One Ambition

What’s my ostensible objective on this blog? My specialty is human religion. I’m striving to change the way people do Christian religion, in particular.

This business of “heart-led” is just another term for genuine faith. I contend that you can’t really call it “faith” unless it grows from a heart of conviction. And conviction does nothing unless you invest your conscious focus on your convictions. So we talk about moving the focus of your sense of self from your head into your heart. And then we have to clarify the terminology, because most of our audience is likely to invest false ideas in our choice of words.

But the whole thing calls for a shift in human awareness itself. We contend that faith is not merely another human endeavor, but that it must rule all things. Thus, whatever else you do under the sun must be rooted in your faith, your moral convictions about what really matters in the first place.

By no means did I set out to break from mainstream Christian religion. I struggled to stay involved and suggest changes from within the system. There was no hidden plan to sneak things in; I shared my perceptions openly during the whole process. It took quite a while for me to follow where my faith was leading me, but at some point, religious leaders pushed me out the door. My suggestions were too radical. I can’t say it was true for all of them, but I know for certain that some of them were frankly threatened by my suggestions. Not in the sense of violence, but in the high probability it would shatter their power and wealth.

Naturally, they accused me of trying to build my own power and wealth to displace theirs. Nothing can be gained by arguing about stuff like that. They were totally lost in their own world and refused to see mine. There could be no New Reformation.

There is a broad trend right now of people feeling disenfranchised in their own domains of interest and endeavor, so it’s easy to relegate me to their agitation for change in the system. In the minds of most people who even notice my work, I’m just another part of that trend. Since there’s no way I can change how people see that, I’m simply playing it for what it’s worth. There is a lot of social, cultural and political turmoil. We might as well include religious turmoil, too.

Wouldn’t it be marvelous if we could get more folks to pay attention to what we are doing here? Unfortunately, the folks who control the means of publicizing such things are opposed to our message, not least because putting faith first threatens their operations. On the other hand, we aren’t a very big threat, in that we don’t have a bunch of folks chanting “Radix Fidem” while ripping into their globalist operations. And we surely won’t get any positive attention from the alternative media sources, because we aren’t their allies, either. No, we’ll have to wait on God, as He is our chief publicist.

For now, that’s all in our favor. Publicity would get in our way at this point. It’s enough that He is drawing to us a base of folks who were actively looking for our message, even if they didn’t know quite what they were seeking. This doesn’t require any real strategy; just doing what we do, and talking about it, will provide a beacon bright enough to guide those who know they need light. We aren’t building a kingdom in the first place, but we do represent the one started two thousand years ago. It’s a kingdom not of this world.

That’s the whole point: We aren’t investing in this world in the first place. The time is already here when this world will be recognized as the horrible prison it really is, and folks will be looking for an escape. Then this religion will grow quite naturally. God’s wrath is a critical element in driving people into His bosom. Eden is not a place on this earth; it never was. Yet paradise is surely all the people who find genuine faith in Christ — we are Eden. We are the Garden of God, insofar as such a thing can be found in this world. We represent the Flaming Sword, the gateway of departure.

Feel free to read about Q-anon, to hang out on Vox Day’s or Neon Revolt’s blogs, and watch the celebration of our future “God Emperor” Trump. You can check out the “Great Awakening” sub-reddit and any number of online forums seeking to interpret the oddball communications from the enigmatic Q. Keep in mind that much of this is pure bullshaloney intended to cultivate the loyalty of a powerful nerd army. Don’t get trapped in that false religion, though, because that’s what it is — a modern form of emperor worship. Stuff will certainly happen simply because God is using Trump as His scourge. Don’t be shocked when it turns bloody, as it surely must.

Nothing of consequence will change in the human condition. All we can hope for is to participate in capturing merely the awareness of a few whom God has called to another world. Actually, that other world is the Creation that already stands right here with us, but a Creation from which fallen mankind is alienated. We seek to peel back the affects of the Curse of the Fall so that we can perceive and commune with His Creation as part of our communion with Him. So the only real hope is escaping the obsession with making something beautiful of our fallen condition, and getting out from under the doom of the Fall.

