Our perspective, of course, is white people in the age of Trump, because we are not the same thing as the American and European political entities. First, the positive: Trump has done great and wonderful things from a racial point of view: Closing the border, cutting the refugee quota to zero except for white South Africans, exterminating DEI within the federal government and attacking it in the private sector. Ending the enforcement of every DOJ consent decree in US cities. Abolishing—to the extent he can—disparate impact. (For Europeans, these things may sound obscure, but they are really important).
However, there are many Trump minuses. I’ll be frank. He is in many ways a loathsome person. His boasting and disregard for the truth could easily cast a very black cloud over all the great and wonderful things he has done. Also, his approach—rule by decree rather than by the much more cumbersome route of legislation—means that virtually all the good he has done can be reversed on the first day by a future half-Hindu president. He is also so erratic and now surrounded by so many yes-men that he could badly damage the world economy. Obviously, this would hurt white people and also detract from the wonderful things he has done on race.
As for our European comrades, it is my impression that Trump has greatly encouraged them. Instead of pumping lethal ideological poisons into Europe, which we have done for decades, on his first visit to Europe, JD Vance tells our cousins that they’ve got to stop censorship and stop perverting democracy by refusing to share power with parties that represent millions and millions of voters. Berating Cyril Ramaphosa in the Oval Office about the genocide of white South Africans is an astonishing example of how diplomacy can cast off the usual niceties and get down to what Margaret Thatcher used to call “the nitty gritty.” These are great lessons for the European ruling class.
For American comrades, this election should have knocked every single cynic out of the position that stylish nay-sayers like to take: That elections are meaningless, and the only thing we can hope for is total collapse, out of which will emerge a forged-in-the-fire racial consciousness and we will build the ethnostate on the ruins.
So, if I am to name a problem and propose a solution, the worst problem—Trump’s impulsive nature and therefore the possibility of recession or world war three—that problem is out of our hands and the only solution is fervent prayer to Odin. But Trump has, I believe, solidified more than ever the trans-Atlantic cooperation of American and European patriots.
