June 30, 2016 - Radio Free Nortwest - H.A. Covington
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Okay, it's the Radio Free Northwest call-in show for June the 30th, 2016.
We're hoping to get some prospective migrants to call to some of the people we've got on the line here and talk about immigrating to their particular part of the homeland.
We do have quite a setup here.
We've got a total of eight people who are resident in the homeland, including Don and myself.
And we're waiting on callers, but we also have a couple of outsiders.
We've got Richard from Florida, and we've got Chris from London.
Chris, while we're waiting for our prospective migrants to call, many congratulations to you and the British people on the results of the Brexit referendum.
Your nation has accomplished a great thing, the first really mass white revolt in Europe since 1945, even if it was only an electoral one.
How are the British people reacting to the results of the referendum over there, even though this is off-topic?
Well, the people voted for ALT for a number of different reasons.
The main reason, I think, was probably Merkel's decision to legalise millions of so-called refugees from the Third World.
They're not really refugees, because if they were refugees, they would have applied for asylum in the first safe country they came to, which would have been Turkey or something like that.
But anyway, they're defined as refugees.
She's legalised them.
They could have German citizenship within five years, or perhaps even less.
If that happened and Britain was still in the EU, then they could all come to Britain.
So I think that was probably the prime cause for the outvote.
It was very slim.
Some people think that it had been rigged, but they couldn't cook it down to the level they wanted.
So whatever the reason, the people have obviously decided that they don't want to remain in the EU.
We still don't know whether or not we're going to implement the policies that we need to implement to try and secure our ethnic sovereignty.
The European Union has this rule which says in order to trade, in order to be part of the single market, you need to have total free movement of people.
And if we agree to the total free movement of people in the UK, that means that we might as well have not left.
Well, I think it's kind of an open secret that that referendum was about immigration, but as I noted on Radio Free Northwest this week...
I, for example, saw a nice, long, interesting, and very to the point movie that was made by somebody, UKIP, whoever, and it hardly mentioned immigration at all, but people have to bear in mind that it's illegal to talk about immigration where you are in anything other than adoring terminology.
So what, in your opinion, will be the result if the British government basically just ignores the referendum, finds some way to get around it and keep the immigration flowing and keep all their Brussels goodies flowing?
Or are they just plain told the voting parties?
There was a call by a Negro MP called David Lammy who wanted the House of Commons to outright overrule the referendum results.
I think it would be very difficult to get away with that because there are very optionistic politicians who would make use of it.
But they may try and get around it by pulling out of the...
We have another caller here.
Let's see if we can get him.
You're on Radio Free Northwest.
Who am I speaking with?
Okay, we now have Ida Bro with us.
So we've got all kinds of people in the homeland here waiting to speak to prospective migrants and no prospective migrants as yet.
We do have Chris from London, Ida Bro.
And Chris, you were talking about attempts to overrule the Brexit.
Yeah, there was a Negro MP called David Lammy, I think, who said that the House of Commons should simply overrule the referendum results.
That would be very difficult, so I think what they may try and do instead would be to negotiate Britain's place in the single market and agree for the total free movement of people, which is the reason why we voted to have a Brexit in the first place.
Well, are you interested in coming out here and making your home here in basically the land of our people's destiny, which is frankly what the Northwest is?
Yes.
Well, that's the place that you're going to, but I feel that you should build communities.
You should work for people in lots of places, and you can do a northwest migration outside of Detroit or the city of Chicago.
A lot of problems you live in if it's an all-white area.
Everything's nice.
People don't have problems with Muslims or black gang members.
You live around Detroit or Chicago or King Wisconsin.
Yes, then you see those things.
So I think we need a mix.
You need to build a homeland, but you also have experience being in a rough area where you become red.
Well, the idea is to bring these people in those areas like Detroit and Chicago, which is, I mean, I myself don't understand how anyone can possibly live in those areas.
I mean, well, Detroit is, I think, generally recognized as unfit for human habitation, but the idea is to bring them here to the homeland, to those three and a half states.
This is not just a flight to the suburbs.
The idea is to bring them here and to form communities within the Northwest.
That can serve as a support system for eventually an independent sovereign nation.
I'd like to chime in here.
One thing you may be hinting at, which I think is true, is that people who live in areas outside the homeland that are still very white, and I'm thinking primarily of the northeast like Maine or places like that, Yeah, they don't feel pressure to move because they feel comfortable.
However, for anyone who's not living in a predominantly white area that they feel comfortable in, they ought to not go to some other place like Maine.
They ought to come to the homeland here in the Pacific Northwest.
Well, even if they're living, I think, in one of those all-white areas, If they have a kind of a long view of the future, the Pacific Northwest is still very much the better bet.
We do have occasionally people who have suggested migration to New England because it actually is, I think statistically, even whiter than the Northwest.
At least certain parts of it are, like Vermont and Maine.
Of course, I understand certain parts of it are getting really bad, too.
Connecticut is getting really bad.
I'm told that the lower coastal area of New Hampshire around Portsmouth is getting all kinds of weird creatures in there.
And Maine has been a target of deliberate racial diversification by the government.
They have actually shipped in thousands of Somalis to Banger, Maine.
And I don't know who to be more sorry for, the people who live there already, are those poor monkoids from the Horn of Africa who got dumped in the middle of a Maine winter.