I’m utterly convinced that Radix Fidem is the route to the Flaming Sword. I want to help as many people as possible to find that path. It’s too sweet to keep to myself.

That’s my only ambition, if you can call it that.

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Bombs and Lies

1. Watch out for gatekeepers. It’s one thing to have a mission from God to protect the feudal domain He puts in your hands. It’s another thing to imagine that your mission from God is to play Covering Cherub. That was Satan’s first job and he started embezzling the Creator’s glory. Offering a similar delusion is one of his favorite ploys to seduce fools who suffer from the Boastful Pride of Life.

Notice how it’s just backwards from the mission Christ gave Peter. The Keys of the Kingdom were a matter of giving God access to His own domain and keeping others out. Peter’s job was to recognize when the Master had come to visit, first Samaritans, then Gentiles, and open the door for communion. Then some years later, Peter was seduced to withdraw from Gentile Christians, and was called on it. Satan wants to restrict people’s access to God.

Recognize when someone is playing gatekeeper between you and your Lord. It happens a lot in organized religion.

2. Not to be cryptic, but I’m trying to word this carefully; I could be misled on some details. We have come close to any number of major false flag events in the past few months. The globalists have been trying to leverage their access to various parts of the system, only to be blocked by others with even better access. We’ve had at least one missile launch, several more attempts at missile launches, military ordinance has been found in wrong places, etc.

Of course, the mainstream media is playing gatekeeper with the information on such events. Most of the world is so used to the globalists controlling the public dialog that even an honest declaration from government officials is simply not possible. The current story is significantly false, so the truth would seem preposterous. Most major man-made disasters that made the news in past decades are not what we’ve been told.

But the only messages getting out there to counter the big lies are more big lies, just a different flavor. With few exceptions, every time I dug into the alternative voices, I found they were pushing their own lies. You know that some portion is true in what the MSM and opposition are both saying, but there are also lies in with it. It’s hard to know what’s factual.

There are several of us within the parish who have sensed with our hearts that we are on the brink of such turmoil that our minds cannot imagine.

3. It’s not enough that people in power are doing crazy things, but I keep seeing it in the random events around me. The general level of human tension is rising; people are going nuts. It is part of God’s wrath that demons are released to drive people crazy. What used to be random wacko stuff is now sweeping whole groups.

It’s one thing to notice our economic and social stability are coming apart, but this is more than just that. It’s a fevered perception, something like hysteria and panic that is oozing through society. People are losing their grip.

On the one hand, this causes all kinds of problems. On the other hand, it opens the door to our ministry of faith. People seeing your heart-led sense of aplomb in the midst of chaos will know you have something they don’t. People don’t repent until they see the raw truth of their sin and feel the misery without any masking.

This is our time.

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Teachings of Jesus — Matthew 21:23-32

The final confrontation had begun. Jesus came to Jerusalem knowing He was about to be abused and executed. In the process, He must call attention to the moral failures of those who hated Him.

The Sanhedrin were well aware of Jesus, having commissioned quite a few delegations to investigate Him over the years of His ministry. They did the same thing with most rabbis not already under their collective thumb. All the more so in this period of time when messianic fervor was high. So they knew that Jesus was a cousin of John the Baptist, the alleged prophet who had been recently executed. Both of these men were viewed as partisans of a sort, aligned with a broad collection of anti-establishment preachers and activists. Part of the Sanhedrin’s mission was keeping these agitators under control to avoid provoking any conflict with the Roman government. The Jewish people were notorious for how easily they could be stoked into rebellion.

