Tu ne cede malis, sed contra audentior ito





Friday 28 October 2011

Remember Captain Boycott

BOYCOTTS: LET'S TAKE BACK SOME POWER; LET'S HAVE SOME FUN

by Polemics

Money counts for more than votes

Boycotts work. If you are feeling depressed and disenfranchised don't be; you have (some) money in your pocket. Money is power - use it. What we lack in individual wealth we compensate for in numbers (and ideally organisation). Nearly one million voters supported the BNP in the Euro elections of '09 and that level of support was maintained in the 2010 General Election. Think of votes as a kind of currency - one million voters spent their votes on us. Now, supposing we could harness those voters to spend, or not spend, their pounds in ways which would promote our political objectives. For example, if in 2010 the Party leadership had wished to teach Unilever a lesson; to make it clear that business was not to interfere in politics; that nationalists were not impressed by their derogatory Marmite advertising campaign; that ridiculing the BNP with their "Love Hate" campaign would hit their bottom line and in the process wipe the smirk off the faces of the cocky young politically correct and comformist "creatives" at their ad agency - all the BNP had to do was post a message on their hugely popular website calling for a boycott of Unilever's products together with a list of those products. Unilever operates in a very competitive field and with products which are readily substitutable. Imagine a situation where a million voters immediately stopped buying "Persil" and bought Proctor & Gamble's "Ariel". That boycott could have been felt by their sales department possibly within hours!

There are plenty of organisations and businesses which are hostile to our objectives:

the BBC is a nest of Marxist vipers almost wholly dependent on licence fee revenues. Throw out the television and stop paying the licence fee. Removing the television from one's life has two important benefits; first one saves money on the licence fee tax; secondly and perhaps more importantly, one starts to feel better mentally. The media really is bad for one's mental health; ditto for the radio; and the newspapers are financially on the ropes thanks to the internet and independent blogging.  It is perfectly within our power to deliver the knockout blow: stop buying them; stop picking up the freebies; and stop reading them even when it's someone else's copy of the "Daily Backstabber".

Think long and hard with whom you do business, and remember buying a pint of milk is doing business.

There are plenty of businesses who promote images of the soft/stealth genocide - race mixing. It is important we boycott these organisations. Race mixing has psychological and health implications. On health grounds alone it should not be encouraged.

To recap, boycotts are good because they are fun; we feel empowered; our mental health improves; we do not need to win elections to further our objectives; we have the satisfaction of punishing the people and organisations harming us; we save money, which we can then direct to people and organisations, who at the very least, do not actively harm us.

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