They're white now, but they might not be white 20 or 30 years from now when it counts, when the breakup comes, whenever the breakup of the United States comes, which will happen.
Jay, can you speak up a bit?
We're having trouble understanding.
Sorry, I'm speaking on Skype.
I don't have the phone on this.
But my point is that you want a healthy, good, all-white country, but at the same time, if you've never experienced the terrors, the horrible stuff that you experience in North Carolina, or I experienced in New York City in the 80s, you're not really going to be a hardcore racialist.
I think we need a mix.
Well, admittedly, to people who have it good where they are, and who live in a fairly white area like, say, Maine, or all large parts of The rest of the country, what they call flyover country.
Hell, there's large parts of the South that are still predominantly white, like up in the Appalachians and so forth.
Yeah, it's a bit of a harder sell, and so you don't get the immediate physical pressure to move.
But again, white people all over the country, I think, if they have any cop on at all, can read the handwriting on the wall.
We've got another caller.
Okay, and we've got Lord Lucan in the conversation now.
Anyway, Jay, yeah, it's going to be a harder sell if someone is comfortable where they are, and I run into this a lot.
There's this one individual guy, I call him Chicago guy, he just, basically, he really ticks me off because this man has the potential to be a leader of a new nation.
He's one of the handful of men that I have met in our movement who you can kind of envision sitting behind a presidential desk one day, but he has told me flat out he's not coming.
Because he's just plain doing too well where he is.
He's got a nice big house in the Chicago suburbs, and he's got his own little life there, and oddly enough, he liked to go after Mormon girls especially.
He actually apparently made some kind of field trip out to Utah to find some Mormon wife specifically for her racial views, and we've got another one coming in.
Okay, we now have 12 people in the group, which is the largest amount we've ever had on this show.
Well, again...
I asked people who lived in the homeland to call in so that they could speak to prospective migrants, and they did, and now we're short on calls from people outside.
Chris, I don't suppose there's any chance you're going to try and make it over here with all the American immigration rubbish?
Well, there are certain routes that one can take, but you're right, it is easier for colored people to get into the U.S. than white people.
I mean, one advantage that white people have is that they're more likely to have relatives in the US than colored people, because the established colored population in the US is just descended from slaves from hundreds of years ago.
There are recent links that bind families in Europe with families in America, but at the same time they don't like it to be easy.
Do you see what I mean?
Oh, yeah.
Well, I knew that when I tried to get my Irish family over here, and that was back in the 80s.
But also when I tried to get my New Zealand girlfriend over here.
This country does not want white immigration, but nonetheless it is still technically possible.
But what we need to do, guys, I think, is establish as many people as possible in their own particular areas who are willing to act as potential migration contacts.
Some of these comrades, who hopefully at some point in time later on tonight will actually call.
There is a religious visa option that some people use, so that's a smooth way of getting in.
What do you mean religious visa?
Yeah, that kind of exempts anyone who's an accredited minister.
Oh good, I thought you were going to say something like you have to convert to Islam because that's what migration this country does want.
Well, if Trump has his way, we won't be taking any Muslims, according to him.
That would be an interesting thing to see.
Do you think that immigration from white countries will be easier under Trump if Trump became president?
I think, number one, Trump won't be elected.
Number one, they're going to stop him in some way.
Number two, if he does become elected president, the entire establishment is going to dig in their heels.
They are going to fight everything he does, every inch they possibly can.
He, legally anyway, won't be able to get anything done, which leaves some interesting possibilities.
Number one, the whole machinery of government in this country might grind to a halt, which can only be good for white people.
Number two...
Trump might get tired of it, and maybe if he can use some of his famous deal-making ability to talk the Joint Chiefs of Staff into backing him up, we can maybe have a military coup, and he can line up some of these liberal bastards against the wall and have them shot, and make them get out of the way.
If you're into actual ancient Roman history, there are certain parallels between the way that Julius Caesar came into being and did his thing.
Of course, he was assassinated, but the results from his assassination eventually brought down the Roman Republic.
They were both populists.
Yeah.
They knew how to please the people.
If America did break up in a kind of breakup-style civil war, would you expect large numbers of foreign whites to come into the country to fight?
One would hope.
If anything broke out on a nationwide scale here, I think we've got kind of two choices.
Number one would be a separatist effort of the kind that I described in my Northwest novels.
We've got essentially a white American version of the IRA doing its thing to try and separate a given portion of territory from the dictatorship.
In our case, the Pacific Northwest.
It might be something like that, more of a low-level guerrilla war.
If we ever got into a full-blown, knock-down, drag-out race war in this country, I think it would probably resemble the Spanish Civil War of the 1930s, the last war that the good guys won.
Hopefully the result would be the same this time, but there would be so many factions and special interest groups lined up on either side that a lot of it would depend on which side could keep their coalition together.
On the white side, you'd have most of the religious types, the 700 Club types.
You'd have most ordinary blue-collar white people.
You would have various conservative business interests.
You would probably have strong elements of the military and the police who are just tired of the crap that's going on.
On the enemy side, you'd have the blacks, the Mexicans, the homos, the entrenched democratic patronage people.
It would be a glorious mess, and I frankly, and I have some idea of what I'm talking about here, so I know this would be very, very bad, but I would rather see that than a continuation of the present system, because in a massive Civil War-type situation, all of this surveillance state stuff, All of this creeping 1984-style tyranny would be swept away, I think.