So here is Jesus saying things that made it sound very much like He is claiming to be the Messiah. To the Sanhedrin that meant not only a threat to their tenuous permit from the Roman officials who there in the city, but a serious threat to Sanhedrin wealth and power. Here He was, so close to the highest of holy days, wandering in and out of the city with His teaching and miracles that questioned their authority in very popular ways. This included an obvious prophetic act of clearing the Bazaars of the Sons of Annas out of the Court of Gentiles.

The next day, He returned and they demanded He declare what authority He had to act in this way. Not least was the matter of destroying the property of the sellers and currency changers, causing them significant financial loss, and inconveniencing the Diaspora Jews visiting from out of town, who couldn’t get their proper offerings for the rituals. In the process, Jesus made public fools of them yet again.

His answer to their query was unexpected. They knew He was clever, so they were anticipating something difficult, and He didn’t disappoint them. He responded to their question with a question of His own: What was the source of authority behind His cousin, John the Baptist? They huddled for a moment and realized there were trapped. Naturally, they dismissed any prophet, regardless how orthodox, who dared suggest they had attended his sermons only to be seen performing righteous rituals, a form of ticket-punching. John told them to come back when they were ready to manifest genuine fruit of repentance. Were they not the very measure of righteousness and God’s favor? How dare John suggest they were serpents!

But the crowd that had gathered to see Jesus today were convinced John was the real deal, a genuine prophet of Jehovah. If these elders and Temple officers were to denounce John, it would provoke a riot in this atmosphere. So they pretended to have no opinion because they couldn’t tell whence his authority. To this Jesus responded that they likely wouldn’t understand His authority, either, so there was no point in discussing it.

Then He launched into another of His famous parables. The symbols were obvious: a powerful figure representing God. His vineyard represented the Covenant Nation; the fruit was their mission of living by the Covenant and harvesting all the blessings of shalom. He ordered each of his two sons to work in that vineyard. The first said, “No.” He at least was honest about his intentions. However, he later came under conviction and went to do the work. The second son promised to get right on it, but never showed up at the vineyard. The officials could smell it coming.

Jesus asked of them which did the will of the father? Obviously it was the first one who repented, and they answered so, probably with some wariness. Rightly so, because Jesus lowered the boom on them. He declared that the “traitorous” tax collectors and shameful prostitutes would enter the Messiah’s Kingdom before any of the officers and elders standing there. It was well known that those who repented at the preaching of John the Baptist often then went on to support the ministry of Jesus. While their wealth was regarded as tainted by evil, those outcasts kept Jesus and His disciples well funded. The penitent son represented those outcasts, while the polite lying son represented themselves. Once more, Jesus made them a laughingstock, painting them as fakes.

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Dell XPS: Upgrading Ubuntu

My Dell XPS 13 came with Ubuntu 16.04. That’s still valid and supported for a few more years yet. However, depending on the kind of work you do on that system, it’s often necessary to upgrade the OS to the latest and greatest. It’s typical of Dell to wait until the first point-release on the Ubuntu LTS line before offering an upgrade. Thus, while Ubuntu 18.04 came out in April, only in the past month or so did Dell consider it ready for prime time.

Now, I keep a backup of all my important files on another system. The other system is a desktop that runs Debian with an SSH sever. I regularly sync between them using Filezilla’s SFTP feature over my home router. Always back-up your files before trying any kind of upgrade.

Here is the official instructions. I chose to run the upgrade install, the first option. This is tricky, at best. Since I can’t bear the anti-user Gnome interface, nor the Unity Desktop, I had added the Xubuntu desktop after receiving my laptop. The release upgrade script was just not up the task and I ended up with a broken system that wouldn’t boot to the desktop. I thought it was worth a try, though.

I then tested the latest Xubuntu installer, but it errored out and failed completely. So I went back to the Canonical route (pun intended) used the latest Ubuntu DVD ISO image. Since I own an external DVD drive, that was the simplest answer for me. The Dell BIOS can detect the drive and whether a bootable disk is in it. All I had to do was hit the F12 key during system boot and it gave me the option of choosing the external DVD with Ubuntu 18.04.1. And no, I didn’t have to turn off UEFI boot controls; it worked properly without tweaking.

