#21 Henry Davenport | 2013-10-28 23:34
There is no reason, except the lack of workers, why we should not repeat the Mantra as is with only this change at the end:
"Diversity is a code word for anti-White."
The whole discussion leads as naturally to that conclusion as it does to "Anti-racist is a code word for anti-white."
Bob, there are two EXCELLENT reasons for your NOT encouraging that, one of which has been made evident by this thread.
1. But first, the simple reason: "Winstons taste good like a cigarette should," and no ad man would have dreamt of softening the hammering of that into every American's mind by also introducing, "Winstons smell good like a cigarette should."
2. The Mantra seems easy to yourself maybe, but it's taken most of us tremendous effort to break our habits and use the Mantra method. All the deeper mental and emotional habits of those of us who are working with the Mantra, and of those who are coming to the Mantra and will be coming to it, operate constantly and strongly to change the Mantra into the same-old same-old. Maintaining the Mantra method in the years ahead is going to be very difficult, because the Mantra method contradicts all natural habits of mind (e.g., just sticking to one thing, whatEVER it is, is almost un-American!) The centrifugal forces working on the Mantra to spin it out of its orbit and into a zillion pieces flying in every conceivable direction are immense.
I believe the only way to keep that from happening is a rather rigid orthodoxy that is very, very slow to admit ANY new thing AT ALL. (Just look what happened to the Catholic Church when it loosened up a bit...when Catholics all of a sudden didn't have to eat fish on Friday...I was already an atheist, but I recall the shock...and look what followed)
I think we could probably survive branching out very, very slightly into items like "anti-whitism," and "diversity is a code word for White Genocide," but suggesting any alternative rendering of a part of the Mantra itself, and, of all things, an alternative to the Mantra's signature phrase, I think will create the horrible unintended precedent of "anything goes." The Mantra will be what goes.