I think it would be like the Spanish Civil War.
I think you would see, in the real Spanish Civil War, there were foreign units.
Okay, who was that?
That was me.
Oh, okay, yeah, go ahead.
Well, on WND, if you know where that website is.
Yeah, I look at that regularly.
There's a general calling for an armed...
Oh, okay.
Yeah, he purged the upper ranks of the military.
Okay, we've got another caller here.
Hello, this is Madison Mark, Harold, formerly Illinois Mark.
How are you?
Oh, yeah, yeah, okay.
Hang on a minute.
We'll see if we can bring you into the conversation here.
Okay, we've got a gentleman in Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin, whom I happen to know is at least tentatively interested in actual migration.
Mark?
Yeah, yeah, and I'll go to Olympia.
We have 13 people in here and almost no prospective migrants.
They're all in the homeland.
Well, tell us either one or the other.
Mark, where in the homeland would you think you'd like to come?
Well, it isn't where I'd like to come, but Harold, where I'd end up at would be the metro Seattle area.
So I did have one question, if anybody's familiar with Seattle, and it has to do with, I guess, something that you can't really find online.
And since I just recently moved to Madison, it's something that I was made aware of.
I'd like to know about the neighborhoods in the area.
Yeah, okay.
Let me tell you what I'm looking for, exactly.
I don't want an all-white neighborhood.
I don't want to be with gold-plated lobster crew, anything like that.
And, of course, I used to hear that Capitol Hill was a bad area.
I've been out in Seattle before, about 30 years ago.
Still is.
Do you want to go to Ballard or Burien or Shoreline just outside of Seattle?
I have to be in where public transportation is at.
That's pretty much the entire Pugetopolis.
You are good to go if you get anywhere near the metro area for public transit.
Here's what I'm looking for, and I wonder if it even exists out there.
A working class neighborhood that's majority white.
But that has a substantial number of non-whites in it.
And I'll explain why.
I think that an area like that is more affordable for me.
And if you're going to be a part of the Northwest Front and the Northwest Imperative, that's probably a great area for recruiting as well.
About 20 years ago, I would have said Ballard.
Where?
About 20 years ago, I would have said Ballard or Greenwood, because that's fairly near the city center, and it was kind of like that in the 90s.
It was starting to go.
I don't know what it's like now.
So even the further north in Seattle you go, all the way up to, say, Northgate or something, it whitens out pretty quickly.
I have my car worked on there, up near that mall, in fact, and it's actually pretty pasty.
Not totally.
But I would say for affordability issues, you're going to need to end up in the suburbs.
Anything in King County itself is a disaster price-wise.
And don't worry about the gold-plated lobster crew.
On Mercer Island.
Yeah.
So don't worry about that.
The situation is that really any of the neighborhoods in, say, Linwood or Everett or Bothell or anything like that are probably about where you want to go.
God, you know what?
Hey, Andy.
Thirty years ago, those used to be like separate cities.
Oh, yeah.
Well, and in a lot of respects, they still are, because once you get outside of Seattle itself, it is a little bit different.
But once you get outside of the incredibly urban areas, like even in Bremerton and Port Orchard and places like that, it's definitely not Seattle.
So there's, I mean, Seattle itself, in just the almost five years I've been here, has changed drastically just from the population boom.
But yeah, I would say for affordability, going south into places like Tacoma is a little bit scary, so I would avoid that.
But up north, anything up north would suit you.
I would.
Not worried about non-whites in the neighborhood, just so long as it was working class and still a fair majority of white.
In fact, that's where I'd rather end up.
I've been around these people a long time, and I come from a working class area.
I just think that that's a great place to probably live, have friends, and actually recruit.
I've run into this before.
A lot of people actually have reached the point where they would rather live around a livable number of non-whites than these rich upper-middle-class liberals.
Right.
I'm in Madison, fellas, right?
I imagine you're going nuts.
The situation in Seattle, it's kind of like a second San Francisco right now.
The housing costs over there are really bad.
I would like to say that, although it's still expensive as hell, over here in Kitsap County, the housing market does seem to be loosening up a bit in that there is more availability.
Our problem is, basically, it's a Navy town and we've got two carriers in port, but that seems to be Settling down a bit and evening out a bit, so there's at least more availability over here, although it's still expensive as the very devil.
In Madison, we've got one area called Willie Street, and you can tell it's a little run down.
It's got working class whites in it.
No professionals hardly live there.
Maybe some artists, you know, that kind of crew, but a lot of older folks mixed with younger people.
And yeah, there's Mexicans there, there's niggers there, but the whole flavor, the whole feel is still of that scruffy, working-class white, and that's what I'd like to find, if that's even possible in Seattle, which I kind of wonder.
More and more it's possible, I'm sorry to say.
The really bad Negroid area in Seattle is a place called Rainier Valley, apparently.
Oh, I remember Rainier Avenue, yeah.
Well, there's a lot of rainier stuff around here because of the mountain.
Rainier Valley, and I believe there's some more.
Now, I'll tell you where you do get some very bad nigger neighborhoods, incomplete with the local chapters of the Crips and the Bloods, and that's Portland.
They're small, but they're very clearly defined black areas, and a few months ago, there was a big thing on the net.