This worked as expected and I chose the option to wipe the file system and make a full fresh installation. Once things were up and running, I once again added the Xubuntu desktop and got a usable system. I’m not quite sure how they arranged it, but right away the update utility notified me that there was a Dell firmware update. All you have to do is download that and it gets put in the right place. The software updater will act confused, because all you have to do is download; there’s no installation as such. When you reboot and system, that’s when it goes through the installation routine. The BIOS finds the installer and proceeds automatically. This is one of reasons why I favor Dell hardware: because Dell works directly with Canonical on making this stuff turn out right.

So far as I can tell, all the hardware is functioning properly without the hassle of chasing down special drivers. Everything seems to work as it should. It’s still fast as lightning and easily the best computer I’ve ever owned. Thank you, parish, for making this possible!

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Draper Bikeway 8

I suppose they decided not to wait any longer. This image shows the bikeway path pushing through the dirt dump for the as-yet unfinished construction down below. The digger is loading up dirt from this massive pile into one of those off-road dump trucks. It’s being used to build up low spots below the dam.

This is one of the stretches I noted previously that really needs a build-up. Today half of the dump loads were coming around the corner to this side near the west end of the dam. The bulldozer is spreading it out wide and leaving about an extra foot of dirt atop the current path.

On the way home, I took SE 29th past the big Sam’s Club again. The new bridge on which the workers have been piddling for the past two months is now almost ready. The other end is still blocked with warning tape, but it’s almost ready.

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Feudal Covenant Nation

Ref: yesterday’s post about 2 Samuel 24. In particular I want you to pay attention to the comments and my response to Mr. T’s questions.

Look at the title of this post and think it through: That’s three words representing essential elements in divine revelation. Modern western culture rejects all three, so this is a huge culture gap that keeps us from the promises of the gospel of Jesus Christ.

Everything — everything — God offers requires that you enter into a covenant relationship with Him and His people. That covenant is inherently feudal. Now, it doesn’t matter how small your “nation” is. It can be just two, at first, anyway. If you have joined with others under your best understanding of covenant law, you are in the place to hear from God. Outside of that feudal covenant bond, God treats all human organizations pretty much the same. A covenant feudal nation is herding sheep; everything else is like driving cattle. The world seems random to those outside of a covenant and they have to impose their own pitiful understanding to bring order. And it doesn’t work very well because they get almost no help from God, nor His discipline (Hebrews 12:6-11).

Hopefully this answers all the lingering questions and issues with Christian religion today. Individual believers get poor guidance from the Holy Spirit because they haven’t fully embraced the basic requirements of a feudal covenant nation. Your church must be a covenant church, and it’s organization must be that of a tribal extended family household. And there are no Lone Rangers in the Kingdom of Heaven. You must join a feudal covenant body of fellow believers. If there isn’t one around, be the foundation for one and wait for God to bring new family members to your nation. He will.

Without those three elements, you cannot have the full complement of miracles Jesus did; you cannot have the full promise that you will do those same miracles and more (John 14:12). You cannot demand that a fig tree wither and you cannot move mountains. You cannot commune with Creation as God intended; you cannot return to Eden. That Flaming Sword at the entrance to Eden requires those three elements.

Feudal. Covenant. Nation.

It’s not a matter of rules, as Westerners think of “law.” It’s the divine moral character of God; it’s the very substance of Creation itself. It’s Biblical Law, it’s divine justice, it’s the gospel of Jesus Christ. We believe our Radix Fidem covenant is merely a fresh restatement of that fundamental covenant law of God. It’s stated in terms that address the peculiar mental orientation of Western minds. The only reason you might consider joining us here in our virtual parish is so that you can meet that fundamental obligation we all have to our Creator.

