Nationalist Training & Lifestyle dan repost
It’s easier to die for something than it is to live for something. To die for a cause takes a great and sudden swelling of emotion. One bold, usually reckless and often futile act.
It can be motivated by an outburst of rage, a desire to be remembered, a shot at vainglory.
To live for something is more mundane. It’s not one great action that can be motivated by hope of leaving a legacy and an escape from an unsatisfactory world. It is not one big act, but thousands of actions and little sacrifices carried out over a lifetime.
There are always times when the big sacrifice and the great act are required of men. For us that time is not yet here, the time is for building. For doing work that is less glorious but every bit as necessary as that of Charles Martel.
It’s important that people get involved with groups that act on a stated protocol of nonviolent action. We cannot afford to be cowards but we also cannot afford to be careless with the lives and freedom of our best men, those willing to LIVE for the cause.
It can be motivated by an outburst of rage, a desire to be remembered, a shot at vainglory.
To live for something is more mundane. It’s not one great action that can be motivated by hope of leaving a legacy and an escape from an unsatisfactory world. It is not one big act, but thousands of actions and little sacrifices carried out over a lifetime.
There are always times when the big sacrifice and the great act are required of men. For us that time is not yet here, the time is for building. For doing work that is less glorious but every bit as necessary as that of Charles Martel.
It’s important that people get involved with groups that act on a stated protocol of nonviolent action. We cannot afford to be cowards but we also cannot afford to be careless with the lives and freedom of our best men, those willing to LIVE for the cause.