The Turner Diaries
August 8, 1993. For the last four days I've been
acting head of our newly organized Department of Public Resources,
Utilities, Services, and Transportation (PRUST) for southern California.
It is a strictly temporary position, and within the next 10 days I will
turn the post over to another engineer, one of the group of volunteers
I've been working with during the last two weeks. He will have the able
assistance of a number of local people who were formerly employed either
by one of the state, county, or municipal agencies here or by one of the
private utility companies, and I have confidence he'll be able to iron
the: . remaining bugs out of the department.
With more than
half the key people back at work here now, things are beginning to run
almost normally. We have restored electricity, water, sewage treatment,
rubbish collection, and W telephone service to all the occupied areas
now-although electricity is strictly rationed. We have even put about 50
gasoline stations back in operation, and those civilians whose work
assignments give them priority status can obtain fuel for their f
automobiles.
PRUST covers our whole enclave, all the way
from Vandenberg to the Mexican border, and I've done a lot of traveling to
survey the needs and resources of the various areas and to get everything
roughly coordinated. I'm really very pleased with what we've been able to
accomplish in such a short time. Next to the military and to the
Department of Food, PRUST has the most essential function to perform and
employs the most workers of all the agencies we've set up
here.
One of the most interesting aspects of my work has
been setting up the interfacing with the Department of Food. They produce
the food; we transport it, store it, and distribute it. There were several
problems to be worked out, primarily because a certain amount of the food
which is produced does not go directly from the fields to the distribution
points but is processed first. This means that the Department of Food
needs to concern itself to a certain extent with storage and
transportation from field to processing plant, before PRUST takes over the
responsibility. Also DF has a specialized transportation need in moving
its
workers from their living quarters to the fields and back.
\
I have had to familiarize myself with DF's whole
operation in order to decide the best way to define our respective
responsibilities. I am very impressed by what I have seen. They have
mobilized more than 600,000 workers-about a quarter of the entire
productive segment of the population under our control -for the production
of food. Between 10 and 15 per cent of these workers are those Whites who
were originally in farming or ranching in this area. Nearly a third are
young volunteers in the 12-to-18 age range. The rest are people from urban
areas who formerly worked in non-essential occupations and have now been
assigned to work crews under DF's supervision.
Many in the
last group are now doing the first really productive work in their lives.
This means DF is performing an important function of social rehabilitation
as well as food production, and our Department of Education is working
closely with DF on this. Every worker receives ten hours of lectures each
week, and he is graded not only on his general attitude toward his work
and on his productivity but also on his responsiveness to these
lectures.
There is a continual sifting process going
on, with workers being reassigned to new work groups on the basis of
attitude and performance in their previous groups. In this way there are
already beginning to emerge from the general mass the first leader-trainee
work groups. From the latter will be selected candidates for Organization
membership.
On several occasions during my tour of DF's
operation I stopped to talk with workers in the fields. The morale varied
considerably from the groups with a high proportion of former social
parasites to the leader-trainee groups, but nowhere could it be called
poor. Everyone has been made to understand that, despite the dislocations
and the hardships caused by the revolution, we are now sure that there
will be enough food to go around-but those who will not work will not eat
either.
My most profound impression comes from the fact
that every face I saw in the fields was White: no Chicanos, no Orientals,
no Blacks, no mongrels. The air seems cleaner, the sun brighter, life more
joyous. What a wonderful difference this single accomplishment of our
revolution has made.
And the workers all feel the
difference too, whether they are ideologically with us or not. There is a
new feeling of solidarity among them, of kinship, of unselfish cooperation
to complete a common task.
Most of the news reports from other parts of
the country are very cheering to us. Although the System is still holding
on, it is only doing so through increasingly open and brutal repression.
The entire country is under martial law, and the government is relying
heavily on hastily armed and deputized Black goon squads to keep the White
civilian population intimidated. Half the System's regular military units
are still confined to their barracks as
unreliable."
Conditions are deteriorating nearly
everywhere. Power outages, transportation and communications breakdowns,
terror bombings, food shortages, assassinations, and massive industrial
sabotage are plaguing the System and helping to maintain the general
unrest. The Organization's action units are doing a heroic job, but their
losses are heavy. Their only aim now is to maintain the pressure on the
System and the general population by striking at every available target
again and again and again, without letup.
