An Occupied Country
Source: atlanticcenturion.wordpress.com
When people refer to occupation governments or occupied countries, the first thought is often of military occupation—the garrisoning of foreign troops in one’s cities and civil administration by their military executives. The other vision is the trope of a cabal of Haredim sitting in a darkly-lit boardroom with a map of the world on the wall, a dated reading of the Jewish Question (JQ) based on the Protocols of the Elders of Zion, which was understandably popularized after the ((((Bolshevik)))) conquest of Russia. If occupation government means martial law by foreigners or kowtowing to the Chief Rabbi of New York, London, or Moscow, it is a hard sell to suggest this is what we are dealing with. Considering Western countries, especially the United States and those in Western Europe, to be occupied sounds bizarre and conspiratorial to someone with one of these narrow or traditional definitions—likely most people. But despite the inaccuracies of the military, colonial, or ZOG notions of “occupation government” in describing literally what is happening, I think the term is still a useful as a metaphor for conveying the reality of rule by anti-majority.
I will define an occupation government as having these qualities:
- It is dominated by a hostile, foreign, politically minority or ethnically minority elite. In fact, more realistically, it may be dominated by a combination of these factions and local collaborators. E.g. overseas Israelis, communists, anti-white liberals (and conservatives), other ethnocentric non-jewish minorities such as blacks, mestizos, etc in the United States. This is not something I have concocted up but something with nebulous historical antecedents, e.g. Austrians and Hungarians being minorities in their halves of Austria-Hungary, the White Raj (British India), the Protestant Ascendancy of Ireland, French Algeria, Mamluk Egypt (Turco-Circassian ruled), the multi-ethnic and multi-faith Ottoman Empire (ruled by Turks and often with Greeks, Armenians and Albanians in high profile administrative, military and economic positions), Apartheid-era South Africa, Alawite-dominated Syria under the Assad dynasty, etc. The list goes on. This is a real historical phenomenon, and minorities or pluralities are rational actors in advancing their interests and collaborating to exercise power and privileges over a majority.
- In order to advance socially, politically or economically as individuals, the subject population is required to work against their own group interests and to the benefit of the elite. It may of course be argued that we are always working for the benefit of our elites, but the key dynamic here is that the relationship is one of net harm in the long-term. For example, the government is one of the largest employers in the United States, and many processes it hires people to help it run are anti-white, such as immigration, refugee resettlement, affirmative action, equal opportunity compliance, etc. These further the dispossession of the White majority, which will be a minority in the United States in our lifetimes, while at the same time providing a source of employment.
- The regime possess the ability to implement unpopular policies through diktat or legalism. A classic example of this is passing restrictions on what one might call rights or liberties or privileges—what kind of people willingly renounce those without being pressured or goaded to do so or not oppose the people taking them away? An occupied people of course. Of course we need our speech and right to arms restricted—it’s for our own good! Sometimes the institutions that the occupied people are familiar with—especially legislatures and courts—will be co-pted for this purpose, since it gives an air of legitimacy to the occupation government and makes opposition management easier. For example, if a law in the United States is challenged, it has to be ruled constitutional by a Supreme Court that is one-third overseas Israeli in order for it to be considered legally binding. Such influence is wildly disproportionate and reflects the anti-majority elitist character of the occupation government.
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