I mentioned in my last post that pro-Whites aren't often as attractive as their conservative counterparts. The reason for that is because most young people find their way into pro-White movements because society has rejected them. Maybe they don't have the best relationship with their parents, maybe they get bullied at school, and it's a safe bet that they never really had success with girls.
People with no social life tend to spend a lot of time on the internet, and that's where most of the "alt-right" existed pre-Charlottesville. Unite the Right demonstrated that they should've stayed on the Internet- brandishing Nazi flags and torches is not a good recruitment method. If anything, the torches were actually more offensive than the flags. Torches are symbols of mobs and violence.
The point is, our movement up until recently was largely based on a deep sense of disillusionment that disproportionately affects men. It wasn't because people woke up one day, read some statistics, and realized that Whites are going extinct. These people needed community and they found it. Humans are social animals.
Red pills aren't well-versed arguments, or internet memes, they're fundamental challenges to your perception of the world. To receive one, you need to be already leaning towards the conclusion yourself. To reference the origin of the "red pill" meme, would Neo have taken the Red Pill if he wasn't already seeing glitches in the Matrix? Red pills are explanations for the inconsistencies and contradictions in today's society. They don't work if the receiver wholeheartedly believes the lie.
The best possible person to administer a Red Pill is a close family member, or trusted friend. My dad, a lifelong conservative and civic nationalist, becoming a fan of alt-right figures like Vox Day did much more to convince me that they had a point than any amount of memes on iFunny. While he wasn't the one to actually convince me they were right, it was because of him that I was open to them in the first place. That glitch in the Matrix- someone I loved and trusted turning to people I thought were "racist" was the thing that set me up to receive a red pill.
Some red pills work because of overwhelming evidence the receiver was unaware of, but only very rarely. To use myself as an example again, my first real red pill was at an anti-gay marriage rally in Chicago. I was 8 years old, and the people across the street were shouting hateful invectives, demanding to fight us. It was enough that there was a large police presence there to make sure that that didn't happen. Still, I was absolutely terrified. That was the day I learned that gay people actually existed, and that they weren't just our political rivals- they would destroy the church we were standing in front of, if they could. It was the first time I realized that people actually hate God.
Other times, betrayal can act as a red pill. People you thought were on your side, or who you thought respected you, suddenly turning against you because you dared to step outside their understanding the Matrix. One of the reasons I said we're living in the best possible timeline is that the last few months have been a massive red pill to people- first the betrayal of our system by democrats, letting people know that these are our adversaries, not merely opponents. Second, the betrayal of the Republican party, showing everyone that we do not live under a two-party system, and haven't for a long time. And third, the betrayal of the law enforcement, putting an end to this "back the blue" speech.
I experienced a red pill like this in high school, when one of my friends called me a White supremacist for reciting a poem where I explicitly stated "White pride is being proud of your ancestors' achievements, not White supremacy." But she didn't care. She said I was a racist, and that you can't be racist to White people.
Openly declaring yourself a pro-White is suicide, but you can still make a difference in your family and your tight-knit circles. When you red pill, do it very cautiously. The best way is to ask questions that shine light on the glitches in the Matrix. If your male friend is wondering "why do girls always go for bad boys and not nice guys like me?" ask him, "why do you think? What do they have that you don't?"
It's always about looking for opportunity. Your co-worker makes an off-kilter remark, and is confused when he gets in trouble for it. Your female friend is a feminist who feels more and more left behind by the intersectional aspects of it. Your black friend gets called a race traitor when he refuses to support BLM. Many people feel that something is deeply wrong with our society, but they simply don't know the right questions to ask. By asking them these questions, you can lead them out of the Matrix and into the truth.
After that, I would suggest leading them to this blog, or to Vox Day, or Nick Fuentes. Give them Michelle Malkin's Open Borders Inc. All that's left is for them to do the research on their own. Once you're awake to the red pills, you will want more.
This is why Fuentes' "Groyper Wars" was such a good idea. Charlie Kirk going around the country doing speeches with a black gay guy in defense of open borders and money for Israel is not conservatism, and people understood that. Fuentes realized that if he could provide that final push- simply asking questions, which Kirk invited, to guide people to the correct conclusions, would show everyone what real conservatism actually is. And it didn't hurt that the people going to these events often were good-looking put-together people.
That's why getting into different social circles and starting a family is important. The closer you are to someone, the easier it is to red pill them. Raise your children to be proud of who they are, and to reproduce with members of their own race. Do not send them to school, unless you want them to turn into BLM spouting Marxists. Homeschooling is always an option. I know I never would've become pro-White without my dad.
As it says in the Bible, raise a child in the path of the Lord, and when he is grown he will not depart from it.
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