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Transcript

Playing to Win: Methods for Non-Violent Nationalist Revolt [stream #94]

Co-Opting Gene Sharp's 'Radical Resistance' and Saul Alinky's 'Rules for Radicals'

Radical leftist students sometimes occupy a university building, then refuse to leave. Or they glue their hands to a road in order to stop traffic. It’s their way of making a statement against this or that societal phenomenon that they perceive as fascist or bourgeois, etc. Such as people trying to get to work on time.

But these and many other radical leftist tactics come from a single author. His name was Gene Sharp. In his book From Dictatorship to Democracy, Sharp listed around 200 nonviolent methods that radical leftists still use today in order to sabotage our society. Or rather, in order to sabotage the white middle class, which they deem the source of all colonial evil.

I know that Gene Sharp wasn’t really a radical leftist. He was working with the CIA to help overthrow foreign regimes. But his methods were used succesfully to do so. And have you noticed how Western leftists today still use these methods to delegitimize the right, and to sabotage what is good? That’s why we are going to counteract this sabotage by using the left’s methods against hem, putting ourselves back in power.

Sharp came to his methods by studying historical revolutions. He discovered that nonviolent revolutions had greater chances of success. And this is what we also want to achieve: to play to win. While some successful revolutions were violent, most of the successful ones were not.

The idea of nonviolent revolution is that you can enlist grandmas and their grandchildren, whereas violent revolution exclusively attracts young males. Numbers-wise, through, it makes sense to include the aging White boomer generations of the West in the upcoming revolt for our survival.

Instead of fighting the enemy head-on, we should focus on taking away their speech. We should smear their character, and publicly mock our opponents. These tactics, of course, are precisely the sort that we, on the right, have fallen victim to for too long.

It’s time to return the favor. We can use the methods of the left against them, and so, pave the way to further our ethnonationalist resolve.

The Ten Commandments of the Right

Before I go over Gene Sharp’s many methods, I’ll first give you our Ten Commandments. This is a list of attitudes originally developed by another radical leftist, namely Saul Alinsky, once a favorite of Hillary Clinton, who wrote a book titled Rules for Radicals. In that book, Alinsky fantasized about overthrowing the White middle class, because that’s where he believed the power and the wealth was.

I edited Alinsky’s rules for radicals into the Ten Commandments of the Right, as follows:

1. Intimidate the enemy. Make the enemy think you have more power than you really have.

2. Use what’s familiar. Build future action based on past experiences. People can only understand new things in terms of old things. The same is true for political action. If you venture too far from your people’s experiences, you will confuse them and the mission will fail.

3. Confuse the enemy. By doing things the enemy has never experienced before, you will confuse them.

4. Tirelessly ridicule the enemy and point out their flaws. Conservatives all too often try to reason with their opponents. We come up with facts and arguments to try to convince the left. But the leftist enemy thinks like a toddler. They aren’t interested in words. They only understand force. By ridiculing the enemy, we undermine their resolve.

5. Keep reinventing yourself and your tactics. When Hitler threatened to invade France, the French built their defenses on the same spot they had fought the First World War. Hitler surprised the French by simply ordering his troops to take a detour around the French defenses.

6. Threaten the enemy with the force you possess. The threat is usually more terrifying than the thing itself.

7. Bend the truth. Use anything the enemy says to your advantage.

8. Act first and provoke the enemy. By forcing the enemy to respond to our initiative, we put ourselves in charge of the situation.

9. Prepare yourself. Work through different scenarios in order to thwart the enemy’s plans. The point is that we need to know what our next moves are going to be.

10. Blame highly visible targets for complex problems. Mass immigration is a complex problem. By blaming, say, Kamala Harris for it, you make her a target. It doesn’t even matter if it’s true or not. By repeating the accusation, it becomes the truth.


Now let’s move on to Gene Sharp’s methods of nonviolent revolution. I have reworked his original 198 methods into a list of methods that I believe are conducive to our ethonationalist cause.

Note 1. A lot of these and similar methods can nowadays be performed as skits on TikTok or other video platforms. Such videos could go viral easily, making a mockery of our entire political caste. We should, in any case, record most of our actions and get our videos to go viral online. We are going to meme ourselves back into power.

