Main Menu
• Shortened Link: W23.link » CreativityAlliance.com
• Beat the Censors on Social Media with ᵂ23 ᴰᴼᵀ ᴸᴵᴺᴷ
• Free Pontifex Maximus @P.M.JoeEsposito USA - Refused Parole Due to Creativity
• Free @Rev.JoelDufresne P.O.W. USA - Prison Martyr - Bogus Charges
• Free @JamesCostello P.O.W. UK - 5 Years for Anti-Immigration Stickers
Join the Church of Creativity - Limited Time: Free Membership
Menu

Show posts

This section allows you to view all posts made by this member. Note that you can only see posts made in areas you currently have access to.

Show posts Menu

Messages - Br.IanVonTurpie

#6
Rothschild MF's!



https://creativityalliance.com/forum/index.php?action=gallery;sa=view;id=4557

Cos..I'm a "Rothschild " common' to get you from a Jew!


ygUdaXJvbiBtYWlkZW4gd3JhdGhjaGlsZCBseXJpY3M%3D
#9
White supremacists clad in black have angered locals in a small NSW border town by travelling there to stage a rally.

Members of the National Socialist Network stood in the centre of Corowa on Saturday and held a large banner that read "white men fight back


https://www.thenewdaily.com.au/news/state/nsw/2024/10/13/corowa-white-supremacists

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-13952531/corowa-white-supremacist-march-masked-man.html


About 50 people wore black from head to toe and masked their faces as they stood in rows near the town's war memorial.

They received a hostile reception from many locals who told them they were not wanted in the town of 5600 people.

A man, identified in media as prominent nationalist activist Thomas Sewell, addressed the public to explain what they were doing there.

He said the group had travelled from Victoria to raise awareness in the town about local people being "eradicated" and replaced with foreign workers.

Corowa is home to the largest piggery in the southern hemisphere. It was taken over by the world's largest meat processor, Brazilian-based JBS.

The group claimed it had become aware of a plan to "buy up the motels and to buy up some of the estates around here".

"They've already begun firing locals from this town. They're firing locals from their jobs and they're importing cheap labour from the third world to replace them," Sewell shouted, in video posted online.

He "apologised" for the group wearing masks and said it was because they had suffered in their war over the "spirit of this nation.

"You might think of us as quite ludicrous or ridiculous at this stage," he said.

"We are only a few men...but we will not stop raising awareness that white people in this town, in this country and around the world are slowly being replaced and eradicated."


Mayor Patrick Bourke told The Sydney Morning Herald the rally was "absolutely disgusting".

"I think it's a cowardly act to carry on like that in a public arena with children and family around is just not on," he said.

"It's pretty unbelievable really to think it would happen in a community like Corowa, it's definitely not welcome here."

Corowa resident Kendra Smith said the group received a "hostile" reception from locals who said they did not want racists in the town.

"It was horrible because we do have a lot of people of colour here, it is just disgusting," she told the ABC.

"We did hear one of them say to a young local boy ... I am not sure of his ethnicity ... 'piss off you stink' — he would only be about 14 years old."

One resident wrote on Facebook: "Who are these strange people?"

"Time for the town to openly celebrate its diversity with all their beautiful faces and contributions on show.

"No gutless hoods needed".
It's like the only way you can continue with your life by not being politically persecuted when all you did was stand up for your country!

#10
Glasgow was once a city of hard working, hard partying hard men and their families. Globalism removed the ship building industry from Glasgow in the 1970's, and so the hard work stopped. The hard partying became a permanent way of life. And a life spent on whisky and beer led to a culture of drugs and booze ... Portland, USA today is Glasgow's future ... This Is Scotland!

Armies of zombie addicts, spiralling death rates and once vibrant streets turned into no-go zones: JONATHAN BROCKLEBANK looks at the terrifying glimpse of what really happens when Portland abandons the war on drugs and how Glasgow could follow

Jonathon Brocklebank - Scotland | Daily Mail (UK) | 12 October 2024

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-13951975/terrifying-glimpse-Glasgow-abandoned-war-drugs.html

It could have been a post-apocalyptic scene. Shoeless figures lay in a heap on the pavement while others, barely conscious, were slumped in shop doorways Every few yards along the street, another pitiful sight of humanity laid low by a dismal scourge. Those still moving looked zombified. Those face-down at the side of the road looked dead. Possibly some were.

Earlier this year the city fathers saw the error of their ways and accepted what residents had long been telling them – that decriminalisation was a disaster.

It reversed the policy and, months on, the city is beginning a long journey to recovery.

Portland, Oregon USA is the model city for racial harmony
The Secret: Just get Whitey hooked on hard drugs!

Some 4,500 miles away in Glasgow, the scenes witnessed in Portland require no great leap of the imagination. A version of them is already in play in parts of the city centre.