From the new
volunteers who are slipping into our area through the enemy lines at a
growing rate, we get a consistent story about the effect the chaotic
conditions are having on people. The White liberals and the minorities are
screaming hysterically for the government to "do something"; the
conservatives are moaning, wringing their hands, and deploring the
"irresponsibility" of it all; and the "average Joes" are becoming more and
more exasperated with everyone concerned: us, the System, the Blacks, and
the various liberal and conservative spokesmen. They just want a return to
"normalcy"-and their accustomed comforts-as soon as
possible.
The System propagandists are making a big thing
out of our forced evacuation of non-Whites and our summary liquidation of
race-criminals and other hostile and degenerate elements here. It's not
having the desired effect, however, except among the liberals and the
minorities. The bulk of the population is too preoccupied with its own
problems at the moment to shed a tear for "the victims of
racism."
The biggest fly in our ointment is northern
California. Things are completely out of control there. General Harding
has really botched the situation. It serves us right for having anything
to do with a conservative; he, like all the rest, was standing behind the
door when the brains were passed out, and so he got a double dose of
pigheadedness to make up for it. (Note to the reader: Turner is referring
to Lt. Gen. Arnold Harding, commander of Travis Air Force Base, which was
located about halfway between San Francisco and Sacramento. Harding's role
in the Great Revolution, though important, lasted only 11 weeks; he was
finally assassinated by an Organization team on September 16, 1993, after
several earlier attempts failed.)
If the situation in the
San Francisco-Sacramento area doesn't improve soon, we're likely to be
involved in a civil war against the troops under Harding. The System would
really love that. The only thing Harding has done right so far was
breaking with Washington during the first week of our July 4 offensive, as
soon as it became clear that the System had lost its grip in California.
On his own initiative he declared an independent military government in
northern California and got nearly all the other officers in military
units stationed there (except our own undercover military people, of
course) to go along with him.
Revolutionary Command made
the strictly practical decision to let General Harding carry the ball in
his area, and our people were instructed not to oppose him. This had the
effect of substantially reducing our own losses, although the military has
actually suffered many more casualties in northern California than in the
south. This is because Harding has failed to take sufficiently radical
measures to consolidate his authority and to deal with Black military
personnel.
And he has failed utterly to get the civilian
population under control-again, because he seems unable to understand the
necessity for radical measures. The Jews and the other Bolshevik elements
in San Francisco are running circles around him, and the Chicanos in the
Sacramento area have been rioting more or less continuously for a
month.
When a delegation of Organization people went to
Harding last month and suggested a joint Organization-military rule for
northern California, with Harding's forces handling defense matters and
the Organization handling civilian matters - including police
functions-Harding arrested them and has refused to release them. Since
then he has been issuing idiotic proclamations about "restoring the
Constitution," stamping out "communism and pornography," and holding new
elections to "re-establish the republican form of government intended by
the Founding Fathers," whatever that means.
And he has
denounced our radical measures in the south as "communism." He is appalled
that we didn't hold some sort of public referendum before expelling the
non-Whites and that we didn't give individual trials to the Jews and
race-criminals we dealt with summarily.
Doesn't the old
fool understand that the American people voted themselves into the mess
they're in now? Doesn't he understand that the Jews have taken over the
country fair and square, according to the Constitution? Doesn't he
understand that the common people have already had their fling at
self-government, and they blew it?
Where does he think new
elections can possibly lead now, with this generation of TV-conditioned
voters, except right back into the same Jewish pigsty? And how does he
think we could have solved our problems down here, except by the radical
measures we used?
Doesn't Harding understand that the chaos
in his area will continue to grow worse until he identifies the categories
of people responsible for that chaos and deals with them
categorically-that it is physically impossible, considering the relative
numbers involved, for him to deal with the Jews, the Blacks, the Chicanos,
and the other troublesome elements on an individual
basis?
Apparently not, because the idiot is still making
appeals to "responsible" Black leaders and to "patriotic" Jews to help him
restore order. Harding, like conservatives in general, can't bring himself
to do what must be done, because it would mean punishing the "innocent"
along with the "guilty," the "good" Negroes and the "loyal" Jews along
with the rest-as if those terms had any meaning in the present context.