The local Monkoids were protesting down there in Portland because they were afraid they were going to get gentrified out of their little ghetto there.
If I can chime in real quick, I do recall that...
Trader Joe's tried to open up a store.
For those of you that don't know, Trader Joe's is a little grocery store, so very trendy.
Guys, I've got another call coming in.
Hang on a minute, Idlebro, and I'll be right back with you.
Okay, Idlebro, go ahead.
Yeah, I was saying that Trader Joe's is just a trendy little grocery store, and they're getting pretty popular.
They tried to open one up in Portland in a historically black neighborhood, and they promptly chimped out because they did not want their property prices getting raised, so Trader Joe's had to scrap the idea.
Yeah, that might have been what I'm thinking about when I'm thinking about those news stories.
They had some so-called community activist type Negro claiming that they didn't want this store coming in here because it would bring white people into the neighborhood.
No, we can't have that.
Can you imagine what would happen if somebody went out and said, well, we don't want this thing over here because it's bringing niggers into the neighborhood.
White people coming, sticking the place nice.
I'm kind of familiar with Chicago, you know, because that's from Illinois, but not too far from Chicago, and a lot of that's going on.
In fact, my daughter just moved from a recently gentrified area, Wicker Park.
Yeah, it's full of hipsters normally, so it's most places.
But they're all white, that's for sure.
White and useless, from what I gather.
Pretty much, yeah.
Can I add a comment?
Go ahead.
This is Jay again from the Midwest.
I want to say some good things about elitist, leftist, rich white people, you know, that...
Hey, Mr. H, how you doing?
This is Brad from South Mississippi.
Okay, hang on just a minute, Brad.
Let's see if we can get you into the conversation here.
Okay, we now have a gentleman from an actual family of people who are prospective migrants, and they're going to be coming up here on their scouting trip in a few days' time, actually.
Brad from Mississippi.
But, Jay, you were talking about hipsters or something?
Yeah, well, they are.
Not all the news is bad.
It's a mistake to be depressed and everything's gone.
The trend in the United States is more like French cities, that the central cities are being reclaimed, they're being whiter, richer.
That's true.
Yeah, the underclass, rough people are being pushed out to industrial suburbs or places like Ferguson, Missouri.
So places, big cities, New York City or Chicago, they've torn down the project.
Madison.
Yeah, and they have, it's not fair, but they've torn down the project, and they basically ethnically cleansed the lower class, non-white, mostly black people.
Yeah, that's what the niggers in Brooklyn and New York and Chicago are complaining and screaming about.
Getting back to migration here, guys, which is supposed to be the topic.
Brad, I believe you're flying into Well, we live in the Central Valley,
the Willamette Valley, near a pretty liberal town, city.
It's filled with lots and lots of filthy hippies and crazy people.
But there is a lot of work here.
It takes hardly anything to get a job across a very large spectrum.
Interestingly enough, with a major university in town, they have a hard time finding decent employees.
Where's that at in Oregon?
I don't mind saying that we live near Eugene because there's a vast amount of area around Eugene.
Eugene, I might add, is a university town, which explains all the filthy hippies and liberals.
That's funny.
I was looking for work out there.
I'm sorry.
I have a friend that lives in Grants Pass and one that lives in Canyon Run.
I think one of them is fairly close to Eugene.
I was trying to look for work out there last year, and I didn't find a whole lot, at least on Indeed.com.
I guess it depends on the industry.
What are you looking for?
I do data analytics work, computer science stuff.
This is why a scouting trip is necessary.
Also, Donner here again.
I will just chime in.
Try websites like Dice.com for that sort of thing.
Yeah, I've had good luck with Indeed, Andy.
I don't know.
Dice, to me, it's there.
Indeed seems to wrap everything up.
I kind of like it.
Yeah, take a look at that.
I'm going to end up in Seattle in October for a conference.
We're going to be staying downtown there, and that company that we're having the conference, that's who I'm thinking about working for.
We have to make some contacts.
I will note that that field has been almost totally consumed with third-party recruiting.
Even medium-sized companies won't do their own hiring anymore.
They will just farm it out to a recruiter.
Okay, go ahead, Andy.
All right, so like I was saying, that particular field...
Especially on the West Coast, and I'm sure it's this way everywhere, but especially on the West Coast has been totally consumed by third-party recruiting entities, and a lot of the jobs just go there and only there.
So one way or another, you're going to need to make some friends with a lot of recruiters, would be my advice.
Yeah, I'm hoping to stroke this company when I get down there in October and make some further friends out of what are now support contacts.
Okay, we must have lost Brad.
Okay.
Andy, you were saying?
I had wrapped my thoughts up, actually.
Okay.
Well, since I'm back, I will also note, since we're on the subject of technology, there's a conference I attend every year in Bellingham, and that's up near the border, near Canada, and I believe it's Wacom County is what's up there.
They apparently have a massive number of employers that have jobs for technology workers because every time I'm there, there's nothing but advertisements about that.
I'm pretty sure everywhere along the I-5 corridor is big for technology workers.
This is why everybody and his dog is coming here.
This is one of the few places left in the country where there are jobs in plenty.
And unfortunately, because everybody is coming here for those jobs...
This is what's driving the rents up and causing the housing shortage and so forth.
And here's another damn call.
Hang on a minute, guys.
