Monday, 20 January 2020

Red Niggers in Texas ....By Ben Klassen


 
How the early Texans cleansed the muds out of their territory

Red Niggers in Texas
No state has a more colorful and glorious history than does the State of Texas, and no state more clearly exemplifies the eternal struggle of the White Man against his deadly racial enemies – the Indians, the Mexicans and JOG, the Federal government itself. Today that struggle goes on, more deadly than ever, in Texas, and on a national basis, and in fact, on a worldwide basis. The only situation that has changed is that the White Race now has more racial enemies pitted against it than ever, namely Asiatics, Haitians, South American and Central Americans, mud peoples, and a host of others. In the meantime, JOG has become more powerful, more vicious and hostile, and the boundaries of the racial war have become more confused and obscure in the White Man’s vision.

Nevertheless, the war today is very real and more ferocious than eve. Whereas the early Texans took direct and effective action and won their racial war more than a hundred years ago, today the opposite is unraveling before our eyes. The White Race is losing, is leaderless, confused, and rapidly on its way to extinction. Let us review some stages of the interesting and heroic history of the White Man’s conquest of the great Lone Star State, how he was beset with the same evil forces we are today, and how he took direct and drastic action to triumph over his mortal enemies.
 

 
I have read a number of books on the Texas Rangers, on the battle of the Alamo, the heroic battle at San Jacinto, and Texas history in general. Most of them downplay and/or de-emphasize the historic fact that the Conquest of Texas was essentially a racial war – a long drawn out three-cornered struggle between the White Man, the Mexicans and the Indians. It was not until recently, however, that when Rev. John Brooks sent me another book on Texas that I realized how fierce and intense that racial battle was. The name of the book is The Lone Star – A History of Texas, and what especially piqued my interest was a chapter in the middle of the book entitled Red Niggers, a term of contempt used by the early White settlers for the ever marauding Indians.
 
For two hundred years the area known as Texas had been claimed by the Spanish conquerors of Mexico. However, by the time the first White settlers arrived in this area under the auspices of Empressario Stephen F. Austin during the 1820’s, the Spanish and Mexican colonization of Texas had been a colossal failure. As in South America, and in Mexico Itself, the Spanish conquest, although preceding by almost two centuries that of their rivals, differed significantly from that of the Anglo-Saxon colonization. The Spaniards did not conquer to colonize. There were three major forces in play that determined the course of Empire. They were the Crown, the army, and the Catholic Church, not all three necessarily on the same course. They came to exploit the land and the native labor, mine the gold and silver and enrich the coffers of the Crown, and in the process expand the domination of the Catholic Church. But as colonizers they were a total failure. They did indeed strip the land of its gold and silver, shipping its wealth across the ocean to make Spain the most affluent domain in Europe during the sixteenth and seventeenth century.

Over the centuries of unabated effort, the attempt by the Catholic Church to Christianize the Indian heathen was a total failure. They did build a number of missions with Indian slave labor, but the Indians did not embrace this alien creed as their own. In fact, only the more docile tribes could be domesticated at all, and during the process they invariably declined in numbers and eventually died out. The more warlike tribes, such as the Comanches, the Apaches and others, rejected Catholicism in toto, and kept up their raiding, scalping and thieving.
As we come to the first half of the nineteenth century, there were a string of five Spanish missions in Texas, of which San Antonio de Bexar was the most prominent, but all were in a state of decline and decay. By the 1820’s the Mexican revolution had aborted from Spain, the country was in chaos and the now mix-breed Mexican settlers in Texas were only a few, subject to the terror and raiding parties of the warlike Indians to the north and to the west. Not only was Mexican colonization not advancing, it was retreating.

When Moses Austin, followed by his son Stephen F. Austin, approached the Mexican government with an offer of bringing in 300 Anglo-American families on a given tract of choice Texas lad, the Mexican government was receptive. This they were not because they liked the Anglos, but because they hoped that these more durable Americans would act as a buffer zone and thus protect the territory behind them for the Mexican settlers to expand upon.

Moses Austin soon died after the initial application, but his son carried on and the Anglo-Celts, Anglo-Saxons, and Anglo-Americans were indeed tough, and a more durable breed. When the new settlers were offered tracts of one site of legua (4428 acres) of good land at 12-1/2 cents an acre, the rush was on. The first wave came from the Trans-Appalachian South – Louisiana, Alabama, Arkansas, Tennessee and Missouri. The main motive was economic improvement – an opportunity to own and settle on good land at approximately one-tenth the going price in the United States. First came the farmers and hardy frontiersmen, soon followed by merchants, lawyers and townsmen. By 1825 his original 300 patents were used up and Austin applied for more. In the next ten years Austin succeeded in locating more than 1500 families. But he was not the only Empressario. There were soon 25 more, although none as successful as Austin. In a single decade these White Americans had more children, raised more crops and built more towns than the Spaniards had in the previous three hundred years.