Naturally it requires that you not forsake the assembly (Hebrews 10:19-25). That’s what our forum is all about; since we cannot assemble physically in the real world, we assemble online in a virtual parish. Invest just a little of your time and get involved in the discussions there. Learn the discipline of this body of faith. Or go start your own, but lock it into your mind that you cannot hope to harvest any significant measure of shalom without being part of a feudal covenant nation.

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The Sin of Census

Ref: 2 Samuel 24 — This came up in a Bible study today and a great many people fail to understand the full context.

Recall that the Covenant of Moses was inherently tribal and feudal. God says that no one has any business poking around in your life who isn’t related by blood or covenant. A government that attempts to centralize certain things is evil. Normally David would have simply polled the chiefs of the Twelve Tribes for a mobilization count. It would be an estimate and David would accept their answer, and hold them to it if he needed to mobilize for war. Keep in mind that most smaller battles were fought with trained troops, but a full mobilization conscripts massive numbers of peasants who were far less trained. The trained professional warriors would command large formations in battle.

For David to take this kind of census violates the feudal trust of the tribal elders. It infringes on their rights, rights that everyone knew about and presumed you would know, so it wasn’t specifically recorded in the Bible. There was a second sin: A census typically meant a tax. Instead of taxing the nation through the elders, it was a direct tax on every individual man of military age. A great many were poor peasants who had no means to pay such a tax without serious hardship. It was typically a shekel, about two days’ wages. That was a huge amount for a peasant. Many of them went into debt to pay this.

So it was intrusive and stepped on the rights of the elders, and it was a painfully oppressive tax. It was a huge pain in the butt for everyone, not least the men assigned to take the census (which took nearly ten months), taking the whole nation away from more important work. David’s sin in choosing this caused the hedge of God’s protection to be removed from the nation. It was unilateral on David’s part; the people had no choice in the matter.

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Static Site Down

Update: It’s back up again.

Second Update: This site will be down permanently early in 2020.

————

I noticed this morning the static site server (soulkiln.org) is not responding. I have no way to contact the manager, either. If you are using my email address at soulkiln.org, I won’t get the message. I recommend you use the one for this blog: ehurst@soulkiln.blog

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What Will It Look Like Tomorrow?

Consider how this virtual parish began. One introverted outcast mumbles to himself online and attracts a few others like himself. I had no idea where I was going, but I knew it couldn’t be back into the mainstream. The longer I kept at it and the farther I went on my path, the more sense it made. That meant that I had something to say about moving away from the mainstream.

At some point it caught on with quite a few others. It became obvious there were others with a similar yearning for something different from the mainstream. But I kept bumping into problems with the old instincts trying to drag me back, so my reflexes kept making false starts on what this was to become. I got some bruises from those mistakes. Somehow, a number of you have stayed with me. I can’t promise that what I envision now is any better, but it’s certainly different.

One of our signature differences is a serious effort to reclaim what was given to us back in the New Testament times. We do what we can to ditch all the false assumptions and just study what life was like for the disciples. Then we try to figure out what that means for us, because it’s painfully obvious our context is quite different. Instead of getting stuck on the particulars of the first century Christian activities, we are trying to understand the soul of their mission.

And I’ve tried to make it clear my answers don’t have to be your answers. As always, I warn that the teaching here is more meta-religion, a serious effort to study what religion should be, how it’s supposed to work. I like to think of it as not reinventing the wheel, but choosing how to design wings instead. In my mind, the single biggest failure of the religion around us is a bad approach, asking the wrong questions.

The gospel of Christ was quite new in the first century after His Ascension. So the idea of missionary journeys to spread the message was the obvious answer. People had never heard, nor had they seen the miracles that went with it. But to be honest, it didn’t explode in most places. The relative number of Christians remained tiny in the Mediterranean Basin. Indeed, a significant element in growing beyond that tiny number was a compromise with worldly ways. Part of that was the fault of Judaizer influences, recreating the failures of Judaism that amounted to perverting the true Old Testament religion into something else.

