About Hunter Wallace 12390 Articles
Founder and Editor-in-Chief of Occidental Dissent

12 Comments

  1. Don’t waste your time.

    My friends get their Facebook pages reported and deleted ALL OF THE TIME for just minor, stupid stuff, I can’t imagine a openly “racist” Southern Nationalist page like yours would last long. Maybe just as you started getting a lot of contacts and putting a lot of time into it, Facebook will delete you.

    Besides, Facebook really messed-up the code recently, where you only randomly see your friends posts unless they pay to “promote” it.

  2. There are tons of white people on facebook.

    American White History Month got over 77 thousand likes. They were shut down, but they just opened up again and I expect they will keep doing so.

    https://www.facebook.com/AmericanWhiteHistoryMonth2

    Every time they shut down white groups on facebook, just for saying it is good to be white, they will anger whites and more whites will understand what is going on. There is no reason Southerners can’t do the same thing.

  3. Sorry, Hunter. I want no part of Facebook or any of the social media.

    I’m the same way. Why would I want to put my life on the internet for god-knows-who to see?

  4. “My friends get their Facebook pages reported and deleted ALL OF THE TIME for just minor, stupid stuff, I can’t imagine a openly “racist” Southern Nationalist page like yours would last long. Maybe just as you started getting a lot of contacts and putting a lot of time into it, Facebook will delete you.”

    Yet it appears that Facebook does not have a problem with pages advocating and calling for the murder of George Zimmermann such as this one: https://www.facebook.com/KGZ123. Typical liberal/leftist hypocrisy and one reason why I will never waste my time signing up for Facebook.

  5. I don’t know if anybody still cares about Paula Deen, but Universal Furniture International says they will keep marketing the Paula Deen Home Collection,

    “Scheffer said in the letter that part of the reason for the company’s decision was feedback from the retail customers that market its furnishings.
    “During the last couple of weeks, we have heard from many of you expressing your passionate support for Paula, urging us to ‘hang in there.’ Other retailers have removed Paula Deen banners, tent cards, hang tags and the like from their floor displays – effectively de-branding the line. To be sure, Paula, her brand and yes, her furniture have become a rallying cry for some and a lightning rod for others. What everyone seems to agree on is that the product design is strong and her collections continue to sell well.” Scheffer writes.”

    http://www.hpe.com/news/business/x533459868/Furniture-company-sticking-with-Deen

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