Enduring the Long March
"Will you give your life purely to money-making and pleasure-making? Or will you give your life and thought—whatever trials it cost, whatever bravery it need—to Australia"
Written by Matthew K. Grant, National Governor of the Australian Natives Association
When a person has mentally arrived at a better understanding of the trajectory of this country and the reasons for its decline they naturally, and rightfully become wound up with anger, frustration and despair. There can be no credible argument against the fact that we are living in a period of time of both cultural and moral decline whilst simultaneously our ethnicity is being displaced (in terms of overall voting share, institutional power and hegemony) by an unending tidal wave of Non-European migrants.
Those people with courage, conviction, the natural instinct of self-preservation and as passionate love of their own kindred, when arriving at these factual realities, naturally want to change the course of our future, and often find themselves knocking on the door of one dissident political group or another, The ANA included. We, are among a host of organisations that have existed over many decades, responding to similar issues, and similar themes, although responding in different ways.
One eternal truth is most people are impatient and are unwilling to do the work necessary to offer any actual enduring resistance to the forces of international capital that have us bound to the tracks of consumerist, deracinated modernity. Most new entrants, particularly those in a younger age bracket, expect that ‘the truth as they see it’ is a roaring lion, that will tear its way through society and drive for political change on its own merits.
The young entrant often expects, in a few short years of brave activism, he will be able to cause a paradigm shift in the national consciousness, he will be able to affect real and meaningful change at a national scale. Theoretically, this is possible yes, but there have not been many (if any) examples of this in the age of mass-propaganda and corporatist repression, it is in-fact more likely, that a group of young activists invoke the wrath of the Commonwealth government, and the most well equipped (both legally and financially) forces in civil society. The activist, too often has entered battle “unarmed”, that is to say, in civil society, cash is your shield, and legal representation is your sword, and more often than not, activists have neither shield nor sword.
Activists of this kind are martyrs…
This is an excerpt taken from an article written by Matthew Grant for the Australian Natives Association, the full article is available for free via the link below!