Although these American frontiersmen were subjects of the Mexican government and had to "profess’ to Catholicism in order to obtain the patents to their land, they brought with them their European culture and American ideas of freedom. As such they were soon on a collision course with the chaotic and ever-changing Mexican government, who by 1830 began to view the Anglos with hatred, envy and fear. Further Immigration of Americans from the north to Texas was restricted, and whereas the early settlers had enjoyed almost unlimited freedom from taxation and Mexican government bureaucracy, now they became subjected to both. Nevertheless, the White Anglo settlers from the American north and east kept on coming in ever increasing numbers. A rebellion and a racial war was inevitable and it was soon to come.

Not only were the White settlers faced with the hostility of the Mexican nation of whose territory they were a part, but the depredations and hit and run raids from the war-like tribes on horseback to the north and west kept increasing. Whereas the Austin colony had settled in an area that had only a scattering of unwarlike Indians, as the numbers of White settlers increased so did the repeated raids from the fierce Comanches, Lipans, Apaches, Karankawas and other Indian warriors on horseback. Stephen F. Austin early in the settlement had organized "companies of ranging volunteers" that were soon to become the notorious Texas Rangers, the scourge of the Indians and the Mexicans, the latter calling them the "Diablos Tejano," the Texan devils.
 
A three cornered racial war was facing the ever expanding White settlers, between the Indians, the Mexicans and the late arriving White settlers. It was a war that was to continue for more than sixty years. It Is not our intent here, nor do we have the space, to give even a concise resume of the colorful history of Texas in the nineteenth century. Suffice it to say that by 1835 the independent, freedom-loving White Texans had had enough and were ready to revolt against the Mexican tyranny. This culminated in the thunderclap at the Alamo when the then President and General of the armies, Santa Anna marched north and decided to teach these Americanos a lesson they would never forget. After 13 days of siege, on March 5, 1836, Santa Anna and his 5000 regulars stormed the walls of the improvised fortress and within a matter of a few hours it was all over. The 182 heroic defenders of the Alamo were all slaughtered and mutilated beyond recognition. But the Mexicans had won only a Pyrrhic victory at best, and the Americans exacted a heavy toll of at least 1600 dead Mexicans and more than 500 wounded, and it was here that the legend of the Diablos Tejanos was spawned.

The shock-waves of the Alamo spread terror throughout Texas and sent the American colonists fleeing eastward with their families, as Santa Anna, despite his heavy losses, was determined to wipe out every last Americano In Texas.
Soon thereafter Sam Houston was given charge of a rag-tag army of 800 volunteers by the then interim government of President David C. Burnett, who headed up a sorely divided cabinet. Houston, too, kept retreating eastward, gaining additional volunteers as he went. Some of his men began grumbling that he, Houston was afraid to fight, but Houston consulted no one and kept his counsel to himself. Then, at the appropriate moment on the afternoon of April 21, Houston attacked. While Santa Anna’s army was camped at the San Jacinto bayou only a mile from the Americans, and enjoying an afternoon siesta, Houston launched his attack on the surprised Mexicans.   
The shout Remember the Alamo! went up as the Americans ran screaming at the disorganized Mexicans. It was all over in about 18 minutes and the carnage that ensued was indescribable. By nightfall 630 Mexican corpses lay scattered in clumps across the grassy field, with more than 200 wounded, as the disoriented Mexican remnants surrendered. The Americans had lost only two killed in action, with about 30 wounded, of whom seven more would die later. General and Presidente Santa Anna had fled, but was captured the next day, disguised in a private’s uniform.

As the news of San Jacinto spread, great cheering went up all over Texas and the pioneers and their families returned to their farms. Houston had not only won a most decisive battle in the history of the White Race, but he had also Won the West. Texas had won its independence.



Nevertheless, the three-cornered racial battle between the Indians, the Mexicans and the White Texan settlers continued. The hit-and-run marauding raids by the fiercest Indians on horseback in North America – the Comanches, the Lipans, the Apaches, the Karankawas – not only continued but increased In Intensity. So also did the intensity of the hatred of the Mexicans, now that they had lost Texas. The United States government in Washington took a strictly hands-off policy and was of no help. They had made a treaty with Mexico in 1819 in which they conceded Texas was Mexican territory. Although the new Republic of Texas wanted to join the United States, the festering slave issue, the eastern bankers and politicians rejected their White brothers who had conquered Texas by sheer blood, guts and colonization.


