Should We Vote In The 2026 Midterms?

“NS” activists have been chiming in on X.

They think the Gavin Wax situation is a compelling reason not to vote in the 2026 midterms. They think this incident justifies their depressive, blackpilled JQ-centric worldview.

Daily Mail:

“The White House has descended into chaos after a top administration official was accused of leaking racist text messages sent by his Republican rivals.

The damaging leak exploded onto the national stage on Tuesday after Politico obtained 2,900 pages including texts which showed top brass at the New York State Young Republican Club calling black people monkeys and praising Adolf Hitler. 

Gavin Wax, a State Department staffer, allegedly orchestrated the takedown of his former colleagues at the conservative club, insiders told the Daily Mail.

Senior White House figures urged Wax to retract his leak last week as word of Politico’s scoop spread, according to four Republican officials familiar with the situation.

An explosive affidavit from Michael Bartels, another Trump administration official, was delivered by Republican Party chiefs to the White House Office of Political Affairs on October 7. It accused Wax of blackmailing him to obtain the leaked group chat. …”

My first thought on this is that it has nothing to do with us.

In the 2026 midterms, we will all be voting (or not voting) in state, local and federal elections for people to represent us in our states. This internal drama among young conservatives in New York over a racist group chat on Telegram is irrelevant to how we have been and will be governed in Alabama.

What sense does it make to be angry at Gov. Kay Ivey or Sen. Tommy Tuberville or the Alabama state legislature or, say, the county sheriff because of Gavin Wax? Normal White people aren’t manic depressive activists who look for any excuse to cede power to their political enemies. The vast majority of White people will vote (or not vote) based on their perceptions of their own representatives. Everyone will have a different ballot in the midterms and will be voting (or not voting) for different people.

In my case, I am thrilled about the imminent demise of the Voting Rights Act, which impacts the Black Belt more than any other region of the country. Outsiders don’t realize that large swathes of the rural and small town South like west Alabama, southwest Georgia or the Mississippi Delta have been under black majority rule in DEI districts for decades. The Voting Rights Act created a revolution in Southern politics which transferred power from the most hardcore segregationists in the region to blacks aligned with White Northern liberals. It destroyed cities like Selma which became a national symbol of White guilt. “Civil Rights Icon” John Lewis marched over the Edmund Pettus Bridge until his death in 2020.

Just a few years ago, Alabama’s Second Congressional District, which is my congressional district, was redrawn to create a second DEI district in Alabama to increase the number of black Democrats in the House. We are now represented by Rep. Shomari Figures because of how John Roberts and Brett Kavanaugh voted in Allen v. Milligan (2023) which forced Alabama to redraw its House map. A similar case in Louisiana which forced Louisiana to create a second DEI district is how we got Louisiana v. Callais which is now before the Supreme Court and is poised to topple Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act. If the Voting Rights Act falls in 2026, it will unleash a counterrevolution in Southern politics because much of the Congressional Black Caucus will be gerrymandered out of existence.

Alabama Republicans also passed the CHOOSE Act in 2024 which is equally important. It creates refundable income tax credits which helps parents afford private school tuition for their children and get them out of majority black public schools. Needless to say, I have three children now and two younger children who will be starting school in a few years and being able to afford their education matters far more than any other issue, especially those which do not concern my state or impact my life. The activists who repeat thought killing cliches like “there is no political solution” are ignoring how Southern Republicans are succeeding in finding ways around the Brown decision, how the Voting Rights Act is being undermined and how the whole narrative of the Civil Rights Movement is losing its grip.

It feels weird writing the GOP is “divided” over how to respond to racism, but that is where we are now in 2025. It has been trending that way for years. I remember when the Senate didn’t struggle to unanimously condemn White Nationalism after Charlottesville in 2017.

Politico:

“NEW YORK — When POLITICO approached Rep. Elise Stefanik this month with hate-filled messages from the same Young Republicans she backed and bankrolled for years, her condemnation was swift and full-throated.

Hours after the story published — and just minutes after Vice President JD Vance derided criticisms of the chat as “pearl clutching” — Stefanik pivoted to attacking Democrats. She derided POLITICO’s story as a “hit piece” and those across the aisle raising alarm about it as “hyperventilating.” …”

Twenty years ago, George W. Bush and House and Senate Republicans voted unanimously to renew the Voting Rights Act. When I graduated from Auburn in 2005, it was unthinkable that Vice President Dick Cheney would publicly defend shitposters in a racist group chat or that much of the conservative movement would rally in their defense and take their side. Granted, there are still people who engage in pearl clutching about racism, but the culture of young conservatives has radically changed. These sentiments are no longer confined to underground messageboards like Stormfront.

“NS” activists look for any excuse to give up, to throw in the towel and not to engage in political activity. It is incredible when you think about it. We live in a time when we are finally beginning to reap the harvest of seeds that were sown twenty to thirty years ago. “Antifascism” has been defined as domestic terrorism. The refugee resettlement program is being changed to bring in White people. The Voting Rights Act is on its last legs. The racist community is powerful enough to drive the national conversation. There are lots of positive and surprising things happening like the Jewish Question going mainstream. Even this story about Gavin Wax ratting out his colleagues reaffirms all the Jewish stereotypes.

