diversitycaution1

On page 7 of the Gorey Guardian, a print and online newspaper for the town of Gorey in Ireland, they have ran an article about how the Guardian’s own office had White Genocide posters stuck to the door during the March 21st “March Against White Genocide”.

Staff arrived at The Gorey Guardian office in the Market Square on Monday morning to find the front door of the premises had been defaced with two deeply offensive and racist posters.

The A3 and A4 posters promoting the ‘White Genocide Project’, which were glued to the door, were promptly torn down, and the matter was reported to Gorey gardaí.

Gorey Guardian staff contacted the gardaí (police) to report the posters, as is common-place when anti-Whites disagree with the content.

Fortunately, we understand the law, and White Genocide can not be argued as “racist” or “hate speech” by any Western legal system simply because you are allowed – actually, encouraged – to hate White people.

A website mentioned on the posters referred to an international day of action on March 21, and it’s thought that a supporter in Gorey saw the website and decided to take action.

Police from the Gorey Garda Station said they were looking to see if similar posters have been found around Ireland, but appear stumped as to who was behind them.

A spokesperson for the Guardian said they were ‘baffled’ by the motivation for the vandalism.

Motivation? Someone obviously cares about what may happen in the future Ireland, and I can understand why they would be.

Ireland, like so many other majority White countries has taken part in an agenda to commit genocide against it’s very own majority population – White people.

No, no mass murders are being arranged, but what is happening is that White areas are being legally targeted and forced to “diversify”, which means bring in large numbers of non-Whites and become minority White.

This, under international law is as much genocide as any mass murder, because the results are the same: fewer and fewer White people as a result of deliberate government policy.

We call it White genocide because no area has been accused of being “too Black” or “too Asian”. When White area are called “too White”, they are defined as the problem.

White GeNOcide Project

NYF-Goes-Mainstream1-1024x576

 

 

 

 

 

 

USA Today always does a wonderful job of putting on a clinic.  A clinic on how to write from the Anti-White perspective.

PHOENIX — An Arizona State University course called "U.S. Race Theory & the Problem of Whiteness" has gained national attention and landed the university and the course's professor in the middle of a debate about race, political correctness and academic freedom.

In the space of two months, the course has been singled out by Fox News commentators, been targeted online by white-supremacist groups and spurred small protests and counter protests in Tempe.

According to university records recently obtained by The Arizona Republic, assistant professor Lee Bebout has received dozens of hostile and hate-filled e-mails about the class, and Tempe police say the instructor suffered harassment when fliers were distributed on campus and in Bebout's neighborhood with "Anti-White" printed over a photo of Bebout, who is white.

The hit piece from USA Today was aimed at the National Youth Front. The youth group has been protesting the abundance of Institutional Anti-Whiteness at ASU.  Where else but a college campus in Western Civilization would you have to put up with a class on the "Problem of Whiteness".  National Youth Front  has stated the following in their press release: "Only a few months after the founding of National Youth Front, we have already hit the big leagues and made an impact!"  Indeed.  The college campus environment across the USA is a cesspool of Anti-Whiteness.

Anti-Whites at USA Today spun it accordingly:

Bebout's colleagues in higher education say the backlash is unfortunate but comes with the territory when anyone takes a critical approach to race and racism.

"Precisely the reason there is such a backlash is exactly the reason why (such classes) should exist," said Nolan Cabrera, an assistant professor at the University of Arizona whose research focuses on race and racism in higher education. "The time it will be unnecessary is when it ceases to be controversial."