Note 2. Before trying any method of protest, check with local laws to see what is or isn’t legal nowadays! I am not advocating illegal or violent action, rather the opposite: nonviolent, legal action!

I. Protest and Persuasion

a. Formal Statements

1. Public Speeches

2. Letters of opposition or support

3. Declarations by organizations and institutions

4. Signed public statements

5. Declarations of indictment and intention

6. Group or mass petitions

b. Communications with a Wider Audience

7. Slogans, caricatures, and symbols

8. Banners, posters, and displayed communications

9. Leaflets, pamphlets, and books

10. Newspapers and journals

11. Records, radio, and television

12. Skywriting and earthwriting

c. Group Representations

13. Deputations, i.e., sending a group of delegates to attend formal events.

14. Mock awards, i.e., awarding Kamal Harris the reward for worst politician.

15. Group lobbying

16. Picketing

17. Mock elections, or rather: making a mockery of elections, by showing that the Uniparty always wins no matter who we vote for.

d. Symbolic Public Acts

18. Displays of flags and symbolic colors (This is why they have the pride flag waving everywhere. It is meant to demoralize people.)

19. Wearing of symbols

20. Prayer and worship (Now you can guess why police everywhere in the West have started arresting Christian street preachers.)

21. Delivering symbolic objects (For example, by handing over a miniature replica of the White House to someone dressed up as an Orthodox Jew. Indeed, such activities can nowadays be performed as skits on TikTok or other social video platforms.)

22. Dress-ups, i.e., workers going to work dressed in formal evening attire, to show the leadership that they deserve better treatment.

23. Fixing broken public architecture, removing grafitti, cleaning streets, etc. in places that have been neglected by the authorities.

24. Symbolic lights, images, and messages projected onto walls. Although, in The Netherlands, a man was convicted to 6 months in prison for projecting the message White Lives Matter onto the Erasmus Bridge. A better way to deal with this may be to project the question, Do White lives matter? or, more radically, state that White Lives Don’t Matter.

25. Displays of portraits: Put up public portraits of our ancestral heroes, our war generals, our historic leaders.

26. Paint as protest: The way that Banksy spreads his communist message with grafitti, our artists can easily counter-protest by putting up clever grafitti messages such as: “Your children will hate you”.

27. New signs and names: Remember when leftists change street names into some incomprehebsible ooga-booha language? We can return them the favor by changing Main Street signs into White Heritage Streets.

28. Symbolic sounds: For example, playing zoo sounds from a portable speaker system upon the arrival of migrants to asylum centers.

29. Symbolic reclamations: When they say we are living on stolen land, we symbolically reconquer it again, to reassert our dominion. Once again, a lot of the stunts can be performed as skits on TikTok etc.

30. Rude gestures: Nowadays, we can get arrested for gesticulating at the police, but what if we simply turned our backs to them?

e. Pressures on Individuals

31. “Haunting” officials: This is a method of following public officials around, without getting too close or interfering with them. Leftist journalists often use this tactict by following.

32. Taunting officials: To provoke someone in an insulting or contemptuous manner. For example, by dressing a man up as a woman and asking the President of France if he’ll marry him.

33. Fraternization (Trying to befriend the enemy as a way of pestering them).

34. Vigils, for example around important pro-White landmarks, statues of our heroes, etc.

f. Drama and Music

35. Humorous skits and pranks

36. Performances of plays and music: For example, re-enacting the conquest of the Americas by Europeans, but unapologetically, by depicting the enemy as unworthy of the territory.

37. Singing illegal songs in public such as Rhodesians Never Die by Clem Tolet.

g. Processions

38. Marches

39. Parades

40. Religious processions: In many Southern European countries, they have elaborate religious processions, and it may be useful to import these into Northern Europe and the Americas as well. See especially the power of procession from the 1982 movie Cavalleria Rusticana by Italian director Zeffirelli.

41. Pilgrimages: The Christian piligrimage to Jerusalem deserves a revival, if not to reclaim Jerusalem as belonging to the Christian world of Europe, and not to the world of Zionist Jews. Pilgrimages can be completed anywhere in the world, of course, perhaps ending the erection of a simple cross on a beach and burning one’s old clothes. Again, such events should be mass broadcast to social media and video platforms. Turn your ordinary hiking triping into a spiritually cleansing pilgrimage.