The taking of hard drugs is rife in lanes linking major thoroughfares. Zombified figures are a common sight – as are addicts dead to the world.

The city has the highest rate of drugs deaths per head of population in Scotland – which, in turn, has by far the highest rate in Europe.

According to the latest data, it has 2.7 times the drugs death rate of England and almost three times the next worst overseas country, which is Ireland.

Some 1,172 people died in Scotland due to drugs misuse in 2023 – a 12 per cent rise on 2022.

It is, the Scottish Government readily admits, a public health 'emergency'. Yet earlier this month it reaffirmed its commitment to tackling the problem by doing exactly what Portland had done with such catastrophic results in 2020.

Speaking about the issue on BBC's Question Time in Dundee, Education Secretary Jenny Gilruth said: 'Our approach to tackling drug use in Scotland has been overtly criminal in the past and that is the problem.'

She added: 'I think taking a more public health approach to this is the right thing to do and not criminalising people.'

When confronted by host Fiona Bruce with the Portland example – where drugs deaths rose by 1,500 per cent during decriminalisation – Ms Gilruth insisted the policy had proved effective elsewhere in the world.

When challenged to name one place, there was no answer – other than to say her government planned to test it in Glasgow. Part of this test will come in the form of a 'consumption room' for illegal drugs – the UK's first – due to open in the city soon.

Based in Hunter Street in the east end, it will allow people to take Class A drugs under the supervision of clinical staff 365 days a year between 9am and 9pm.

The 'non-judgmental space' appears to have the blessing of Lord Advocate Dorothy Bain, who said last year it would not be in the public interest to prosecute its users for drug possession.

Two years before that, Ms Bain announced a significant shift in policy relating to those found with Class A drugs such as heroin, cocaine and methamphetamine.

She gave Police Scotland discretion to issue warnings to offenders rather than charge them.

In all cases, police confiscate any drugs found. Three years on, the policy is viewed by many as de facto decriminalisation – a huge step towards the approach which brought such disastrous consequences in Portland.

And yet the Scottish Government insists that it does not go far enough.

Snake Pliskin's Daughter is
MAD MAXINE
in
ESCAPE FROM GLASGOW

In a report it published last year, it argued 'decriminalising drugs for personal use would help and support people' and ultimately 'improve and save lives'.

The barrier, it said, was the UK Government to which the powers to decriminalise were reserved. Westminster, therefore, should change the law UK-wide.

Alternatively, the Government could devolve powers relating to drugs laws to Holyrood.

The third suggested route for decriminalising Class A drugs in Scotland was independence.

What emerges, then, is a nation with by far the biggest drugs deaths problem in the UK – not to mention across Europe – demanding the right to pursue a strategy which is proven to exacerbate rather than alleviate the chaos wrought by these killer drugs.

'It is utter ignorance,' says Annemarie Ward, a former addict from Ayrshire who is now CEO of the charity Faces and Voices of Recovery UK.

The 54-year-old, an internationally recognised expert on drugs recovery, says the Portland example stands as a salutary warning of what lies down a road upon which Scotland has already embarked.

She says the nation is firmly in the grip of the 'harm reduction' policy which seeks to contain addiction rather than prioritise recovery from it.

'It started off 30 years ago and we were assured by the stalwarts of the harm reduction ideology that this was not in any way, shape or form a Trojan horse for legalisation.

'We are now at the point where the harm reduction idealogues will say, 'it's because you're not doing enough'.'

She adds: 'They say 'If only we had opened more drug consumption rooms, if only we had given people more free needles, if only we gave them safe supplies,' so it's never enough – the harm reduction interventions are never enough and it's only if we give people more and more drugs and more and more access to drugs, then we'll save lives, but that's just not the case.

'The evidence doesn't bear that out and the main reason why harm reduction in Portland failed drastically is because it didn't address the root causes of addiction, which is all the homelessness, mental health issues, poverty, trauma – all the stuff that we are experiencing in Scotland.

Ms Ward says it is already clear crime in Glasgow and elsewhere in Scotland is closely connected with addiction. Indeed, the practice of issuing police warnings to those found with drugs compounds the crime problem, she argues.

'Previously they would have taken that person to the cells,' she says. 'Now that person has had their drugs taken off them and been sent on their way, so they are even sicker than they were and even more desperate, so they are going to go away and commit more crime to restock.'

The advent of a Glasgow consumption room is another grave mistake, she says, empowering addicts not to get clean and sober but to carry on taking drugs in controlled conditions. She says: 'We are sending mixed messages to society about the dangers of drugs when we are telling people they can get their drugs tested for safe consumption and they can go to safe consumption sites.

'If there are no consequences there is not a need to change, is there? The system has become over-reliant on keeping people in a state of managing addiction rather than providing them with the resources and opportunities to break free.'

