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Friday, 19 December 2025

RTC - A Gift for Nationalist Community Builders What Is To Be Done Part 7

 

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RTC - A Gift for Nationalist Community Builders

What Is To Be Done Part 7

By Nick Griffin
RTC

We have settled on the true meaning of “building community”. It is not helping a community in search of votes. It is not building comradeship in an isolated nationalist organisation. It is finding ways to help to strengthen the bonds within an existing community.

Having clarified what the concept really means, the question we now have to answer is what can be done to turn it into reality.

active_club

Let’s start by visualising a group of increasingly typical young nationalists. They may have met online, through an existing organisation or through educational or social contacts. They have probably then been influenced by the slogan “Tribe and Train” to start getting together for regular sessions in the gym. Great stuff! Young men should glory in, and hone, their new-found strength.

Perhaps they’ve gone out to put up a few stickers, exchanged and discussed a few politically incorrect books. Over the summer they might have gone for hikes ending in a country pub, or spent the evening round a campfire and slept out under the stars.

Good for them. They’ve built comradeship. They’re fitter than they were and have confidence and esprit de corps. Now, what are they going to do with it? In simple terms, they’ve got three real choices:

1) Keep going as they are until, one-by-one, they drift off into the mundane responsibilities of life. Work, university (bad choice for most, but some are still making it), fatherhood (best choice, but still too rare) and so on. It was fun while it lasted, but slips into the past, having made no real difference;

2) Get ‘radical’. Get themselves a black gym uniform, masks and an ‘extremist’ banner. Post photos online of themselves with heavyweights and empty heads. Get infiltrated, or grassed up by one of the creeps who encourages such groups because that’s how Judas Goat agent provocateurs earn their thirty pieces of silver. Get arrested and caught with those politically incorrect books. Get thrown into prison. Get their lives ruined, having made no real difference;

3) Stay clean, not just of drugs, but of the dangerous mental drug that is heart-on-sleeve far-right radicalism. Studiously avoid given any hints of ‘extremism’ which would draw attention to their group. Take a good look at the place where they live, decide exactly what sort of real community work they are going to undertake, and make a start.

Fortunately, those who make that third, saving choice don’t have far to look. At least not in Britain or Ireland, though I am sure that those in other countries will find something with similar promise if they will only look.

patriotic_community

The Raise the Colours operation has visually transformed working and lower middle-class areas of England, Scotland and Wales into mainland versions of their counterparts in Northern Ireland.

In some cases, this was centrally organised by activists tied in to one extent or another with the Counter Jihad network. I will not repeat what I’ve said in early essays and videos about how these civic nationalist, Zionist-funded traitors are no friends of the ordinary people of Britain.

I will, however, grant that the ‘Ulsterisation’ of Britain, which their social media teams have helped to unleash, presents a golden opportunity to nationalists who decide to stop fooling around with risky slogans and get down to real local community work.

YourTown Flagsters

Step 1

Try to find out precisely who put up the flags in your patch. If people in the local working-class pub are reticent, you could try putting up some more. Now it is firmly established as legal, this piece of identitarian action is as safe and easy as it is dramatic.

If you can find them, see if they want help to turn their initial effort into a permanent, loosely organised team effort. Don’t get political on them; if at present they love Tommeh and Israel just bite your tongue, you’ll have plenty of time to educate them gently once you’ve been out flagging with them on a few rainy nights leading up to St. George’s Day.

If you find them and they don’t want help, don’t worry. If they’re soft, disorganised and not motivated for the long haul, just aim to leapfrog them. After all, you’ve already got a tight-knit and confident group. If by chance they’re tough, determined and hostile to people treading on their turf, just shift your sights a mile or so and find a patch they’ve not touched.

If you can’t find them at all, move on to -

Step 2

Produce a simple leaflet/poster, on behalf of “YourTown Flagsters” (“flaggers” is a term deliberately chosen by hostile leftists in the media on account of the connotations of the word ‘flagging’) and tape it onto a few of the lamp posts decked with flags. You may need to put a few fresh flags up in places where there is more pedestrian traffic.

The leaflet needn’t be glossy and professional. In fact, that would scream of ‘outsiders’ who don’t need help in any case, so the more home-made and amateur it is, the better. Here’s some basic text for you to use or adapt:

We’re the YourTown Flagsters –

We’re here to help turn the Raise The Colours display into a regular show of pride in YourTown and England. We’re not political. We’re not ‘against’ anyone. We just LOVE our flags, our community and our country.

We’re here to look after our flags. We’re going to replace them with proud new ones when they get tatty.

We’re here to pressure the council if they start sending Jobsworths to take them down.

You can help!

