Friday, December 05, 2008

“Occupation,” “Civil War,” “Domestic Terrorism,” or “Dirty War”: How to Define the Condition of Whites in the West?

By Nicholas Stix

Old Atlantic Lighthouse responded to my teaser, "Bombay (Mumbai), Islam, and the West," to my VDARE Blog essay, “Bombay (aka Mumbai), and the Convergence of Race and Religious War,” as follows:

And yet those who read this are still afraid to say,save the white people, stop non-white immigration and keep the West white majority and safe for whites. Those words are hostages to fortune to be used against me, and every white person reading them quakes with fear. These are the feelings of being occupied. Its lying to ourselves to call it anything else.


His language is very powerful, and yet I will stick to the phrase “civil war,” for the occupation was invited by the West’s elites, rather than being a military invasion. And I recall the phrase of German constitutional theorist Martin Kriele, of a government engaging in “partisanship in a civil war” (“Parteilichkeit im Bürgerkrieg”). Even the phrase “civil war” is imperfect, because it assumes two or more groups of citizens fighting each other, whereas in this conflict, a large chunk of the fighters are not citizens at all.

One thing I just realized I should have changed: Since not only do the attackers not wear uniforms (though they often carry flags!), and the government manipulates them against its own citizens, instead of “civil war,” I should have said “dirty war,” though this requires redefining the latter term as a combination of “civil war,” the previous definition of “dirty war,” and “terrorism.”

http://www.thefreedictionary.com/dirty+war

Noun 1. dirty war - an offensive conducted by secret police or the military of a regime against revolutionary and terrorist insurgents and marked by the use of kidnapping and torture and murder with civilians often being the victims; "thousands of people disappeared and were killed during Argentina's dirty war in the late 1970s"

act of terrorism, terrorism, terrorist act - the calculated use of violence (or the threat of violence) against civilians in order to attain goals that are political or religious or ideological in nature; this is done through intimidation or coercion or instilling fear

offence, offensive, offense - the action of attacking an enemy

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