So we went from a tiny minority called by genuine faith, to a massive conversion based on civil law. And it is this brand of Christian religion that has most certainly spread itself across the globe. We live in a time when virtually every human has heard some version of the gospel. Any different version is discounted pretty quickly, simply because there is a proliferation of highly varied “gospels” out there. It takes a special arrogance to pretend yours is the only true version, and I have no interest in going there.

I’m not interested in using the methods of fallen humanity to spread our message. There’s enough of that crap already. It’s not elitism, except in the sense that only God can bring new souls to our parish. We live in a very strange time, a world radically different from the New Testament. What we do here is about as public as it can be already. Sending missionaries is merely an anachronism, when the message by itself travels to places we could never go. Granted, it’s pretty much overwhelmed by all the other noise people are making, but it’s there.

To my knowledge, none of us live close enough to another member of the parish to have face-to-face fellowship. Yet several of you have already begun spreading the word simply by living it where you are. Right now, most of the world is distracted. Something will have to get their attention, and we know from history that it usually requires some kind of tribulation before people start hearing the cry of their hearts.

So this first planting of seeds of faith happens to be a bunch of mavericks and loners; very few of us are extroverts. If we were, we would not have come to the point of soul-searching and introspection so that we could hear how we don’t belong to the mainstream. Extroverts just don’t think that way. Yep, God chose as His first wave a bunch of cranks and weirdos. I have no doubt our way of faith will spread sooner or later, but it’s simply not in our nature to go out and campaign for attention. God can add people like that later.

Let’s not make the mistake of thinking that we the norm for what our message produces. We have no business trying to make Radix Fidem something that reflects our peculiarities, as if someone joining later can’t add some attributes that we don’t have. Let our distinguishing features be the power of our new and ancient faith in the heart-led way. That kind of change is already very radical compared to the mainstream. Let that define us.

When tribulation hits, an awful lot of people are going to question whether their religion is sufficient for the needs of their convictions. Some portion of those who start to question that way are going to find us, either online or individually in real life. God alone knows what Radix Fidem will look like in years to come. Don’t be afraid. Just keep your fellowship boundaries where they have to be and give thanks when folks step out on their own.

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The Anglo-American Identity

Some of you are going to get this wrong no matter how I say, or how well I present it. All I can offer is what I’ve seen. If you can’t use it, set it aside and move on with your life. I have zero interest in your attempts to debate or establish some kind of external objective standard to which you can appeal.

This is just some observations. They should help you understand some things that could affect your mission and calling. We need to correct some false impressions that our world has force-fed us so that we can see clearly what a heart-led walk will teach us. So all I’m trying to do is remove bad learning so you can be free to learn on your own what God wants to tell you. Referring you to academic studies isn’t going to help. Read this with your heart; don’t let your mind get in the way.

The Bible refers to “nations,” a term that seems to indicate groups of people who share a culture and some DNA. I doubt there has ever been a pure race of people on this planet, nor could there ever be. However, we do know that a nation in biblical terms includes a set of moral characteristics that can make them unique, and that it is a mix of culture and DNA, if nothing else, in the sense that shared DNA can give folks a predisposition to certain cultural features.

Thus, we observe that Anglo-Americans are mixture of several nations in that sense, but with a certain amount of shared culture. Now, location and conditions will also affect cultural contents. So you mix in all of these considerations and you come up with several broad regional “nations” within the US.

Now, urban areas will always be one kind of nation, always possessing certain recognizable traits simply because of what living in a city does to people. So our urban metropolitan areas will give us broad generalities we can work with, things we’ve come to expect, with only slight variations according to location.

Outside of the cities, we can see broad cultural identities in certain parts of the US. The northeast is broadly a blue-collar culture. The southeast is more redneck. The southwest and west coast are too deeply affected by Native and Mexican presence, so they aren’t really part of Anglo-America. But the Plains and northwestern areas all the way out to the Rockies are somewhat of a cowboy-frontiersman culture. Each of those groups have trademark habits and responses to things, yet they all share a certain amount of overlap with common Anglo-American rule-based culture and expectations.

