Andrew Anglin

Daily Stormer

May 24, 2016

But wait guise. What if this is like, totally gay as all hell?

We have passed peak faggotry.

Liberal SJWism is no longer cool or edgy, it is authoritarian and oppressive. It’s been that way for a while, but the kids are finally waking up to this reality.

Here are the latest numbers from an ABC News poll:

Support for Our Glorious Leader over Hillary among 18-29-year-olds went from 25% to 42% in two months. That’s 17 points. This is an insane jump. Something you don’t really see like, ever.

I dare say that this has a whole lot to do with the culture that the Daily Stormer and others in the Alt-Right are creating. No young person wants to be a dorky loser mindlessly following exactly what they’ve been told to follow, and we have had great success in spreading the message that this is exactly what SJWs are: mindless followers.

Not cool.

Cool.

Not cool.

Cool.

Not cool.

Cool.

You can imagine this happening in real time: a White man in his twenties is out protesting in support of the Mexican invasion or ISIS or whatever, and then all of the sudden he’s like “dude, wait a second. Wtf am I doing? Why should I be putting another group’s interests above my own interests? Why am I doing this? Because someone told me to?”

Then he remembers comments he’s seen on Twitter or Facebook or the comments section of a news site, using funny images to mock Whites who have sold out their own heritage to other groups. And then he look down at his frail body and gay-ass trendy clothing and is like “OMG am I like, a complete and total faggot?”

Wikipedia:

Anagnorisis (/ˌænəɡˈnɒrᵻsᵻs/; Ancient Greek: ἀναγνώρισις) is a moment in a play or other work when a character makes a critical discovery. Anagnorisis originally meant recognition in its Greek context, not only of a person but also of what that person stood for. Anagnorisis was the hero’s sudden awareness of a real situation, the realisation of things as they stood, and finally, the hero’s insight into a relationship with an often antagonistic character in Aristotelian tragedy.

He then understands: Trump is the leader of his tribe. And follow him he must.

Not just because all the cool kids are doing it, but because he has interests and is part of a collective which shares these interests. He has an identity.

Soon, he is reading the Daily Stormer, shaving his head and wearing black t-shirts, hitting the gym, stocking up on ammo for the impending race war.