I receive many letters from listeners, and usually they are
gratifying to me. Some people tell me that I have opened their
eyes or that I have helped them make sense out of what's been
happening to their world, that my explanations have really helped
them understand what's going on, have helped them see the big
picture. And some people tell me that they already had figured
out by themselves what's happening, and that they are very happy
to have discovered my broadcasts, because now they know that
they aren't the only ones to have figured it out: that they
aren't alone in the world, that there are others who have come
to the same conclusions they have.
I especially sympathize with these people who tell me how
glad they are to discover that they're not the only ones who
understand what's happening, because there was a time when
I also wondered whether I was the only sane person in the
universe. I was running around telling anyone who would listen,
"My god, don't you understand where this policy of racial
integration of the schools will lead? It will lead to the
drugs and crime that are endemic among Blacks spreading to
White boys and girls. It will lead to a lowering of scholastic
standards to accommodate the Blacks. It will lead to a greatly
increased rate of racial intermarriage."
And people would look at me as if I were crazy, and they'd
tell me I was an alarmist. They'd say to me, "Just having
a few Blacks in school won't hurt anything. Surely everything
will go on pretty much as it always has."
Then, after I'd looked into the ownership and management
of the news and entertainment media which were pushing every
destructive racial and social and political policy and I discovered
that most of them were Jews, I figured I had the key to what
was happening to America, and I tried to tell people about
that. I'd say, "Listen, did you know that every major
studio in Hollywood is run by Jews? Did you know that all
three television networks are run by Jews?" In those
days there were just three television networks, ABC, CBS,
and NBC. And I'd start naming the Jews who were running the
big film companies in Hollywood, the Jews who ran the networks,
the Jews who owned the New York Times and the Washington Post
and the three weekly news magazines. I'd say, "Hey, listen,
the Jews make up less than three per cent of the population
in the United States, and yet they control nearly every medium
of mass communication. That's no coincidence." And people
would tell me, "Well, so what? They're just good businessmen,
that's all. They're clever at that sort of thing. That's how
they got control. Don't worry about it."
And I'd say, "But don't you see, with their monopoly
control of the media they're able to have an enormous influence
on public opinion. Look at what they're doing with these television
serials of theirs, All in the Family, and M*A*S*H, and the
rest. They're all slanted the same way -- all of them. That's
no coincidence. And by controlling the ideas and opinions
of such a large segment of the public, they can control votes,
they can control political candidates. That's why our government
is pushing the same policies the media are pushing. It's no
coincidence. Don't you understand?"
And people would say to me, "Don't talk like that. That
sounds like anti-Semitism. You can't say anything that's anti-Semitic,
because if you do the media will destroy you, they'll smear
you, they'll cause you to lose your job. Go away; don't talk
to me."
And I'd reply to them, "Look, I don't care what you
call it -- anti-Semitism or patriotism or alarmism or what
-- the point is that it's the truth; it's what's happening
to us. And it's our responsibility to stop it." But my
listeners already would be running away as fast as they could
go. And I would really feel lonely. And so I can sympathize
with the listeners who write me today and tell me how glad
they are to have found out that they're not alone in their
concern for what's being done to our country, to our civilization,
to our people.
But let me tell you, it's a lot easier today to find people
who agree with us than it was 25 years ago. There are a lot
more concerned people out there today than there were then.
There are a lot more people who understand what's happening.
And if my efforts have had anything to do with that, if I
have been able to increase the number of those who understand,
then I am very happy for that. That is my reward for everything
I do: knowing that I am building the number of people who
understand what's happening in the world today.
But you know, there's more to our task than just helping
people to understand what's happening. The bigger job is to
get people to accept responsibility -- personal responsibility
-- for straightening things out. Even back in those days when
I felt very lonely, I realized that getting people to accept
responsibility was a more difficult job than getting them
to understand. When people told me, "You can't talk about
the Jews; they'll destroy you," -- when they said that
and then ran away from me, it was clear that they already
had at least some understanding of the Jewish problem. They
understood that the Jews are extremely powerful and are organized
and don't want anybody explaining to the public what they're
up to. These people already understood that much without my
telling them about it. They just didn't want to do anything
about it. They were afraid. They didn't want to accept personal
responsibility.
It took a while for that fact to sink in. I couldn't understand
this unwillingness to accept responsibility. I mean, when
our ancestors came over here from England and Scotland and
Scandinavia and Germany and took this land away from the Indians
and built a country, they weren't a bunch of softies or cowards
or people who ran away from a challenge. They were strong
people. They were fighters. How did their great-great-great-great-great
grandsons become such a bunch of wimps, such a bunch of couch
potatoes and lemmings? I couldn't understand that.