These reflect my experience. Yours would likely be different. And you could play with your parameters and find all kinds of ways to look it things and get different answers. That’s exactly my point: The US has never been a “nation.” It has always been multiple nations, sometimes overlapping within the same space. If I had visited only with certain minority groups while traveling the US, I’m sure I would have seen a different set of nations.

In broad general terms, Anglo-American culture is rules-oriented, and the people are naturally predisposed to live by them. You shouldn’t have to lock your doors, for example, but we have predators among us who don’t live by those rules. Yet I can take you to some small towns where virtually nobody locks their doors. And then I can take you to communities where houses have bars on the windows and they still get broken into often — because it’s not an Anglo-American community. By definition, Anglo-American culture includes a powerful element of Medieval European chivalry mythology.

Anglo-Americans have this semi-conscious assumption about giving people a break as long as they appear to be playing by those same rules. It’s not just a matter of property, but it’s more that the rules are sacred. Folks who break those rules can expect a very predictable response, in that those Anglo-American rules are written not just in their conscious expectations, but in their genes and in the context in which they live. You can try as hard as you like, but too much of it is written in their DNA, and you won’t change their response to turmoil. It’s more than just education and conditioning.

In broad general terms, Anglo-Americans treat feminism as the same package with political correctness and “social justice” values. Your typical Anglo-American will view them together rather as an intruding minority cult, a treasonous rejection of normal life. They have tolerated it for a while, but in recent times that cult has gotten too pushy. They are insufferably arrogant and pushing their cult as the only possible truth. Along with this, the cult has allied with all kinds of invading nations, trying to wipe away the dominant Anglo-American identity.

It won’t work. That cult is actually the ugly side of the Anglo-American culture, but most folks don’t recognize that. Both sides reject the other, and neither will ever really win, except for a period of time. The mainstream will eventually beat back the cult, but it will lurk beneath the surface and rise again. Right now, the mainstream is just now rising up to beat back the cult again.

Every nation, race and people on this earth are capable of fighting in their own way. They all have their own approach to warfare, and the reasons for going to war. Each has its own prowess and unique advantages. Again, it’s partly culture, partly DNA, and partly a matter of location and context. But here in Anglo-America, nobody is going to defeat the Anglo-Americans. By no means are they morally superior and favored by God, but God has granted them a certain advantage for His own inscrutable reasons. They have one advantage: They are more efficient and effective at combat itself. It’s their native element, their primary form of art and religion. They developed nukes and used them; they won’t hesitate to use them again, literally and figuratively.

Chivalry is merely a peace-time facade. Anglo-Americans are particularly bad at governing, but when government comes apart, their true nature shines. It’s not as if they never lose in battle, but they will take the most Satanic revenge later. This requires they reassert their self-conscious identity over their own cult folk. In the past few decades, they’ve been pretending they could stop being racist. It’s a facade, a myth. Nor should you imagine that Anglo-Americans are more racist than other identifiable groups. I’ve seen racial hatred in all colors; it’s human nature and can’t be trained or conditioned out of us (only the Holy Spirit can break it). So Anglo-Americans are just as bad as anyone else, but it won’t likely be a mere matter of skin color, but of national identity.

None of this has anything to do with what’s morally right or wrong. This is simply some observations. I no longer identify as Anglo-American; the heart-led way tends to make you walk away from all of that. It changes how you look at yourself and reality around you. You can still understand how the heart-less world operates, but you know you can’t go back into that world.

What I’m trying to say is that you should brace yourself for the Anglo-American backlash to what they perceive as too damned much provocation. Don’t look at the rhetoric, but look at how they act. No matter how hard folks try to tone this down, it could easily be a bloodbath. That’s the Anglo-American way.

Trump is tapping into this Anglo-American sense of identity without calling it that.

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