The White colonists carried on. They formed an independent Republic. The hero of San Jacinto, Sam Houston was its first president, limited by the new constitution to a two-year term. The Indian raids increased. The new Republic was bankrupt and badly in need of not only money, but material goods of every kind. It could not afford a regular army. Having spent three years of his youth among the Cherokee Indians, Houston had a soft spot in his head about the Indian attacks. Houston was succeeded by Mirabeau Buonaparte Lamar, also a hero of San Jacinto, as president of the Republic in 1838.

Unlike Houston, Lamar had no soft spot or illusions about the racial war that freed the colonists. He faced the reality: Texas had to fend for itself. Rejecting the hypocrisy of the bleeding hearts of the North, Lamar took a forthright stand on the racial problems that confronted him, a stand that was strongly supported by the colonists themselves. As far as the Mexicans were concerned, he advocated the Mexican government should be given a final chance to negotiate a boundary and peace with Texas. If they did not, the Mexicans should be brought to their senses by knocking them to their knees. As far as the Indians were concerned, he considered them as merely trespassing red vermin on Texas soil. In this outlook, Lamar invented nothing new. The notion that these savages were tenants at will, without inherent title to American soil, and the White Man might dispossess them without formal legal action, was already firmly imbedded in American thought that had already acquired the legitimacy of two hundred years of history.



Lamar stated bluntly that the Indians, the Mexicans and the White Man could never live peacefully in the same territory. "Nature forbids it." He revived the Texas Rangers and inaugurated a firm policy of driving all the Indians and Mexicans out of Texas, a policy eagerly supported by the majority of the White Texans. Not only was it his objective to drive out the more peaceful Cherokees living on Texas soil, but it became governmental policy to pursue and destroy the more warlike Indians who made repeated forays from the north and the west. The attitude of the Texas settlers was to exterminate all Indians, that the only good Indian was a dead Indian. They called them red vermin, red niggers, and realized that their farms and settlements would never be safe until the Indian menace was completely destroyed once and for all.

From its very beginning, the Texas Republic had been campaigning for annexation into the United States, only to be spurned by such abolitionists as John Quincy Adams and other eastern anti-slavery advocates. When, in 1844, James K. Polk was elected president, a new hero entered the arena in Washington. Polk favored American expansion "from sea to shining sea" and in late December of 1845 the aspiration of most Texans was realized. Texas became a state of the Union, much to the relief of its inhabitants.
By this time, the Mexican threat on Texas’ southern borders had become more abrasive and the Texas financial situation was in chaos. Soon after annexation, the United States, under President Polk, declared war against Mexico. In the ensuing war, 1846-48, the White Americans thoroughly trounced the Mestizo Mexicans on their home territory, although the White Man was repeatedly outnumbered in men and artillery in every battle. The Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo ended the war, and President Polk, whom we Creators regard as the greatest of American presidents, gained for the White Man the western third of the United States, Including California, Arizona, New Mexico and other territories, as well as assuring the security of Texas.
 
President Polk died (1849) shortly after then end of his one term. After the war with Mexico, in which the Texas Rangers played a heroic and significant part, the people of Texas re-assessed their situation. Instead of the government helping to protect the White colonists from the marauding Mexicans south of the Rio Grande and from the fierce Indian raids from the west and north, the policy of the Feds in Washington was to do neither. The government in Washington, in fact, made the slavery issue its main preoccupation, and since Texas was a slave state, Texas was looked upon with disfavor. It made arrangements for Indian reservations on Texas territory, and forbade Federal troops from pursuing Mexican raiders across the Rio Grande. Meanwhile, the Texans and the Texas Rangers beefed up their own limited forces, wondering all the while whose side their "new" government was on. 


This abrasive situation continued for another 13 years. For 30 years the Jews, the Rothschilds, and the eastern bankers had fomented a virulent campaign of hatred against the slave-owning southern states. The Jews were now orchestrating one of the most notorious and successful examples of their "Divide and Conquer" techniques, the North against the South. After a whole generation of detailed planning, conniving and conspiring, they found a most willing spokesman to lead their assault. Shortly after Abraham Lincoln was elected, the Civil War broke out in April of 1861. As planned, it proved to be the most tragic, destructive and insane war in American history. It devastated the South, including Texas, and changed forever the mentality of the White Race.