Well, since then I have gradually come to understand how
that happened, how America lost its spine. America isn't the
only country that's happened to. And of course, not every
American has lost his spine. There still are many Americans
who are not afraid of the truth. There still are Americans
who are willing to accept personal responsibility: Americans
who when they understand what's going on, either because I
explained it to them or they figured it out for themselves,
don't run away. Instead they say, "What can I do? How
can I help?" There still are Americans like that. The
problem is that there aren't enough of them. So I want to
share with you my thoughts on this concept of personal responsibility,
in the hope that it will help you be willing to accept your
responsibility also.
You know, we live in an age of shirkers, of deadbeats, of
people who actually think they're being smart by never being
responsible for anything. It seems like the first rule a lot
of our soldiers in Vietnam learned 25 years ago was "never
volunteer for anything." That's what I hear from a lot
of Vietnam vets. But this attitude also has permeated our
whole society and has affected many Americans who are too
young to have been in Vietnam. People who spend a lot of time
on the Internet discussing political and social issues with
other people tell me that the word there too is "never
join anything; if you do the government may cause you trouble
or you may be asked to do something; so the smart thing to
do -- the safe thing to do -- is never join anything."
Well, of course, the thing about the Internet is that it
is anonymous. People can express their opinions about anything
they want without anybody knowing who they are. They all use
pseudonyms or nicknames. It's the perfect environment for
cowards, for shirkers. They can shoot their mouths off and
act like real men without being called to account. And like
shirkers everywhere, they would like for everyone else to
be a shirker too, so they are not shown up for what they are.
They would like for their cowardice and irresponsibility to
be regarded as prudence. They want to thought of as smart
guys instead of as shirkers.
But really, how smart is it never to accept any personal
responsibility? What that amounts to is opting to be a spectator
in life instead of a participant. Life is interesting. Life
can be fun. There are many fascinating things to observe,
to talk about. And I guess these smart guys figure that they
will watch it all first. They will talk about it all with
their friends first. Then when they know everything they can
go back and make smart choices about what to become involved
in. They won't make any mistakes.
But you know, it doesn't work that way. You don't get to
go back and start over after you've watched it all and got
it all figured out. You only get one shot at life, and you've
got to make the most of it. You've got to figure it out as
you go, even if that means accepting some risk and making
some mistakes. There's no going back. If you just watch it
all the way to the end, telling everyone how smart you are
because you're not making any commitments or taking any chances,
you've missed your chance to live. And that chance never will
come again. The people who live are the people who participate
in life, not the spectators who just watch it go by.
I guess that in this television age, when kids grow up spending
much more time watching things happen on the TV screen than
actually doing things, people who are naturally weak and passive
will slip into the spectator mode and stay there all their
lives. And at this point there's not much we can do for them.
They've just missed it. But I know that there are many men
and women out there who still are capable of reaching out
and taking hold of life and living. Those are the ones I'm
talking to. And I apologize if what I'm saying sounds painfully
obvious, painfully self-evident -- but it is so extremely
important that I must say it.
This wonderful gift of life that we have, what does it mean?
What is its real value? Is it simply a collection of sensations,
of feelings, that we get as spectators? I'm sure that for
many people that's what life is. The more pleasurable their
collection of sensations, the more pleasant their feelings,
the more enjoyable the things they see as spectators, the
better their life is. And that's understandable. That's what
life always has been for animals -- and we are animals. We
are creatures of instinct, and our instincts tell us to survive,
to find food, to seek shelter, to reproduce, to avoid danger.
In a prosperous, civilized society the drive to satisfy these
basic needs expresses itself as a quest for wealth, for enjoyment,
for comfort.
A thousand years ago our ancestors also sought wealth, enjoyment,
and comfort. But they didn't believe that these things were
quite as important as most people today think they are. In
that age before television people were perhaps a little closer
to the earth, and they were a little more aware of just how
temporary an individual's life is, and they reached out for
things with a little more permanence, things beyond wealth
and comfort and pleasure, things which to them seemed to have
more real meaning. I remember a few lines of poetry which
expressed this feeling among our ancestors in Scandinavia
-- and more generally in the Germanic parts of Europe -- back
during the Viking age. Those lines are:
Cattle die, and kinsmen die,
and so must one die oneself.
But there is one thing I know which never dies,
and that is the fame of a dead man's deeds.
For our ancestors a thousand years ago, of course, cattle
were wealth, and kinsmen were power, and though they sought
these things just as we do today, they understood that they
were transitory; the value of these things was not permanent.
The only thing that is permanent is the mark that one makes
on the world with one's deeds. Everyone wants to live well,
of course, but it is better to live effectively: to live so
that one is remembered for what one has accomplished.
And to put a little finer edge on the concept, it is not
just fame in itself which is important. What counts also is
the type of fame, the type of renown. The goal was to be remembered
not just for being able to throw a spear farther than others
or to swing a battle-ax harder or to use a sword more skillfully;
it was to be remembered for having lived a meaningful life,
a significant life. For some that meant a life of accomplishment,
of changing the world; for others it meant a life lived as
closely as possible in accord with the ideals of personal
honor and of service to one's people, so that one's life could
be held up as a model and remembered as such.