42. Motorcades

h. Honoring the Dead

43. Political mourning: Mourn the deceased heroes of the West: our soldiers, our generals, our leaders, all those who once felt no shame to fight for their people.

44. Mock funerals: We bury Leftism, for example, as personified by Ronald McDonald, the corporate clown.

45. Demonstrative funerals: When one of our girls has been raped and killed by yet another foreign clan, a million men should show up to her funeral. As in a display of power, a warning to the enemy.

46. Homage at burial places: Wherever ours have fallen, we start leaving behind flags and flowers. The recent surge in white flags with red crosses in Britain is an excellent strat.

i. Public Assemblies

47. Assemblies of protest or support

48. Protest meetings

49. Camouflaged meetings of protest

50. Teach-ins: I.e., informative lectures to educate our right-wingers who normally don’t read books (but whose ears are still fine).

j. Withdrawal and Renunciation

51. Walk-outs: Visit a far-left event, then ostentatiously walk out when talks start.

52. Silence: Refuse to participate in activities that harm our people, such as, if you’re forced to attend a diversity training for fear of losing your job, the least you can do is to remain silent and withdraw from the activity.

53. Renouncing honors: If you’ve been given some kind of award by an institituion that doesn’t support our people, them symbolically destroy it or dispose of it. Another perfect activity for a viral TikTok video.

54. Turning one’s back to people who don’t support us.


II. Methods of Noncooperation

a. Ostracism of Persons

55. Social boycott

56. Selective social boycott

57. Lysistratic nonaction, i.e., the famous sex strike, except by reversing the roles and having right-wing men state on TikTok they now refuse to sleep with leftist women. Ultimately, it’s just a silly threat, but it might reach the headlines of the New York Times.

58. Excommunication: Remove people from your social circles if they’ve made treasonous statements, or if they serve Israel instead of our own countries.

59. Interdict: Ban certain groups or people from participation in your circles.

b. Ignoring Social Events, Customs, and Institutions

60. Suspension of social and sports activities

61. Boycott of social affairs

62. Student strike

63. Social disobedience

64. Withdrawal from social institutions

c. Withdrawal from the Social System

65. Stay-at-home: Don’t attend your diversity training. Just say you did.

66. Total personal noncooperation: Refuse to cooperate

67. “Flight” of workers

68. Sanctuary; It is the idea of safe spaces for people seeking to withdraw themselves from power and authority they disagree with. For us right-wingers, we could demand “Christian sanctuaries” in increasingly non-Christian schools and so on, referring to our rights as minorities.

69. Collective disappearance: The idea is rather to make large groups of people invisible as a form of protest.

70. Protest emigration (hijrat): It’s like walking out, except we make plans to leave our region or country entirely, as a way of showing authorities that they no longer serve our needs and interests.


III. Economic Boycotts

a. Actions by Consumers

71. Consumers’ boycott

72. Nonconsumption of boycotted goods: Refuse to eat the halal food

73. Policy of austerity

74. Rent withholding: This used to be a powerful strategy in the Dutch city of Rotterdam during the 1970s. People would pay rent into a foundation they set up together, but wouldn’t send the funds on to the landlords, thus forcing the landlords to fix major housing issues first.

75. Refusal to rent: This is a situation we can all too well understand nowadays. Just look at the number of people moving into van life, or setting up off the grid housing, just to get away from the usual system of high rents.

76. National consumers’ boycott

77. International consumers’ boycott

b. Action by Workers and Producers

78. Workmen’s boycott

79. Producers’ boycott

c. Action by Middlemen

80. Suppliers’ and handlers’ boycott

d. Action by Owners and Management

81. Traders’ boycott

82. Refusal to let or sell property

83. Lockout, i.e., locking workers out of their factories

84. Refusal of industrial assistance

85. Merchants’ “general strike”

e. Action by Holders of Financial Resources

86. Withdrawal of bank deposits (though calling for bank runs is nowadays illegal).

87. Refusal to pay fees, dues, and assessments

88. Refusal to pay debts or interest

89. Severance of funds and credit

90. Revenue refusal

91. Refusal of a government’s money

f. Action by Governments

92. Domestic embargo, i.e., restrictions on trade with unfavorable regimes.

93. Blacklisting of traders

94. International sellers’ embargo

95. International buyers’ embargo

96. International trade embargo


IV. Strikes

Here, Gene Sharp included a whole section on strikes, i.e., the refusal to work. I’m not sure about this tactic. Might it be better to do the opposite, i.e., instead of striking, we start solving cetrain problems in the boss’s time, showing the bureaucats in charge that solutions are actualy easy to implement, if we’d only just go ahead with them?