Although only a small portion of the war took place on Texas soil, nevertheless the Texans contributed heavily to its efforts and incurred disastrous losses in men killed and wounded. When it was over, Texas, along with the other Southern states, became occupied territory, occupied by a hostile, hateful, Jew-controlled Federal government. On June 19, 1865, General Gordon Granger of the Union Army landed in Texas. Some 52,000 bluecoats were sent to the border (southern) area alone, to rule, humiliate and tyrannize the White population. Their Texan former government was declared null and void, their plantations and farms were devastated. The niggers, of which there were now 200,000 in Texas, ran rampant. Although these niggers were illiterate, dumb and savage, they, along with the northern carpet baggers became the electorate and the rulers. Texas was now under military rule, whether they liked it or not. Niggers now terrorized cities such as Victoria, burned down some towns such as Brenham. The Union troops jeeringly stood by and condoned such atrocities. The White Texans, it seemed were now helpless to defend themselves and were ruled by the most vicious and hateful enemies – the niggers and the Jew controlled JOG, the Jewish Occupational Government.
For nine years these stalwart Texans endured these humiliations, atrocities and thievery of their liberties and their properties. Then by 1873 they finally got their act together and having thoroughly learned their lesson of fraud, manipulation and chicanery from their oppressors, they finally ousted JOG’s tyrannical Governor E.J. Davis, and replaced him with their own man, Richard Coke, although they had to break down the door of the Governor’s office to do so. They also now replaced the legislature with members of the former rebel army, they abolished the dreaded "state police" of the JOG, and wrote themselves a new constitution.

One of the notable features of this new constitution was its limitations of powers of the government. The Texans had learned a hard lesson and they instinctively distrusted government, all government. They now no longer looked to government and what it could do for them, but agonizingly realized what government could do to them. The powers of the governor of Texas were now one of the weakest in the country.

The Indian and the Mexican problems were still very real in this badly devastated state. The Indian raids, severe during the war, continued with increased fury after the surrender of the Confederates. From 1865 to Aug. 5, 1867, reports from county judges show that 163 persons were killed by Indians, 43 carried away into captivity. In this matter, too, the Texans took a firm hand. They reinvigorated their Texas Rangers, and under the capable leadership of Colonel Randal Mackenzie on the western frontier with 1000 Rangers in command of the Frontier Battalion, he destroyed the Indian tribes, using the tactics of hot pursuit wherever it would lead. They organized a Ranger Special Force on the Rio Grande under the leadership of the famous Leander H. McNelly to bring the Mexican depredations to a halt on that frontier.

By 1880, these heroic Texas Rangers had done their job and done it well. The last settler had been killed by Indians and the last Indian shot by the Texas Rangers. The frontier was secure. We now come to analyze the situation as it exists today in Texas, and in the United States. The Civil War put the Jews and their money power in flagrant control in Washington and in the state Capitals. They have remained in power ever since, the sinister and hidden enemy of not only the Southern Whites, but all White people. They have been diabolically clever in using their vast financial resources to expand that power and to enslave the White Race all over the world, using the White Race itself as a tool in their vicious technique of Divide and Conquer.

Today our main enemy is still JOG, and not much has changed, except now the Indians and the Mexicans are not our only threat. Now the Mexican horde has been increased to flood proportions, but it has also been augmented with Cubans, Haitians, Hindus, Pakistanis, Chinese, Japanese and hordes of other alien mud races. Like the situation in Texas a century ago, JOG is doing nothing to stop the invasion. On the contrary it has opened the doors wide and is encouraging the mud flood, rewarding it with welfare and subsidization after these parasites get here. All this at the White Mans expense, and aimed at the destruction of the White Race.



What can we do about it? What can we learn from the Texans who cleansed the muds out of their territory by 1880?



1. The first thing we can learn is that the cleansing action, heroic as it was then, was not permanent. Today there are more Mexicans in Texas, (as well as California, Arizona, New Mexico and other states) than there were in Mexico a century ago. And they are still coming in droves.



2. The reason we have not stopped the mud flood is because the White Race has never gotten their act together to extirpate the real cause – the Jewish virus which was the cause of the Civil War, and a host of other wars (W.W. I, W.W. II), all of which have been devastating to the White Race.



3. The reason we, the White Race, have succumbed to the deadly Jewish virus is because of our blindly clinging to the destructive Jewish mind-scrambler, namely Christianity, which teaches us that we must love our enemies, and that the Jews are Gods chosen.


4. The solution is what the C.O.T.C. has advocated repeatedly: we need a racial religion of our own, based on reality and the survival, expansion and advancement of our own kind. With Creativity we now have such a religion, one around which we can now rally the total White Race and cleanse the world of the expanding mud races with the same zeal and determination as the Texas Rangers did in the last century.


Ben Klassen
Founder Church Of The Creator

 



 



 



 
ARTICLE TAKEN FROM RACIAL LOYALTY #75
NOV 18AC (1991)
 
 
 



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