Turnip’s Digest
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The pastor of the church pictured above left before we got to the grave side, so I had to conduct as much of the Burial of the Dead from the Book of Common Prayer as a layman is allowed to
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The modern right is absolutely abysmal at helping its own and those around them that they nominally seek to defend. We have streamers, content producers, budding local organizations, basketweavers, families, authors, poets, musicians, and everything in between all of them, but not one organization dedicated and able to make sure none of our own fall through the cracks or survive being put out by the state and its fellow persecutors (which I will let you infer). The Blackshirts ran soup kitchens and breadlines. The remnants of the Confederates founded multiple societies and organizations, some still around today, to ensure that their own would be cared for when everywhere else was deadset on grinding them into the dust. The remnants of the White Army have a still functioning military union to care for those they could reach.

It’s all well and good to point out that mainstream “conservatives” will only offer jobs and support to leftist cosmopolitans kicked out of the left, but it’s pointless if we aren’t ourselves doing any better.

We do see a good start from Patriotic Alternative, and Krogan is absolutely right to say that everyone, especially Americans, should be taking notes.

https://t.me/AmericanKrogan/2833
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A lot of people conflate Christian Nationalism with some Ill-perceived postmillenialism, so I thought I would clear something up and link to an article by a friend.

Christian Nationalism is not some utopian attempt to bring about the Paradise on Earth if only we forced everybody and everything to be Christian (as if anybody believes that faith can be forced into somebody by human might and will). Rather, Christian Nationalism is very plain and basic. It realizes that there is no such thing as neutral or progressive governance. It extrapolates from this what must be done; either the laws and rulers of the land are in line with Christ or against Christ with no in-between, void, gray area, or neutrality. It goes beyond the early 21st century conception of Christianity as a private affair that exists for utility of those around you and recognizes that Christianity must be defended from constant attack by the demons that plague us on the battlegrounds of our churches, our clergy, our leaders and governors, and our legal system.

One may think “Christian Nationalism simply wants laws and rulers in line with Christ? Wasn’t this just the Western World for millennia?” The answer is simple: yes, that is all it is.

My friend elaborates further here: https://news.gab.com/2021/12/14/christian-nationalism-is-the-only-godly-option/

And this was written in response to: https://t.me/VeryLutheran/281
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Go to church

Also

I hate Eurasianism
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Forwarded from American Krogan
I'm going to say it again... Fallout is based on the very 1950s Americana Culture these people hate for being "racist," and yet they all insist that there'd be tons of diversity.
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Before the day ends, I’ll finish off Lincolnshire Posy by posting The Lost Lady Found

This is unique, as Grainger supposedly did not collect it and record it himself. Rather, he had previously written arrangements of the piece based on a recording that he received from a woman. The woman had recorded an old family friend singing the folk song around 1905. Grainger had collected the full lyrics though, which are provided as always

https://youtu.be/yjRvUKKxVMY
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I’ve been posting from the Dallas Wind Symphony (and you can find the album playlist here: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_kggaiqXVCfeDfVkrkmk_OdnMN4A7YV5WE)

But it does not capture the feeling of the Posy for the simple fact that is splits the movements into several videos. This is much closer to what I remember it sounding like when I heard a symphony play it live: https://youtu.be/K1FDk8__Nv4
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On the next episode of safe and effective.
This is unserious behavior that should be heavily discouraged
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Forwarded from The End Of Everything
I was nuked from my Twitter account last night, having accrued 10.5K followers. I'm appealing the decision, but I hold out little hope of this being fruitful. Thanks to everyone that followed me. Onward and upward!
Forwarded from Esoterica Americana
I will of course always be thankful for the deaths of those who explicitly identify my people for extermination-- a habit of Dugin and his Eurasian 5th column.

Dead commies are dead commies, no matter who sired them or what you'd like to do with them.
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Say what you will about Yarvin, the audience is having a meltdown and I love it
For anyone that thinks a positive reaction towards Dugin’s tragedy is detestable, especially Christians or those that think it’s inhumane to react in such a way:

“O daughter of Babylon, who are to be destroyed, Happy the one who repays you as you have served us! Happy the one who takes and dashes Your little ones against the rock!”

This is from Psalm 137. Israel, the Church, had been scattered and defeated at the righteous command of God, and the Psalmist, a faithful man, sings to God the joy that will be felt when the children and babies of the attackers and captors are killed

This is not included in scripture as a warning not to be this way. In fact, you can find similar remarks in Psalm 119, where utter hatred and condemnation is afforded to anyone against God and His Law. This is to be emulated
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Audio
I figured I would continue the English folk song trend even though Lincolnshire Posy is over.

The Girl I Left Behind Me dates back at least to the Elizabethan Era, most likely to parts of the English Navy. A trend of folk song at the time, it quickly spread to colonies and remained mostly verbal, with few written copies of the song dating to before 1790 now surviving. Some attribute the melody of “The Girl I Left Behind Me” to the Irish melody “The Wandering Labourer,” and while this is most likely the case, some dispute it. In America, the lyrics had evolved by the time of the civil war, and the melody had been turned into a march. This version popularized in the war is the version most Americans know if they have heard the song before now. The recording I have attached, however, is closer to the original.

I should note in addition to this that another English name for the song is “Brighton Camp,” and if I am not mistaken, this was the name for it in the Revolutionary War.
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Forwarded from Esoterica Americana
If you dont like the guy who made *squints* national bolshevism famous...you're a slavophobe.

Bigot.
Sandbatch makes a point here that’s somehow been forgotten.

Eurasianists in their earliest years were republicans against the Tsar and Imperial Russia. The majority of them were ambivalent to hostile against Christianity. After the Soviets cemented their regime, they had trouble deciding if they were good or bad. Some Eurasianists joined and supported the Mladorossi. Most others were gulaged or supported the Soviets. The ones that survived the gulags, like Lev Gumilyev, advocated political theories that concluded in Russia emulating the Mongol Horde and destroying White Civilization.

Why, then, in the modern day are we surprised or downplaying the fact that the most prominent Eurasianist is no better than the long line of terrible influences before him?
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Forwarded from Leonidas Polk
“Well, after all, Queen Eleanor when she sucked blood from her husband's
arm was a cannibal." What is one to say to such people? One can only say "Confine yourself to sucking poisoned blood from people's arms, and I permit you to call yourself by the glorious title of Cannibal." In this sense people say of Eugenics, "After all, whenever we discourage a schoolboy from marrying a mad negress with a hump back, we are really Eugenists." Again one can only answer, "Confine yourselves strictly to such schoolboys as are naturally attracted to hump-backed negresses; and you may exult in the title of Eugenist, all the more proudly because that distinction will be rare." But surely anyone's common-sense must tell him that if Eugenics dealt only with such extravagant cases, it would be called common-sense—and not Eugenics. The human race has excluded such absurdities for unknown ages; and has never yet called it Eugenics.”
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“But the Scriptures teach thus: Even though we collect in one mass the works of all the monks, however splendidly they may shine, they would not be as noble and good as if God should pick up a straw.”
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