I’m heading home today after spending the week with my extended family at a lake in the mountains of a northwestern state. It was the most relaxing week I’ve ever had and now that I’ve been redpilled I realize why. There were only white people in this town. It’s like a hidden jewel. Here are some observations that I had:
At the beach people actually left their stuff unattended. Towels, wakeboards, sand toys, chairs, umbrellas, food, etc just left there while the owners went to lunch or the restrooms or whatever. I never see that level of trust elsewhere in more diverse areas.
People were friendly and polite to strangers. A family appeared to have car trouble on the side of the road and instantly several people stopped to help. No one cut in line at stores or restaurants and said “excuse me” when passing. A refreshing twist from the glares and sidewalk blocking I experience in places with rich diversity.
There were traditional families everywhere. Dad, mom, kids. No gay couples, no trans kids, no 300 lb blue hairs or sleeve tats. Just lots of attractive, fit, blonde families.
It was so amazing how relaxed I feel being able to let my guard down. I’m constantly on alert when at home. Watching my purse, avoiding creepy black or Hispanic men leering, watching out for Asian drivers on the road or Asian shoppers with no sense of personal space. It felt so good to not worry about all that.
Can we please have a white homeland again?
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13445123751 ago
In small white towns, people always leave their cars and houses unlocked. I've even known people who let their keys in their car. In large diverse cities, you need to lock everything because niggers of colour will steal anything just because they can.
Broc_Lia ago
I read a story about a guy visiting Tristan de Cunha once. The locals considered it perfectly normal to go for a walk around the island, and if it got too hot, just hang their coat on a tree branch and come get it the next day. After all, who would steal Jim's coat?
sidhe007 ago
We never locked houses or cars growing up in my town. Moved back to raise my family 20 years ago and still don't lock anything up.