“All vets are mentally ill in some way and government should prevent them from owning firearms”
— Dianne Feinstein
Canadians are hungry for some good food and they can't afford it, thanks to the mindset of the internationalist mercenary globalist regimes that have ruled and ruined Canada over the last three generations. This is what the globalist free trade deals have brought us. Anything of any value at the food stores are beyond the economic reach of poor Canadians while the poorly employed can barely afford a beef steak or a roast, only on special occasions or high holidays. Even the one-time poorest cheap "meat" staples such as wieners and bologna are now considered a treat, because of high prices that the internationalist food companies have priced out of bounds.
In a country where wheat and other grains are plentiful, an ordinary loaf of bread is an expensive item, since most of it is exported to foreign consumers by big commercial farmers who couldn't give a damn for the ordinary Canadian since he doesn't recognize or comment on the myriad of multicult nonwhite faces, claiming brotherhood through citizenship with them. White Canadians have become strangers in our own land, now they're hungry too for the good things in life. Unfortunately, there's nowhere to turn to complain and since the politicians have all become mindful of the women's bloc vote which guarantees that these globalist politicians always end up elected, on some politically correct platform that naive dizzy dames think are so cute and proper. All pro-world economy bastards are to blame for this social malaise; this is evident in the faces of the elderly, the handicapped and the working poor.
Only trendy metrosexuals and other hedonistic bon vivants love this situation, lining up at the latest fashionable dinky eatery in freezing weather to buy thirty dollar breakfasts and chatter away about concerts, homosexual sitcoms and violent perverts' movies. I know. I've heard them.
Thirty dollars is the weekly food budget for those on fixed incomes, if they plan right to the next monthly check. I know, I've seen their pathetic garbage food buys at the checkouts. No wonder there's so much petty crime in the poor neighborhoods, mostly unreported and unpoliced.
The greedy merchants have done us no favors either, importing crappy products from China; cakes that taste like they've filled with air and sawdust and other non-nutritional chemical concoctions passed off as cheap food. I've never heard of one food company CEO complain publicly on how they have to raise prices and explain to the public why and when it will end. I've never heard one politician ask the big food chains to reduce the costs; in fact the whole food industry and pricing of staples seems out of everyone's reach, except the rich, uncontrolled capitalists on top. When Dwight Eisenhower warned about the power of the military industrial complex that rules the world, he should have called it the mercantile industrial complex because when this one percent greed-bag [sic] elite which rules the world with their grunt military who haven't fought a patriotic war (defense being their raison d'être) since the Russians' rebuttal of ovrerlording [sic] Germans in World War II. I don't like the merchants — there's too much hype and anxiety and their greedy gluttonous actions are naturally unsustainable. Sell, sell, sell; buy, buy, buy, make more people and more customers — it's always more, more for the very few. As white nationalists, we have to be concerned not only about our ideological enemies in various 'professions'— journalists, teachers, clerics — but we must be concerned with the stomachs of the poor and the welfare of our supporters, because that's where most of them are. Gouging, price-fixing, exorbitant fees and ridiculous over-packing to cheat customers out of product amounts — all this has to be our concern if we want to win the hearts of the people, that we not only have the concepts of good will and fair play but common sense, too. Napoleon said that an army marches on its stomach. So too, does our movement. When we see obvious unfairness in the cost of food, we must immediately complain to the consumer ministries of the governments, the CEOs and anywhere that company advertises and declare your opposition to their public presence.
Remember, food is one of the few categories where "any publicity is good publicity" does not hold. Let's start our campaign today, wherever you are and demand common sense, good will and fair play prices for our daily bread food supplies.