Volunteer to help us put up more flags.

Keep an eye out for anyone taking them down – take photos if possible, note number plates, and call us IMMEDIATELY.

Donate or help raise money, so we can put up even more flags and make YourTown even more colourful and proud.

Call any time on 07….. [Your burner phone number]

Of course, all this material should also go on a local Facebook page, complete with photos and video clips of your flags waving. Keep it completely non-political, but look for opportunities to support and advertise other local good causes and events.

Step 3

Visit people who call you and keep a simple record of what they’re willing to do to help. Bear in mind that at least one caller, who won’t want to give you his or her address, will be working for the local press, while another will be working for the police. But so what? You’re doing nothing illegal, and you are saying nothing political. Look out for opportunities like a collection box in a local pub or shop.

Work to extend your team beyond your initial group. Their political opinions, or lack of them, don’t matter. You’re looking for local contacts, willing hands, donations and eyes and ears in the community. Nothing more, nothing less.

Step 4

In the run-up to your national saint’s day, get to work putting up new flags. Study how certain ways of securing them last much better than others. The experts in Northern Ireland fix theirs to wooden battens, and then cable tie the battens to the lamp posts, rather than using cable ties through just two eyelets, which rip quite easily.

Experiment with knocking doors in your target street. Carry a bag of new flags to show people, tell them you’re going to be decorating their street for St. George’s (Andrew’s/David’s) Day and ask if they’d like to give a fiver to pay for a flag.

Keep a note of those who do, because they are going to be important in future Community Building operations which will go way beyond your Flagster beginnings.

Now it’s confirmed that councils in most areas have decided that putting up flags is legal, there’s not generally any reason to do it at dead of night. You should certainly NOT be putting any where they really do pose a traffic hazard, or where they are going to antagonise large ethnic minority communities. The aim of all this is to inspire and unify our people, to prepare them to be sympathetic to work for our communities. There is nothing to be gained by winding up, and uniting, any of the ‘Others’. Especially as our real problem isn’t with them, but with our own liberal traitors.

Step 5

When you’ve gathered a good few local sympathisers, try to find a venue for a get-together and fund-raiser. Most pubs are struggling and landlords are quite likely to favour a BBQ or Quiz night which brings a couple of dozen extra drinks-buyers in on an otherwise quiet evening.

Or, if YourTown is already under a Reform council, you may well be able to get a council premises for such an event. Now that’s an early milestone in embedding yourself in the community.

At about this time, you should find that pro-flag people who know your team are sufficiently sympathetic to you for it to be possible to spend a bit of social time with them and to gradually mould their political opinions. This is important, because the flagster team is only the first step.

As we will see in the next chapter of What Is To Be Done, the aim is to use this operation as a springboard. You may already have made YourTown widely admired as a place with far more flags than neighbouring places, but there are many more things to be done on the road to turning it into a Community Strongpoint. But you can’t do them all yourself, so your team has to grow, so you need to recruit new people and to turn soft, civnat contacts into real nationalists.

Step 6

Even when no routine flag renewal date is due, raise some extra money and get a fresh supply in. Tatty or stolen flags will need replacing from time to time and, sooner or later, some external event will demand a rapid response. This could be anything from the council taking down existing flags, to a major terrorist attack which raises nationalist passions among the public. Be ready, because a quick and effective response will cement your reputation among sympathetic local people.

remembrance_poppy_giant

Step 7

Prepare for Remembrance Day. The Chinese have discovered that there is a market for all sorts of poppy-themed decorations as November comes around. This means that they are very cheap and readily available.

Get some pictures or some samples and go and visit all your previous donors. Most will happily chip in to put giant poppies on the lamp posts and strings of small ones in roadside garden hedges, etc. Publicans and even decent vicars (there are still some) may also be happy to host displays.

Whoever else joins in, for about £100 you can turn key places in YourTown into a mass display of Remembrance pride. Make sure that the whole area knows that it’s another YourTown Flagster operation. If you’re the first group to do so, you’re going to make a lot more local friends, and help build the contacts and trust you’ll need for the next steps in building a real community – with you and your nationalist ideals at its beating heart.

What do you do next? Or what else could you do if, for some very unlikely reason, Your town doesn’t have a gap for a Flagster Team? I’ll be setting it all out here very shortly, so become a free subscriber so you don’t miss it. Or a paid one to how you appreciate my work. Thank you!

If you appreciate my work, but aren’t yet ready to become a paid subscriber on Substack, perhaps you’d feel good at least buying me a coffee. “Many a mickle maks a muckle”, as my ancestors on my fairly remote Scottish side would have said. Thank you! “Buy Me a Coffee” HERE