“NS” has a culture of losing though. It seems to attract depressed people who are quitters and losers. They all have a negative attitude. They are fragile and incapable of handling setbacks. It is the right philosophy for miserable people who want to have no success in politics. Your philosophy in life determines your values and attitude and those things determine your actions and results. This is why I refuse to associate historic National Socialism with “NS.” The original movement in Germany in the 1920s and 1930s had a will to power – think Leni Riefenstahl’s Triumph of the Will – while what calls itself “NS” is the most depressive, blackpilled shit on the internet populated by activists who act like Jews are omnipotent.

Finally, we are over a year out from the 2026 midterms. I’m not even sure who will be on the ballot in my state. I will decide whether I am voting and who I support a month or two before the election. This is what I have always done. There are a lot of things that could happen over the next year.

8 Comments

  1. The Twitter video of the guy in Baghdad throwing shoes at the horrible George Bush II is my favorite video. Thanks for posting it Hunter, it never gets old.

  2. As for whether one in the South should vote Repuke in the mid-terms? I’d say it’s OK to do so as long as it would buy our side time to build a genuine alternative to the fake-and-gay GOP, who need to be tossed in the garbage-heap of history even more than the old Whigs of the 1800s did. The accelerationist argument that voting for some woketard D-jersey will be the “worse is better” kick in the ass to the terminally retarded normies has been proven to be false most of the time. Worse is usually just worse.

  3. Trump and the Republican party have done a few good things, I as a national socialist am willing to admit that. The Afrikaner refugees are great. The CHOOSE Act in Alabama sounds like a good program. Some of what you cite is not worth celebrating. His prosecution of the Negress Letieta James has nothing to do with VDARE, it’s revenge for the fact that she prosecuted him. Ditto with the prosecution of Bolton, it’s got nothing to do with him being a warmongering Israel-firster, Trump’s fine with that, it’s because he said mean things about Trump.

    And a great deal of what Trump has done has been just plain terrible. Appointing Robert Kennedy to HHS in exchange for an endorsement. Giving Argentina 20 BILLION dollars of our money just so its “libertarian” leader can give handouts. Creating a “strategic crypto reserve” for the benefit of Indian crypto scammers. He even recognized a bunch of Negroids, the “Lumbee,” as “native Americans” so they can get their teeth into the white taxpayer’s money. His presidency has been one scam after another.

    Beyond the bad policies are bad ideas. If you go to a Trump rally, you’ll see much obesity, many women dressing like whores, and other dysgenic behaviors. You cite the bad behavior of national socialist “spider man marches,” and rightly, but that is the result of national socialists failing to live up to their own ideals. In contrast, the rot in Trumpism is deeper, it’s the worst part of populism, the celebration of mediocrity. Plus, there’s a strain of anti-scientific, anti-eugenic Judeo-Christianity that was absent from Trumpism in 2016, but which wormed its way in as the Judeo-Christian Right embraced Trump and threatens to overtake it after Trump leaves the scene.

    National socialism and Judeo-Christian nationalism are distinct ideologies. The former stands for a secular state where religious confession is up to the believer. The latter thinks religion and government should be mixed together. The former supports eugenics. The latter opposes eugenics, not merely on practical grounds, but because they think improving the race somehow contradicts the Bible they think should be the basis of government. We don’t want that, we want national socialism! You’re like a waiter who keeps delivering something the customer didn’t order and then saying “oppositional defiant disorder” when said customer is not satisfied.

  4. Hopefully there is an undercurrent of White racial consciousness rising in the ranks of younger Republicans. Here in Virginia we are having statewide elections. The Democrats aren’t worth even mentioning obviously, but the Republican ticket is a black woman immigrant for Governor, for Lieutenant Governor
    a White openly homosexual (the first one in Virginia history to ever run for statewide office) who has a black lover (he is also the most right wing candidate running) and a hispanic for attorney general and the local delegate candidate is a Indian not sure if he is first generation or second.

    • I feel your pain

      Here in Alabama, I have been concerned that former Auburn basketball coach Bruce Pearl was going to run for Tommy Tuberville’s Senate seat. Pearl is a notorious Zionist. Fortunately, it hasn’t happened yet, but that would be a bridge too far

  5. Wallace is a typical race cuck Conservativard – he surrenders public schools to the negroes and wants the White taxpayers of Alabama to pick up the tab so his kids don’t have to rub elbows with the negroes that his great great great-grandpappy brought over to pick cotton.

    • The public schools were surrendered to blacks in the 1950s by the Brown decision long before I was born. Elections have consequences. Empowering liberals in the 1930s, 1940s and 1950s is responsible for creating the Supreme Court majority which wrecked public education.

      “NS” is about empowering White liberals to do more destructive shit with the public schools like indoctrinating children in White guilt and transgenderism while forcing parents to pay out of pocket for private school tuition. At least this way we get our own tax dollars back and the freedom to choose where our kids go to school

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