I will try not to drop anybody this time.
You're on Radio Free Northwest.
Who am I speaking with, please?
Hey, Harold, I had a...
Let me say this.
I'm not in the homeland.
I'd like to be.
I'd like to be.
But at this stage in my life, for me to move 2,000 miles away, you know, I just about give up familiar places, friends, family.
It's a pretty tough decision.
If I was younger, knowing what I know now, I would have been out there before I got my family and my life started.
That raises a good point.
What you're telling us is that people who are at critical points in their lives where they would normally be open to moving, like someone who just graduated from high school, graduated from college, just got out of the military, something like that, they have the opportunity to go where they want.
Anyway, Richard was saying that his main problem with migration is his age, and let me say something right now.
I know I rant and rave and holler about migration all the time, telling people to get their asses out here, so forth and so on, but I understand.
That someone of, say, advanced years, someone who is retired, someone who has sunk all of their worldly goods into a retirement program, who owns a house, and so forth and so on, that unless someone like that is really, really motivated, like your retirement home is being surrounded by...
Haitian immigrants or something like that, you're probably not going to be coming.
I want to reassure you guys that I am realistic about this.
I'm more concerned with getting young people and people with families out here because if you are young, there is nothing for you in the Negroid East or the Negroid South or the Mexican burials of California.
And if you are young with children, if you've got a family, if you're a young married couple, There damn sure isn't anything for you out there.
So those are the people we really need to be bringing here.
Well, as a younger man who didn't have any property, didn't have a wife or kids, for me, my migration was fairly easy.
And to all the young men and young women out there who don't have anything tying them down, you need to come as soon as possible and sink your roots because...
The low-hanging fruit isn't going to be here forever.
Do it while it's easy, and it won't be painful, because you have everything to gain.
I've been up here in the homeland for over two years now, and I do not regret it at all.
We've got another call here.
Okay, Gertrude's back.
And let me again remind you guys, you heard Gertrude and her daughter on Radio Free Northwest this week.
Oh, I'm sorry.
Yeah, I was just Madison Mark again.
I was listening to, I'm sorry, I can't remember your name, about, you know, being a young man and being out there for a while and to be able to go out to the Northwest.
Yeah.
I did it in 1986.
You know, we left the Midwest.
A friend of mine, we didn't know where we were going.
We hopped in my three-quarter ton, 77 Dodge van.
Hang on a minute, Mark.
Another call.
Okay, we've got Adam back in.
Go ahead, Mark.
Oh, I was just going to, I won't take long.
I was 25 or 26 with no wife or kids and no job prospects, certainly, and I ended up in Seattle sleeping at a state camping ground in Enumclaw and sitting in Safeway parking lots for about a week before I found a friend who would take me in.
That was actually a friend of my brother's who happened to be out in the Seattle area.
And we stayed out there for a year and a half.
I wish I would have never left, but I did.
I met a girl and drug her back to the hellhole that is Illinois.
And now we're both trying to get back to the system of Washington State.
Well, I wanted to throw in another remark.
I understand moving is never fun.
When I found the Northwest Front, of course, I was young, no kids, no wife.
Still no kids, no wife, but, you know, this is five, six years ago now.
The reality was I had just moved in the last year.
I didn't...
That was the last thing I wanted to do again, but I knew it was important enough to take care of.
And it's worth noting that, and I'll say this, for non-military reasons, my family, not that's anything wrong with military reasons, but I'm not an army kid or a military kid, but my family moved quite a bit when I was a child, all the way up to and including my adult years.
Those things happen all the time.
Now, granted, Don has a habit of pointing out, and he's totally correct, that this is usually for economic reasons, but there's no reason that can't be a part of somebody's migration.
Moves...
Past a certain point in life do happen.
They can be made to happen.
And I know that just from my own experience.
And it's not the world-ender that it can seem.
And I understand why it seems that way.
But just food for thought there.
I'm still having a lot of trouble, I understand.
I think he's saying that if you're not moving up here, that you could send more money to help us out.
Yeah.
Thank you.
Well, money is always appreciated.
Greg, can you hear me?
Yeah, I can hear you fine.
Well, this is Brad.
I just wanted to, I don't know, you can take it with a grain of salt if you can hear me, but me and my family live in deep south Mississippi, and I'm going to tell you right now, my children are a minority in school.
And I looked at a statistic the other day at work, and the average age right now for white...
Oh, my God.
years old six years old for wetbacks the average age for blacks is 24 and that's right now i can tell you right now i've got deep deep roots down here in south mississippi and i can tell you right now that this little trip we're fixing to make here in the next few days which i hope i get to meet some people
It's a trip to where we can actually look and find a place to live, because I will drag up hell come high water to get my family out of this Negro South down here, because we are finished.
From what I gather, Mississippi is about like, well, it'd be about like you were living on a farm in Rhodesia in 1979.
Yeah, I can tell you right now, I've got land, I've got cattle, I've got a farm, I work in the oil and gas industry, so finding a job's not hard.
I can fly back and forth to work, but the main issue for me is the safety for my family and a good school for my kids, and I don't want them.
My daughter came home the other day, and we cut off the TV, and we sit around, and we talk, and we ask each other what's going on today, you know, how the kids did in school and everything.
And she said a negroid term in front of me and my wife, and I don't like to have a fit.
