Frilly dresses and white supremacy? A response to The Guardian

Today I read an article published in The Guardian: “Frilly dresses and white supremacy: welcome to the weird, frightening world of ‘trad wives’” by Sian Norris. I honestly could not believe the rubbish I was reading; it would have been better placed in a fiction section rather than being classified as a piece of journalism. It had all the usual connotations of anti-White hatred along with a revulsion of traditional values.

At the end of the story was an invitation to write a response of up to 300 words, so that’s just what I did. We’ll have to wait and see if it gets published. Here is my response:

I was left feeling quite bemused after reading the article by Sian Norris, where she attempted to describe the world of a “trad wife”. I had initially thought the article was satire, but soon realised copious amounts of liberal Kool-Aid must have been consumed.

Here is a perspective from an ex-feminist, who thought any woman who sought to be equal with a man “lacked ambition” and was thrilled by emasculating men at the pool table or down the firing range. However, I soon came to realise I was just damn competitive, but everything around me had been engineered for me to hate White men. Now it’s the turn of the White woman! How did we get to a stage where wearing a long floral dress is frowned upon and the traditional family unit is considered toxic? We really are in trouble. I wonder if Sian would dare comment on a Muslim woman’s attire and her role in supporting her husband and raising their children? I think not. These same feminists who scream “my body, my choice” with regards to abortion would march you off for a mandatory COVID vaccine without a second thought. In a time where politicians won’t answer the question of whether a female can have male genitalia, I’m glad to be considered the “extremist” for wanting to be traditional.

My closing thoughts: men and women complement each other when the natural and traditional way of living is embraced. No quantity of anti-depressants, alcohol, holidays or consumerism can give me a better feeling than that when my grandchild smiles at me and reaches for a cuddle; that touches your soul like nothing else in this world. I urge all your readers to watch “Birthgap – Childless World” by Stephen J Shaw.

One of the viewpoints which I didn’t have the word count to comment on was “the great replacement myth”. I wonder if these people walk round with their eyes closed; perhaps they have never visited places like London, Slough, Luton, etc. Or maybe they are just happy to see our demise? With hard work from many Nationalists this subject is now filtering through and being spoken about on larger media outlets.

At Homeland Party we support the traditional family unit and believe there is nothing more beautiful and rewarding than having a family. At the end of my response to Sian I urged Guardian readers to watch Stephen J Shaw’s documentary “Birthgap – Childless World”. I found this to present such an interesting viewpoint. The historical thinking is that women are just having smaller families, but there is more to it than that: many women are having no children at all. They are sold a lie: that you can have it all, work and party and then have children later in life if you desire. In fact, for many of these women it turns out they have left it too late and are unable to conceive. The statistics are shocking for countries like Germany and Italy where they might never recover from the decline.

I would be very interested in hearing what you think of the documentary. The first part is freely available to watch on YouTube:

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