This may require some more thought. But it would be a powerful statement to start fixing all sorts of minor problems in our public domain, by ignoring official planning.

[…]

V. Political Sabotage

a. Rejection of Authority

120. Withholding or withdrawal of allegiance

121. Refusal of public support

122. Literature and speeches advocating resistance

b. Citizens’ Noncooperation with Government

123. Boycott of legislative bodies

124. Boycott of elections

125. Boycott of government employment and positions

126. Boycott of government depts., agencies, and other bodies

127. Withdrawal from government educational institutions

128. Boycott of government-supported organizations

129. Refusal of assistance to enforcement agents

130. Removal of own signs and placemarks

131. Refusal to accept appointed officials

132. Refusal to dissolve existing institutions

c. Citizens’ Alternatives to Obedience

133. Reluctant and slow compliance

134. Nonobedience in absence of direct supervision

135. Popular nonobedience (not doing what you’re told)

136. Disguised disobedience (going against what you’re told)

137. Refusal of an assemblage or meeting to disperse

138. Sitdown—Leftist love sitdowns, to block traffic or to occupy a university building. Perhaps we can give this a right-wing twist.

139. Noncooperation with conscription and deportation

140. Hiding, escape, and false identities

141. Civil disobedience of “illegitimate” laws

d. Action by Government Personnel

142. Selective refusal of assistance by government aides

143. Blocking of lines of command and information

144. Stalling and obstruction

145. General administrative noncooperation

146. Judicial noncooperation

147. Deliberate inefficiency and selective noncooperation by enforcement agents.

148. Mutiny

e. Domestic Governmental Action

149. Quasi-legal evasions and delays

150. Noncooperation by constituent governmental units

f. International Governmental Action

151. Changes in diplomatic and other representations

152. Delay and cancellation of diplomatic events

153. Withholding of diplomatic recognition

154. Severance of diplomatic relations

155. Withdrawal from international organizations

156. Refusal of membership in international bodies

157. Expulsion from international organizations


VI. Nonviolent Intervention

a. Psychological Intervention

158. Self-exposure to the elements? Or rather: Building shelter for homeless White people.

159. The fast?—Instead of fasting, we should bulk up, grow muscle, go to the gym. Let’s not engage in these sort of tactics that harm our physical and mental wellbeing, but rather engage in what strengthens us.

160. Reverse trial: When you appear before a court, turn the day around by putting forth arguments that indict that judges and the court system, or the society as a whole.

161. Nonviolent harassment

b. Physical Intervention

Here, Sharp lists many ways of physically obstructing matters. Which may or may not be a good idea, depending on what’s being obstructed.

c. Social Intervention

174. Establishing new social patterns

175. Overloading of facilities

176. Stall-in, i.e. deliberately running out of gas

177. Speak-in, Go to leftist events by posing as a leftist speaker, and then speaking your opinions anyway.

178. Guerrilla theater: Spontaneous public performance that nowadays can be spread far an wide via social media.

179. Alternative social institutions

180. Alternative communication system: Yes, we need our own new tools for secrecy, for example.

d. Economic Intervention

181. Reverse strike

182. Stay-in strike

183. Nonviolent land seizure

184. Defiance of blockades

185. Politically motivated counterfeiting

186. Preclusive purchasing

187. Seizure of assets

188. Dumping

189. Selective patronage

190. Alternative markets

191. Alternative transportation systems

192. Alternative economic institutions

e. Political Intervention

193. Overloading of administrative systems

194. Disclosing identities of secret agents

195. Seeking imprisonment

196. Civil disobedience of “neutral” laws

197. Work-on without collaboration

198. Dual sovereignty and parallel government

f. Fake Crowdfunds

Raise money from concerned leftists but funnel the money toward right-wining causes. Not by doing anything illegal but by using obfuscated language that leftists might misinterpret.

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