And I told her, I said, either you speak proper southern English or you don't speak at all.
Now, my wife offered me a drill sergeant, but I can't help it.
That's just the way it is.
And I want my kids out of this crap.
It's getting to where every white young kid is picking up every dead gum nigger term there is in this world and acting just like it.
Yeah.
Well, they go to school, and they see the niggers getting away with stuff, so they think that's the way to go.
Hey, Brad.
This is Madison Mark here.
My relatives are from Kentucky, and we ended up up north here.
But everybody that's aware of what's going on in the country, a lot of the family thinks that going down south is the way to go, because they figure the whites that are down there are at least racially aware.
and super, super extremist conservative.
But like my brother is even talking about Mississippi being a great place.
He's never been there.
But see, the story you're telling is that's the truth, ain't it?
No, don't go to Mississippi.
I can tell you right now, sir, that you don't want to come down here.
I'm telling you right now, this has gotten so bad.
They'll go almost anywhere in the South.
I believe Richard was saying in one of the earlier shows that once you get off the interstate in most southern states now and you start going down the blue highways and going through the small towns, it's almost all black and Mexican now.
Yes, sir.
That's absolutely right.
And I would advise you not to let him do that.
I mean, like I said, it's...
It's horrible, I'm telling you.
I've worked my butt off blood, sweat, and tears on the property that I've got that my family's on since the 1830s.
No matter how bad I want to stay inside, because it feels like I'm giving up on what my ancestors fought and died for, but they had to come from somewhere and make a living, so I'm going to give my children the best chance they can have at a life, and that's up there with y 'all.
A lot of people say, oh, you can't move to the Northwest because you're running away.
There is no shame in running away from certain destruction.
Where you are, Brad, you are outnumbered.
You are outgunned in the legal sense in that if anything were to happen and you were to be forced to defend yourself, it is you who would end up doing life in prison because the whole power system and the whole legal system is now in the hands of the enemy.
Our ancestors, many of them, came to this country originally on those ships across the water because they were fleeing from tyranny of various kinds in Europe and in their own countries.
There is no shame or disgrace in fleeing from an overwhelming, overpowering tyranny in order so that you and your family can be safe.
So that's one thing I think we need to get over.
Okay, we've got another one.
I was just, when I called in, I was asking for a little guidance on the neighborhoods in Metro Seattle because that's where I'm going to end up.
I need a public transportation system, so I need to use the bus or whatever, Hoover or whatever's there.
And I want a particular neighborhood that you can't really find online.
And I'm looking for a working class, a majority white neighborhood, but I don't really want it all white because, you know, it's more affordable and it's also a good recruitment area.
So I didn't really get a good sense of where I should look.
All right, well, to make that a little bit more clear, further north, and when I say further north, I mean north-north, The northern suburbs, Everett, Linwood, places like that, Bothell, perhaps.
And I couldn't tell you about specific neighborhoods in those cities in particular.
Now, what you should do, because you're going to get more working class up there that's still reasonably white, what you should do is Google around for the...
There's a particular type of map, and I can't remember the formal name of it.
Somebody has taken, and has for the last several census, taken census data...
Citydata.com.
Citydata.com, that helps some, but specifically, there are maps that correspond to one dot is one person, and they're color-coded by race, and they're fairly accurate.
In my experience, they're fairly accurate.
And that is the sort of thing to go get a look at, because look in the northern part of the Pugetopolis, find an area you think is about the balance you want, and see what's there.
Do the buses run up there, Andy?
Do they run all the way up that far north?
The buses run all over, I mean, as far north as Marysville, if you want.
The public transportation in this part of the state is actually quite sophisticated.
And there are such situations as park and rides, too, where if you're just a little too far up, you don't have a very hard time getting in a car and getting to some place where you can get on a bus that will take you further down the city.
I do apologize for not having a specific neighborhood for you, but that far north isn't mine.
You know, I'm usually passing through there on interstate.
Yeah, I also want to put something in south of Seattle, like Federal Way and Kent and Auburn.
Those have tons of working-class neighborhoods, and like Andy said, the public transportation out here is excellent compared to anywhere.
It's really good.
This is Mark Ian.
Can I ask you about Auburn?
I used to live in Auburn when I was there in 86, and Federal Way.
Federal Way was an unincorporated area back then.
It was all woods, you know?
Oh, it's way different now.
It's way different now.
Federal Way is a city now.
They're all incorporated.
Plenty of diversity, if that's what someone is speaking.
But that's kind of weird to me.
But let's talk about immigration today.
I just want to put in that I have two immigrants coming in late September that really haven't been in contact with the party or anything But they're just coming.
They're my family and that's two more there.
I was trying to get one to call in but they're you know Okay, now we have apparently, according to this, Nick from Iowa.
He actually made it into the conversation.
So, Nick, do you have any questions about migration?
Yeah, I do.
My name's Nate.
Oh, okay.
I didn't know if you wanted me to say that on the air.
I don't care.
I'm not afraid.
Well, my main question is really when I should migrate because as it stands right now, I am an apprentice in a skilled trade and it likely would take me five plus years to reach journeyman status which would let me have...
A lot more economic opportunities in the Northwest, but I don't know if it would be a good idea for me to just try and work my way from the ground up in the homeland or stay here and finish up my apprenticeship.
If you're in the union, there's tons of unions out here.
