British Turn Out to Remember Our Dead Heroes

By Max Musson:

As ceremonies of remembrance took place all over Britain, large crowds turned out in London for the annual Remembrance Day parade and wreath laying ceremony at the Cenetaph, and our news media snapped away taking photographs, inadvertently recording the implicitly White nature of this national event.

There follows a number of photographs taken early yesterday, and while no law has been passed forbidding non-White people from attending Remembrance Day ceremonies, the stark absence of non-White faces among the crowds is surprising when one considers that the Allied victory during World War 2 signalled the end of White racial supremacy and the beginning of the Multiracial Era.

One would have thought that the sacrifice of all those brave, young White men and women to secure the ethnic and racial interests of the Third World might be something that all non-White people would want to commemorate, but apparently not.

For all the politicians bluster about pluralism and the diversity of our society, Remembrance Sunday, when young and old come together to contemplate such primal things as eternity and the ultimate sacrifice, is still a tribal event.

With a few exceptions, the war memorials of Britain this morning were surrounded by a sea of White faces, as we White people ceremonially reminded ourselves once again, of our warrior heritage and momentarily forged a spiritual connection with those of our forebears who had the courage to fight for our people.

Let us hope that one day we may summon the courage to fight again, only this time against the real enemy, those who oppress us, those who usurp our primacy of place here in our ancestral homeland, and those who plot our eventual extinction.

By Max Musson © 2013

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17 thoughts on “British Turn Out to Remember Our Dead Heroes

  1. Let us not forget the bonds of brotherhood forged between us on the battlefields of the world (from Queensland, Australia).

  2. Nice point. It was the same in Abergavenny where I paid my respects.
    Perhaps a pile of these pictures from around Britain should be sent to Michael Crick after his baiting of former UKIP chairman Godfrey Bloom for the UKIP manifesto picture having no black faces in a sea of white and condemning it as racist.
    Also in Abergavenny, whilst admiring the scenery on the way to the cenotaph at 10:30, My ears were assaulted by the wailing of a call to prayer (or possibly arms) at a local mosque. When that sound covers the nation we are truly lost.
    Lest we forget.

    1. Good article Max. I wonder if the BBC will consider making a programme where those old warriors from the photos and their comrades from all over Britain are interviewed and asked whether the Britain that they live in today is the Britain that they were fighting for in WWI and WWII.

      1. I don’t think there’s any danger of the BBC doing that, the answer will be a forgone conclusion reinforced with a resounding NO!
        .
        Both my grandfathers suffered permanent injuries during WW1, one partially losing the sight of one eye and the other losing a leg. My father and all of my uncles fought during WW2, two of my uncles were injured, one of them suffering permanent injuries to one arm, and my father suffered severe head injuries the effects of which haunted him all his life.
        .
        You couldn’t get a more patriotic group of men and while I was too young to know my grandfathers well, all of my father’s generation bristled with pride during the 50s and 60s, that we British had managed to prevail in that second war against Germany. Before they died however, to a man they were aghast at what had become of our country, so much so that they found it difficult to contain their emotions whenever the subject was broached.

  3. To be fair I saw 1 Sikh man & maybe there were a few others, the only blacks I noticed were in the parade as cadets, probably to do with the school they attend & also the Scouts were there, who also have some non white children as members.
    But largely this is of interest only to white people.

    1. Among congregations at Remembrance Day ceremonies, one sees White people of all ages; men; women; and children, but apart from the occasional Sikh and some Gurkha veterans and the occasional non-White boy scout, school boy or army cadet, attending because they have gone along with their troop or as part of a school group, the ethnic minorities do not attend.
      .
      One might say, why should they? Most of the dead service people being commemorated were White people who gave their lives in the service of OUR nation before the dawning of the Multicultural Era, at a time when OUR nation clearly did not include them and their kind.
      .
      As I have stated in the article, the end of WW2 signalled the beginning of the Multicultural Era and while one might have thought the ethnic minorities of Third World extraction might want to celebrate that fact, such celebrations of their eclipse of the Whiteman at Remembrance Day ceremonies would be in very bad taste, even for them, and might also be the straw that finally breaks the camel’s back, sparking a resurgence of our racial vigour.

  4. The U.K. Column have today shone a light on this issue with a similar expose (around 5 minutes in). A subsequent damning indictment from an ex-Royal Navy veteran lamenting Zio-Britain’s attack on Germany, Italy, and imperialist Japan (10 minutes in) is welcome dispatches from a group considered by some as “part of the problem” in the sense that they are not nationalists. What is said from the ex-Royal Navy veteran echoes the position of many in our cause.
    .
    Nationalists –according to our principles– they may be not, but this –as well as U.K. Column’s consistent denunciation of Zionism and the Liberal/Red conspiracy against us from within– should find favour with those in our Cause.
    .
    U.K. Column in this regard ought to be congratulated.
    .

  5. I feel that remembrance should be shown for all western lives lost.
    Most just ordinary folk taken from their family to blindly do the bidding of the ruling elite.
    My grandfather wouldn’t speak much about his time at war, he thought it not right to reminisce of taking another man’s life, his time in p.o.w almost took his life but still he see the German soldiers as men no different than himself, above all the not wanting to be there.
    A tragic waste of truly admirable generations, quite possibly the last.

    1. To correct myself a wee bit………..there was a pinch of sarcasm when I said above that this article be entitled White British……… It was meant to really shove it at those who would in fact say you can be British and not White. Emphasis on my insertion simply to point out that in fact the Remembrance Services in the old White Commonwealth were carried out 99% by Whites with British Roots.

  6. ‘One would have thought that the sacrifice of all those brave, young White men and women to secure the ethnic and racial interests of the Third World might be something that all non-White people would want to commemorate, but apparently not.’

    Maybe, on some subconscious level, they feel that would amount to adding insult to injury: let the whites (the real losers of the World Wars) mourn their dead in peace, without being reminded who the winners were.

    1. Indeed Anonymous, if the ethnic minorities were to celebrate our loss to noisily, our people might not be able to ignore the implications of that fact and might feel compelled to act.

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