In any case the life that had lasting value was a life of
participation; never a life of sitting on one's hands and
playing it safe. Perhaps too much television and too much
comfort have caused us to lose sight of this very important
thing which our ancestors understood. I think that they saw
their individual lives more clearly in the larger context
of the ongoing life of the race than we do. They were on more
familiar terms with birth and with death than we are and were
not as likely as we are to slip into the folly of believing
that they would live forever. And so being constantly aware
of the reality and inevitability of death they were more concerned
than we are to use their lives effectively and to give lasting
meaning to them.
For those of us today who do want to participate in life,
who want to live significant lives, there is no more significant
activity in which to participate than working to assure a
healthy future for our people, for our European race. And
there is almost no limit to the ways in which you can participate
in this activity. Whether you're a housewife or a computer
scientist or a machinist or a secretary or a bulldozer operator
or a law-enforcement officer or a teacher or a writer or an
artist, you can participate. The only reason that a rabble
of feminists and queers and Jews and Blacks and mestizos and
liberals and Clinton supporters are running America into the
ground today is that decent people are sitting on their hands.
If the decent people in America would get off their hands
and accept personal responsibility for what is being done
to their world, and if they would make a commitment and begin
working together, we could sweep the whole Clinton coalition
into the dustbin of history. It doesn't matter that the Clinton
rabble outnumber us. We will whip them in a minute. We will
have the media bosses jumping into the ocean all along the
East Coast and swimming toward Israel as fast as they can
go. But first we must be willing to accept personal responsibility.
And so my message today to every decent person who is listening
is this: Don't be a shirker. Don't try to be a smart guy by
continuing to cheer from the sidelines but refusing to join
the team and get out on the field. Stand up and become a participant
in life. Make of your life a model that people will remember
and talk about long after you're gone. And sure, the bureaucrats
in the Clinton government may try to put your name on some
sort of "enemies" list of Politically Incorrect
people, but you should regard that as a badge of honor.
And let me tell you something else -- and this is directed
not only toward the decent men and women in my audience, but
also toward those who now think of themselves as "smart
guys" -- let me tell you: don't worry if the Clinton
government hates you for standing up and accepting your personal
responsibility. Don't worry if Hillary Clinton denounces you
as part of some "right wing conspiracy." Don't worry
if Janet Reno tells her jackbooted thugs that you should be
watched. Don't worry about any of these people. Don't be afraid
of them, because they aren't going to last. Their ship is
taking on water fast, and they are going down sooner than
they expect, believe me.
Listen, I'm not one of these old-fashioned moralists who'll
tell you that because every major city in America has become
the sort of place that would make the folks in Sodom and Gomorrah
blush, we're going to be punished with fire and brimstone.
I don't believe that wickedness is automatically punished.
I do believe that evil can thrive and prosper for quite a
while. My god, look, at how successful the Jews have been.
But I also believe that when a society loses its manliness,
when its leaders lose all sense of direction and no longer
are guided by any principle or any ideal and are concerned
only with looking out for themselves, when a country loses
its backbone and its citizens withdraw from the public arena
and refuse to be anything but spectators -- then that society,
that country, will not remain afloat for long. It's going
under.
I mean, how can anyone be afraid of a government headed by
Bill Clinton? How can anyone take seriously a Congress whose
members are so frightened by the opinion polls that they won't
throw the bum out? Janet Reno may still have a lot of jackbooted
thugs at her disposal, but by being a part of the Clinton
government she has forfeited the respect, the serious consideration,
of decent citizens. Really, the time has come for us to understand
that this government of clowns and criminals in Washington
may still be dangerous, but it won't be around forever. And
I'm not talking about just the Clinton administration; I'm
talking about the whole structure, the whole system. In planning
our strategies, in deciding how we should live, what the government
thinks about us just shouldn't be as fundamental a consideration
as it would be if we lived in a healthy society with a government
of principled men. Even the smart guys should be thinking
ahead to the time when this rotten system and all its supporters,
all its collaborators, are with the maggots, and people who
don't know how to accept personal responsibility because they
have never done it, people who don't know how to participate
in events because they always have been only spectators, may
find the going a lot rougher. The non-participants may find
it much harder to survive.
Anyway, it's always better to be a participant than a spectator,
and never more than now. It is time, my fellow White men and
women, for us to stop worrying about anything except doing
what is right. It is time for us to accept our responsibilities.
Thanks for being with me again today. And by the way, if
you missed my radio broadcast last week, you still can listen
to it through the Internet. The current program and a few
recent programs -- both text and audio -- always are accessible
on the Internet.