My experiences of being an “Outpost White”



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No Germans were harmed in the making of this video.

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24 thoughts on “My experiences of being an “Outpost White””

  1. I totally feel you; the problem is we're not Israeli or part of their Diaspora. You see, they're permitted to have a tribal identity and employ in-group preference to advance their group at any cost while the rest of us must suppress our group identities to act as interchangeable economic units THEY can exploit and undermine at their leisure.

    They then import other people's to usurp us and sew disunity among theretofore mostly-homogenous, majoritarian European peoples; these peoples are more familiar to them than we are, like the Desert Dwellers taking over France.

    Check out Soumission, a novel by French writer Michek Houellebecq.

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  2. I guess that I could be described as an "Outpost H-whyte". I'm a real mongrel, though. Mostly European Irish, Scottish, Jewish even got a bit of Maori from my mum's side. It might explain why I'm pale as hell, but don't burn too easily, but that paleness is mostly due to my hypothyroidism. I guess I'm a pretty hard-core individualist, I couldn't care less about "belonging" or "identifying" with anything even as a New Zealander or my family name, etc. It's a pretty extreme position, I guess. But I've seen so many people become extremists in some way because of the obsession with belonging. I'll label myself, sure. I'm an atheist, materialist, and center left dude, but those are just small parts of a bigger whole, so do not define me completely.
    Uhh, yeah.

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  3. hello sir, good vid and Happy New Year! I know what you are talking about. Although I grew up in the UK, I left when I had just turned 17 and lived in South Africa until I was nearly 30, coming back to Britain I felt like I had been in a cryogenic sleep and was 'out of sync'. Folk see me as a Brit, but I feel outside of it too, like a visitor. Or maybe I am just an oddity full stop 🙂 And in this world we now live, it serves the interests of 'the powers that be' for us all to feel rootless.

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  4. You definitely sound like a South African. I'm a outpost South African, except my ancestors came from Europe 200 years ago and we have stayed since xD. More seriously I don't really align with my born culture (the dreaded Afrikaner) and I sometimes think we whites in general don't belong as a part of the South African "nation" .

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  5. I generally feel the same as a White American in the SouthWest. My city, Phoenix, was completely sold out by immigration, insane demographic change. Around 20% of the residents here are foreign born (Not including the children of these immigrants.) 95% increase in Hispanic residents from 2000 to 2022, and a 165% increase in Black residents. And because this is a relatively recently settled frontier state, we don't really have a culture of our own. We are completely robbed and deprived of a history, a traceable Genealogy, where we have to go decades and even centuries back for a cultural source to resonate with. There were no magnificent feats of architecture, old fields of battle, and other awe inspiring cultural sights growing up that most Whites have had the good fortune of being raised near, where they have a physical presence of their roots. By the time I got to highschool it was only 10% White, it felt as if I was going to school in a foreign country. I have a friend from California who was the only White kid in his entire school, who reported dozens of family to ICE just to try and stabilize his town's demographics because it is getting this bad in the SouthWest. I will probably start using the term outpost White myself because it is very accurate, too many modern White men are robbed of their roots, a direct unmixed lineage, and a country that is truly there's and isn't just an economic zone, all of which is ultimately the most important part of shaping an identity.

    The new format where you just talk is great and I look forward to more videos from this channel.

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  6. The term you're looking for is deracinated. You are too far removed from your heritage and feel no connection to it. Alternatively, you grew up being told how evil and bland your people are, and those ideas have embedded themselves into your psyche. I'm Canadian and I feel a strong attachment to my ethnic roots. Canada is a Western European overseas nation, and thus it belongs to us. Maybe I would feel slightly out of place if I went back to Britain due to the divergence of culture and ideals by the Brits who landed in Canada, but ultimately they are my people and I don't think I would feel a sense of unbelonging in the motherland.

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