Just switch to a union out here if you're an apprentice, and I would say get out here as soon as possible.
As soon as possible.
As soon as possible.
Is there any way you can transfer your...
Well, as far as I know, I would have to get all my licenses and get everything over again.
So I'm kind of leaning towards the idea of just working maybe for another year or until the end of the year or whatever until I can have a little bit more experience built up and then just trying to get an apprenticeship somewhere in the homeland instead of waiting for five years to become a journeyman and then having to take all my tests and get all my licenses.
Do you mind if you tell me what your trade is?
Because in Columbia County, I know of a couple unions out here that are specifically trying to hire HVAC and electricians right now.
Well, I am an electrician, so that maybe would help.
Yeah, so here in Columbia County near Portland in Oregon, I was actually trying to find an electrical-related job due to my military experience.
And unfortunately, they didn't quite want me because of not having the college background.
But since you've already started that road, I think there's opportunity in this area for you if you wanted to look that up.
Yeah, he wants to get a hold of IBE.
If you've got that particular skill, you will have no difficulty at all getting work up here.
Nope.
Hey, Nick, it's Madison Mark.
I live in Davenport, Iowa.
I know there's a lot of trade unions up there.
I always thought you had to have your card, fellas.
I don't know.
I don't know what it takes to get your card, but you've got to get past your journeyman, right?
Well, the company I'm working for is not Union, so that might be sort of a problem.
We, as a race in this country, no longer have an infinite amount of time to make plans and to make long-range assessments and so forth and so on.
When I was younger, there was always this diffused idea in the minds of, well, me and others, that as bad as things were, from our point of view, the crunch hadn't come yet, and there was still time to do this and do that, make a plan, have a family, that sort of stuff.
That is no longer applicable.
The ball of wax is starting to unravel, if you'll pardon my mixed metaphors.
This Trump campaign is interesting in itself, but it's symptomatic of the fact that things really are starting to come unglued here.
The past eight years of Obama have been an absolute catastrophe, and the fabric of liberal or neoliberal society is becoming frayed and torn, and as I've said before, just in the past few years, I've started to get a genuine feeling.
That the balloon could go up.
So, the fact is, Nate, you may not have five years.
Yeah, I agree with you, Harold.
That is my sentiment, too.
That's my sentiment, too, is why I tell people is come up here now, because you may not have that opportunity within one or two or three years, because everybody else is rushing up here.
And by the time you're good and ready and got all your ducks in a row, there won't be any opportunities because we've already been flooded.
So, Nate, if you have to start over from the bottom, then start over now while it's less painful up here in the homeland.
I have a suggestion for that young apprentice.
I've been in the unions for like 40 years, and I'll tell you, this is what I would do.
Pick an area northwest where you want to go.
And find out the electrical business agent for the electrical union in that area and develop a relationship with him over the phone.
He'll help you.
If he gets to see that you're a good prospect for his union, they'll help you because they do want good people.
There's a lot of people just trying to get in the union just for the high wages and whatever.
But if you're a good prospect, they will help you.
Because you've got to watch too.
Because some unions, if you just come in cold, they don't let everybody in.
So that's my suggestion if you want to move and you want to get a job in the union.
All right, I need to interrupt with a couple of administrative things.
Andy, go ahead.
I do apologize for interrupting the other gentleman, but two administrative things.
First, I want to echo the do it now rather than later, because we've seen that people who delay migration several years never end up doing it.
And two, we've had an awful lot of people, and some of them may not be on the call anymore.
This is the administrative matter.
We've had an awful lot of people that have a good reason to be in touch with other people who have been on the call.
Now, it's going to be very difficult for Harold, and it would be for even if me or Don or somebody else were doing it, it's going to be difficult for us to remember who has reason to talk to who.
So anybody on this call that needs to get in touch with anybody else on the call, I would say email Harold.
Sorry, Harold, the volunteer.
No, that's no problem.
Those of you that need to continue these conversations, like people meeting people in Oregon or people discussing professional and trade life, things like that, see to it that you can remind Harold.
Well, let's take care of all that off the call.
Yeah, no, don't put anything like that on here.
Yeah, let's be real careful.
Nate from Iowa, that would be the best thing, you know, keep it first name only.
Anyway, point being, see to it that you remind the party to put you in touch with whoever else you need to talk to.
I think Gertrude and Brad probably need to have a word with one another.
Gertrude and Brad and Nate and all the people that can help his situation.
Now, I'm glad to see somebody went the trade route.
Because that, in the long run, can be a more lucrative thing than a medium-range or low-range salaried office job.
I will, however, say that's a slice of life I know nothing about, and it sounds like we have some eminently qualified people to help Nate out, which is good.
And just, that's an administrative matter.
I've got a question, Mr. Age, if you don't mind.
Yeah, sure.
Yes, sir.
We're taking a trip down to Douglas County, Oregon, and I've looked everywhere, and that seems like the most tempered...
Well, there's one man.
I won't.
Okay, we'll just edit this out in the finished version, but it lives down there.
Yes, sir.
Yes, sir.
I talked to him before.
Okay.
He lives a little further south where I'm looking in Douglas County.
Look, that's okay.
I'm just trying to...
I just want to let y 'all know that we are coming, and we are very serious about this.
We're fishing a drag-up route and reroute somewhere else.
