that they were sincerely trying to "fight
Communism"?
U.S.S. Liberty
Let us remember the U.S.S. Liberty, where 205 American sailors and officers
were wounded or killed by an Israeli attacking force of aircraft gunners,
torpedo boats, and napalm in June 1967. And, let us never forget the government
and the controlled media which covered up that atrocity, the full truth
of which is still largely hidden from the American people.
Let us also remember the young Americans who never came home from Haiti,
from Somalia, from Iraq. They enlisted in our military believing that they
were defenders of America, but cynical politicians and politician-owners
sent them to defend Israel's interests in the Middle East, and to enforce
the dictates of a world government the very concept of which is antithetical
to our American Constitution and Declaration of Independence.
They gave not only their lives. Giving your life is often called "the
ultimate sacrifice." As great as that is, there is another and greater
sacrifice. When they died, the children and grandchildren and great-grandchildren
they never had died with them. And so on into infinity. That is the ultimate
sacrifice.
What a terrible loss that is! For these brave warriors who died for
America, who died fighting America's enemies, and in some wars (particularly
in this century) tragically died fighting for America's enemies,
were for the most part the best men that America possessed. They loved
America, they did not hate her. They would not have wanted to change her
into what she has become today. They were the great-hearted, not the small-minded.
They gave everything, they asked for nothing. They were the strong, not
the weak. They were the brave, not the slick. Their children would have
inherited the qualities we need most in America today.
I can see their faces now before me. Millions upon millions of men and
women and children who were never born because of the wars fought for America
and against America. Scores of generations of our people -- what contributions
might they have made? Their fathers died for us, so we shall never know.
We shall never meet them. But in some sense they stand before us today,
they stand proud and tall in our conscience this Memorial Day -- those
who fell and the unborn descendants of those who fell at Lexington and
Concord, at Yorktown, at Gettysburg, at the Alamo, at Little Big Horn,
of those who fell in Flanders Fields and at Iwo Jima, of those whose lives
ended in the wretched sands of the Middle East or whose bodies were dragged
through the streets of Somalia or Haiti.
This Memorial Day, I am asking every one of you to rededicate yourselves
to the principles and ideals that made America great, the principles and
ideals that so many sacrificed their lives for. They did not sacrifice
their lives so that American soldiers could be mercenaries for unaccountable
UN bureaucrats.
They did not sacrifice their lives so that their descendants would be
afraid to walk at night in the cities of America.
They did not sacrifice their lives so that a powerful foreign interest
group could milk five billion dollars every year from docile American cattle
to support the state of Israel.
They did not sacrifice their lives so that this powerful foreign interest
group could own a large part of this country including nearly all of its
major media.
They did not sacrifice their lives so that Mexico could retake one third
-- or will it be two thirds? -- of America.
So much has happened that you do not understand, that the controlled
media and the schools have simply kept from you. Before Americans have
even the slightest chance of retaking their country and making her free
once again, they must educate themselves. They must understand how their
nation has been stolen from them. They must understand how it happened
and who is responsible.
Ladies and gentlemen, no nation can survive unless its young men are
willing to die to preserve it. But what a squandering of lives, what a
permanent impoverishment of our nation have we suffered at the hands of
those who would cynically manipulate our patriotism so that we would be
the cannon fodder for their wars, while they sit safely in their counting-houses
and lie-factories in New York City and Los Angeles.
How long will you let them keep killing our sons? The longer we wait,
the more difficult it will be to speak out against our secret rulers.
Today and every day let us remember those who died for America and the
generations who are yet to come.