Why GenX Can’t Believe In Anything

Volksgemeinschaft: is a german expression which on the surface simply means “people’s community”. However, it has a deeper and more spiritual meaning.  The word expresses is the ideal of the Volk, bound together by blood and a common race soul, living and working as an organic community for a higher purpose.

This concept in diametrically opposed to the GenX way of thinking, and here’s why:

Generation X is usually defined as those who were born between 1966 and 1980.  They, or should I say “we” (I am a reluctant GenXer), are often characterized by the shallow pop culture and media which celebrated them; think Grunge Music, movies like Empire Records, Slacker, Singles, and the wholesale white adoption of negro music. This is their cultural legacy.

Unfortunately, their legacy of cultural expression is much more insidious than what is portrayed in the vapid Jewish media. The real rot is the apathy. More than anything else, this feeling is what defines those of this “forgotten generation”. This vice, which has found its zenith in Gen X, is even perversely celebrated. To show any undue interest or concern is an anathema. The the only permitted concern is the occasionally cause d’jour, that always revolves around the fetishization of the other in some faraway place (think “Free Tibet”). Concern for your own community and people is always mocked with characteristic GenX snark.

This total inability to allow yourself to believe in something great has given birth to the most meaningful sentiment one can aspire to: not giving a fuck. This is the mindset inherent to the “outsider hero” trope in most GenX films.  But there is nothing heroic or constructive in this outlook. It only creates a vacuum in which those who want to influence society and culture can take up residence and further degrade us.  Interestingly, this explains the GenX flirtation with libertarianism. Libertarian ideas encourage the thought that one will simply be left alone. Man is then free to tend to his little corner of the world, pursuing whatever meaningless hobbies or interests he uses to define himself.

GenX largely raised itself. We were the generation of latchkey children. Our boomer parents were often away; engrossed by their own ambitions, or chasing some pleasure outside the home. Remember that our parents were the first generation raised totally by talmudvision. After the ZOG victory of 1945, TV was a central to everyday life and in many instances was the only communal act a family engaged in.  The heart of the home–it’s hearth and great hall–was the electric jew feeding programming directly into the minds of Mom, Dad, and their progeny of 2.5 children every single day.

The lack of zeal, the lack of any faith that things can truly change is why Gen X is known as the “Forgotten Generation”. One cannot fully commit to a cause or subordinate oneself to something higher when your greatest act is to not care…especially when it is caring about something other than yourself.

2 thoughts on “Why GenX Can’t Believe In Anything

  1. Good stuff. Reminds me of Rockwell decrying the perception that dispassionate responses were more authentic or legitimate than hot-blooded ones. Underneath the pageantry he was a prescient and sophisticated thinker.

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