The National Alliance has
members from 18 to 92 years old in nearly every walk of life and in a
dozen countries. They have an extraordinarily wide variety of
backgrounds and skills and interests, but two things they all share are
a deep feeling of racial consciousness and a profound sense of personal
responsibility.
While most White Americans and Europeans have lost their racial and
cultural moorings and have become mere rootless drifters in a
cosmopolitan chaos, our members still know where they came from and what
they're a part of. They have not succumbed to the poisonous barrage of
egalitarian and "multicultural" propaganda from Hollywood, Washington,
and New York. And while others feel beholden only to themselves and
refuse to take any responsibility for what is happening around them,
each Alliance member sees himself as a link in the endless chain of
generations, with an inescapable responsibility to both his forebears
and his posterity; he understands that he is responsible for everything
that is within his power to change.
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Hope, MI
Brandi is a housewife and mother she joined the National Alliance because
she wanted our children to growup in a clean, healthy, White world, where
they won't be a minority. She wants them to learn White values, not TV
values.
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Our members want their lives to count. They want to be part of something
significant and lasting. They do not want to waste their opportunity to
make a difference. They want to maximize their individual potential for
effectiveness and for success in the things which are truly important.
Our members are not concerned about being fashionable or "Politically
Correct" at the moment; they want to be winners in the long run; they
want to be soldiers in the last battalion in the field. They want to be
remembered by all the future generations of our people as the heroes and
heroines who made it possible for those future generations to live and
to inherit the earth.
Our members also understand that by joining their strength with that of
others they can become stronger and more effective; they can act as
parts of a disciplined unit which focuses all of their efforts on one
goal at a time; they don't have to try to do it all themselves. And they
realize the importance of the moral reinforcement which comes from
working together with many others who share their values, especially
since they often must
work in an environment of hostility and ignorance. They gain strength
and encouragement from knowing not only that they are doing what is
right, but also that they have many comrades who appreciate them and
that they are part of an institution embodying their values which will
carry the product of their work into the future, even after they are
gone.