And I'm so, so very happy I have found y 'all.
You don't know what a blessing it is to me and my family to finally find y 'all.
I've been looking for you guys for about five or six years, and I'm so thankful that I found y 'all.
Thank you so much.
Okay.
Harold, I sent you an email a couple days ago asking pretty much the same question of whether you wanted me now or later with more job experience.
And I just want to say that if it was up to me, I would be packing at U-Haul tomorrow because this is extremely important to me to participate in this movement.
But I don't know exactly what you want from me in terms of what I should do to become a migrant there and become a member of the party.
People ask me that a lot.
They come to me and say, Harold, what do you need?
And I tell them, which basically means I'm telling them to migrate.
And basically right now the party needs two things.
We need boots on the ground and we need money.
My advice to you is go ahead, get it done now or as soon as you conveniently can.
I don't mean rock up here with nothing but a t-shirt on your back and $10 in your pocket and looking for the local homeless shelter.
And by the way, we've had that happen.
A migration is something that needs to be planned.
On the average, I'd say it probably takes about a year.
And by all means, sit down and make a, well, not long-term, but a medium-term or short-term plan as to how you could do it in, say, maybe a year.
And again, maybe I'm being paranoid or alarmist, and I always feel a little bit bad when I talk about these things because I'm kind of, you know, scared I'm going to mess up some white kid's life by giving me bad advice.
I don't think so in this case.
I really would not recommend waiting another five years.
The things going on in this country's politics and economy right now and in the world tend to indicate to me that five-year predictions in this society are not very safe to make, put it that way.
I think everybody pretty much needs to make a decision, among other things, as to where they are going to be when the excrement impacts on the rotating blades.
Which is going to happen.
So my advice to you, Nate, is, I mean, don't jump on the Greyhound bus and just head for Seattle right now, now, now, but make a short to medium or a shorter to medium term plan to be out here in maybe a year or so, if that would be possible.
You're going to have to save money and you're going to have to do all the usual things, but five years is chancing it a bit, in my opinion.
So there's another aspect to this question.
That I personally tend to get this aspect a little bit more.
It sounds like kind of in there, so I'll repeat it again.
I can't answer for anyone listening.
In terms of what we need from specific individuals.
That's usually a veiled way of asking, where do we want someone to move?
And my answer to that is always, and will always be, obviously within the homeland.
But you're already talking about doing that, and you're already talking about participating in the Northwest Imperative, and you've said how important it is to you, Nate, and that's great.
But beyond that, nobody's going to look out for your interests like you will.
And that always means, and we've heard, you know, we have people like Mac that have been on in the past, and they've always given the same advice, and that's that you need to go where you personally are going to prosper.
So, within the bounds of the homeland, you need to make the best choice for you personally, because above all else, we need well-placed, functional people that are doing well for themselves.
Yeah.
You're single, right?
Me?
Um, Nate?
Uh, no.
Absolutely not.
I have a National Socialist woman who...
Oh, that's right.
Yeah, okay.
I remember now.
Well, do you have any kids?
No, not yet.
Okay.
Well, frankly, if you're planning on having a family, I would say that you definitely need to avoid Seattle and Portland, the big cities.
If you...
Got the trade that you have, you should be able to get a job with no sweat in some places.
Like, one of the things I mentioned in the organizational letter, which I will email you about, there's a city in central western Washington that, in my opinion, it was the first place I ever came when I was in the homeland, and that was in 2002.
In my opinion, it probably would be a very good place for us to get settled into.
It's large enough to have a fairly prosperous economy and to have job opportunities.
But it's not this big urban sprawl type thing that is going to have all the urban problems.
And I think it would be, frankly, a much better place to raise children than, say, either Seattle or Portland or certainly Eugene.
So if you will, again, get with me on email, I will talk to you about that.
I have a guy here.
If I could chime in.
If folks have children, one thing you might also want to keep in mind is that there are substantially different laws regarding homeschooling in the different states in the homeland, some of which have no oversight and allow you to do what you'd like to do in terms of how you'd school your children, and others of which are quite restrictive and make you do a lot of things that the state wants.
To make sure that you are in line with their curriculum, and so in addition to simply finding a job in a particular neighborhood that you want to go to.
Okay, guys, is there anything else real quick?
Because we need to go ahead and sign off here.
I just have one.
I just wanted to know, do we have people in the Metro Seattle area?
Oh, yeah.
Andy Donner, right here.
North of downtown Seattle.
Excellent.
I have something for Nate, and this also does go for anybody else that's interested.
Considering the winter, there is a lot of snow in the inland northwest, and if you're going to be driving, you're going to be crossing over that.
So if you're planning to move here, I'd say shoot for getting here sometime between April and October, because the winter months can be pretty hairy.
Oh yeah, for sure.
I'll tell that to people as well.
You don't want to be making the full move in the dead of winter.
I've had people come up here on their scouting trips in January, but making the move in the dead of winter is not the best thing it was.
I actually, I made that move in the dead of winter in February and actually had to pass over the Rockies with a trailer behind my truck, and I would not recommend it.
I did the same thing, Mark.
The passes closed on me in January.
So, I think in Wyoming or something like that.
Okay, guys.
Thanks for calling.
I apologize for all the hitches, but we do have some good material on here, and once we get all of the various madness edited out, we should have a pretty good little program here.