How much further down the road to decriminalisation will the consumption room take Scotland, then? Certainly, police have no intention of raiding the premises and arresting anyone inside for possession.

But there remains uncertainty about the approach to be taken outside the facility.

A Police Scotland spokesman insists the law has not changed and drugs will be confiscated from anyone found with them. It means that, under the letter of the law, addicts carrying heroin could be stopped and have their drugs taken from them yards from the door of the place they are going to take them.

But will that happen in practice – or will an unofficial drugs possession 'amnesty' be in place around the facility?

The Crown Office denies that any kind of tolerance zone will be in place.

But Neil McKeganey, co-director of the Centre for Substance Use Research in Glasgow, says the facility 'sounds a legal and bureaucratic nightmare.

He adds: 'Realistically, the drug consumption room will require an effective tolerance zone in which the police agree not to arrest anyone in the centre, going to the centre, or leaving the centre.'

The facility, he says, 'can only operate in the grey area where it is entirely at the discretion of the police what they do and when they do it and to whom.'

As for the drive towards decriminalisation, Dr McKeganey says the Scottish Government risks turning Scotland into the 'go-to' place for drugs by pursuing 'an entirely mythical idea that by allowing people to use illegal drugs, without fear of prosecution, they can somehow reduce the harms.'

He adds: 'The most likely outcome of such a policy is that illegal drugs will become more available, not less available, and the harms those drugs cause will increase, not reduce.'

The evidence from places which had introduced decriminalisation, says Dr McKeganey, is it not only failed to reduce the harms but allowed the drugs trade to gain 'an unassailable foothold' in those communities.


A Crown Office spokesman said possession of illegal drugs in the consumption room would remain an offence but the Lord Advocate was prepared to publish a statement of prosecution policy to the effect that it would not be in the public interest to charge users of it.

The spokesman said: 'The Lord Advocate is content that the proposed facility could provide a mechanism for support services to engage with some of the most vulnerable people in society.

A Police Scotland spokesman said recorded police warnings were a tool available to officers for specific offences 'where it was justifiable and proportionate'.

On the force's approach to the consumption room, Assistant Chief Constable Catriona Paton said: 'Existing legislation will not be changing, and our officers will be bound by their legal duty to uphold the law and will not ignore acts of criminality.

'We also have a duty to respond to the communities in the area surrounding the Safer Drugs Consumption Facility.'

The Scottish Government was adamant yesterday that decriminalisation did work.

A spokesman said: 'The balance of international evidence on decriminalisation – and from evaluated safer drugs consumption facilities worldwide – shows that both can save and improve lives and significantly reduce some of the harms associated with problem drug use.

'However, we know neither is a silver bullet and strong support, treatment and harm reduction services are also needed.'

Further 'evidence-based' measures being taken to reduce harms included widening access to treatment and support and increasing the availability of residential rehabilitation.

In Portland, even many of the drug users themselves came to the view that decriminalisation was a grievous mistake.

They could see the evidence with their own eyes – all around them and in their own hopelessness and despair.

Yet, on the strength of competing evidence ministers appear unable to cite, Scotland ploughs on towards the US city's model. Its hellscape could soon be our own.

&er Once all your people are messed up, it soon won't be hard for Muds to come invade and ruin you! I don't know how the US Govt, could let Oregon be like this?! Or Scotland even?!
 
 
Church Links Holy Books W.R.L. Friends Holoco$t Links
 

Legal Notices
Due to a 2003 CE decision in the US 7th Circuit Court Of Appeals, the name “Church of the Creator” is the trademarked property of a Christian entity known as TE-TA-MA Truth Foundation-Family of URI®. Use of the name “Church of the Creator” in any context is historical, and is presented for educational purposes only. The Church of Creativity makes no attempt to assume or supersede the trademark. Trademark remains with the trademark holder. [More ...]
 
The Church of Creativity is a Professional, Non-Violent, Progressive Pro-White Religion. We promote White Civil Rights, White Self-Determination, and White Liberation via 100% legal activism. We do not promote, tolerate nor incite illegal activity. [More ...]



Creator Origins
Church of the Creator: Founded by Ben Klassen - Year Zero (1973CE)
Your Own Creator Forum: Continuously Online Since 25AC (1998CE)
Creativity Alliance & Church of Creativity: Founded 30AC (2003CE)
Links: The History of Creativity | The Creator Calendar Explained
» Save the White Race - Join the Church of Creativity «

23 Words
What is good for the White Race is of the Highest Virtue;
What is bad for the White Race is the Ultimate Sin.


Main Website   Forum RSS Feed   Send Mail   About Us
Copyright © 30 AC - AC (2003 CE - CE), Creativity Alliance. All Rights Reserved.
Back to the Top