HOMESTEADING

As a Folk and a race it is not likely that we are going to survive in today’s urban cesspools. Besides the hostility and degeneracy within the urban quagmires, we should never lose sight of the fact that this is a very unstable world, not only socially, but economically as well. Life in the cities is dependent on public bureaucrats, profit conscious utility companies, and corporate food stores. It wouldn’t take very much of a downturn in the economy to change life from thoughtless indulgence at the department stores, supermarkets, and fast food chains to clawing for any moldy crumb of decayed food or any tattered rag to cover one’s freezing body. We have always recommended that all Aryans get as far away as possible from these urban death-traps, and to learn how to live simply, naturally, and self-reliantly. We cannot survive if we place our existence in the loving hands of the very system which seeks to destroy us! Regardless of whether or not you are in the city, if you intend to survive, you need to know the basics of self-reliance: growing or procuring your own food, building your own shelter, making your own clothes, and tending to your own illnesses and medical emergencies. As well, you need information on how and where to homestead, and how to support yourself on the land.
The best publication we’ve seen for and this and more (and we are long-time homesteaders ourselves) is a bi-monthly journal called ‘Countryside & Small Stock Journal’ 145 Industrial Drive Medford, WI 54451 ($18 per year). While hardly a racialist publication, Countryside has a wealth of sorely needed information for our Aryan Folk. Their statement of philosophy really says it all: “Our philosophy is not a single idea, but many ideas and attitudes, including a reverence for Nature and a preference for country life; a concern for family nurture and community cohesion; a certain hostility toward luxury; a belief that the primary reward of work should be well-being rather than money; a certain nostalgia for the supposed simplicities of the past and an anxiety about the technological and bureaucratic complexities of the present and the future; and a taste for the plain and functional. Countryside reflects and supports the simple life, and calls its practitioners homesteaders.” The table of contents for the May/June issue demonstrates the scope of its articles: Homestead security equals free-range chickens, a good dog and Jerusalem artichokes; What is intensive planting? How does it work?; Small-scale milking machines; Defending “ugly” fish; Home heating from the good Earth. True revolutionaries can start arming themselves now, not with guns, explosives, and fantasy ideas from newsletter warriors, but with the liberating knowledge of practical self-reliance.
Mentioned Literature

http://www.countrysidemag.com/current.htm