public works projects

Such an inspiring view from Downtown Vancouver

Starting roughly in June, 2020 in America, we saw a coordinated attack on White Statues, as carried out through the golems of BLM and Antifa. While they claimed to be merely attacking former slave owners, or people tangentially related in some way, they also gleefully tore down statues of abolitionists such as Mattias Baldwin, Tadeusz Kościuszko, Hans Christian Heg, and many others. It became clear to all that they simply saw a statue of a White Man and tried to destroy it, in the anti-White racial pogram of 2020, some of which made its way tepidly up to Canada.

Mattias Baldwin, an abolitionist who literally funded schools for black children. Called a “colonizer,” we’ll hear more about that later.

Similarly, the anti-Christian attacks that have happened this past summer here in Canada have made clear a few obvious and important things. First, “Traditional Conservatives,” will never advocate for, let alone protect, White People, Christians, Normal People (in social situations), and definitely not non-billionaires financially. No matter how many times the suckers vote for them, when the chips are down, when churches are being burned, the Conservatives can be counted on to stab you in the back.

The CPC leader said “this is the greatest scar in Canadian history.” But he wasn’t talking about the church burning, tearing down of White Statues, theft of taxpayer dollars, or cancelling of Canada Day. He was talking about the slander about church mass graves as if it was real.

Here in BC, the statue of John A. MacDonald in Victoria was vandalized, and was attempted to be torn down. In reality, nobody but us can and will stop MacDonald from being torn down eventually, but if he causes such pain amongst our enemies, why not expand upon this policy? John A. MacDonald was a great and exceedingly interesting man, and his face should, and indeed will, adorn much more of the public space of our great province, and we should hope, our great country. 

Victoria, BC. John A. MacDonald statue.

We live in a disgustingly ugly world, unlike our ancestors hundreds of years ago. In fact, our world is far more ugly and uninspiring than Rome thousands of years ago or Greece far before that. Why is it so ugly moving through the streets, or the subway system? Why do we have disgusting soulless consumerism shoved into our faces constantly instead of an uplifting romantic painting, or a proud statue of a general, or doctor, or scientist? We have this, because the ruling class would like to make you feel small, atomized, and worthless. For the same reason in the Soviet Union, architects would make deliberately ugly buildings. The purpose is to make you understand at least on a subconscious level, that you are not in charge, they are.

Soviet Union isn’t much to the glory of Rome

Instead we are going to recapture the public spaces, and we will look to our past to see our future. Should we limit ourselves only to Canadian heroes? We are in fact part of a larger story that begins in Athens and has found its way here, and there are many great men in our history that will inspire us and the next generations to rise above the mediocrity of the present world. It is not up to NPP Leadership to decide which type of public works projects your tax dollars are spent on, although we would love to see statues of Alexander Solzhenitsyn, Archimedes, William Shakespeare, or Werner Von Braun, just as much as you would. 

A lack of true democracy does not simply mean that you get anti-White hate ideology (critical race theory), child trannies, church burnings, mass censorship by Google/Facebook, lied into wars, and all the other injustices we face on a daily basis. When the malicious is at the wheel, we get no beautiful buildings, statues, or other physical objects to make us feel a part of something larger than ourselves. And that needs to change.