And so, afraid of treating individuals "unjustly," he is floundering
around helplessly while everything goes to hell and the civilians in his
area die like flies from starvation. Generals should be made of sterner
stuff.
The one advantage to us from the situation in the
north is the flood of White refugees it has brought us. More people have
been coming into our area in the last two weeks to get away from the
anarchy around San Francisco than have been slipping through the System's
lines from the rest of the country.
And, while they last,
it is interesting to have living, breathing examples of three types of
social orders simultaneously before us: in the north, a conservative
regime; to the east, liberal-Jewish democracy; and here, the beginning of
a whole new world rising out of the ruins of the
old.
August 23. Tomorrow I leave for Washington
again. I have been at Vandenberg for four days learning how nuclear
warheads work. I am in charge of a group which will hand-carry four
60-kiloton warheads to Washington for concealment in key locations around
the capital.
Approximately 50 other men-all members of the
Order-were trained with me, and each of them has a similar mission as a
group leader. That means a total of about 200 warheads to be dispersed
around the country initially, with more to follow
later.
All the warheads are identical; they were removed
from a stockpile of 240-mm artillery projectiles our people found here.
They've been slightly modified, so they can be detonated by coded radio
signals. They will be our insurance, in case we lose our missile-launch
facility here.
The present mission is the hairiest one I've
ever been assigned. It will be a lot tougher than blowing up the FBI
headquarters two years ago. Five of us must make our way through 3,500
miles of enemy territory, carrying four nuclear bombs weighing a total of
just over 520 pounds, without getting caught. Then we have to sneak them
into areas that will be heavily guarded and conceal them, so that there is
a negligible chance of their being found.
Aside from the
dangers involved, which tie my guts in knots whenever I think about them,
I have mixed feelings about this mission. On the one hand, I hate to leave
California. Being a participant in the birth of our new society hers has
been tremendously exciting and rewarding for me, and our work is just
beginning. New projects are being launched every day, and I want to be a
part of them. We are laying the foundations here for the new social order
which will serve our race for the next thousand years.
And
to be able to live and work in a sane, healthy, White man's world-that is
something which is beyond valuation for me. These last few weeks have been
wonderful. It is terribly depressing to think of leaving this White oasis
and plunging once again into that cesspool of mongrels and Blacks and Jews
and sick, twisted White liberals out there.
On the other
hand, it has been more than three months since I've seen Katherine, and it
seems like a year. The one thing which has limited my enthusiasm about
what we've accomplished here is that she hasn't been able to share it with
me. And now, with the changed situation, she and the others in Washington
are living under much more difficult conditions and in greater danger than
we here in California. Realizing that makes me feel guilty every day I
remain.
The strongest feeling I have now, however is one of
responsibility. I am both proud and awed that I, still only a probationary
member of the Order, am being entrusted with such an important and
difficult task. I must try hard to put all other thoughts and feelings
aside until it is successfully completed.
During the last
four days I have not only learned about the structure and functioning of
the warheads for which I will be responsible, but also why this mission is
vital. That involved A lesson in strategy which has been very
sobering.
The people in Revolutionary Command, with their
eyes fixed firmly on our long-range goal of total victory over the System,
have not let themselves be deluded by our gains in California and the
present difficulties the System is facing elsewhere. The grim facts are
these:
First, outside of California the System remains
essentially intact, and the disparity in numbers between the System's
forces and our own is even worse than it was before July 4. Thatch because
we've been recklessly expending our strength everywhere else in the
country to keep the System off balance long enough for us to consolidate
our gains here.
Second, despite the military forces under
our control here, the System-as soon as it has tidied up some of its
present military morale problems-will be able to pound us into the ground
by conventional means with very little trouble. The only thing that's
really kept them off us this long has been our threat of nuclear reprisal
against New York and Tel Aviv.
Third, our nuclear threat is
in grave danger of being neutralized. The System has the capability for
launching a surprise first strike against us with a high probability of
knocking out all our "hardened" launch silos before we can fire our
missiles. Revolutionary Command's intelligence sources indicate that such
a surprise strike is exactly what is being planned. The System is holding
off only until it has finished an emergency military reorganization which
will give it confidence in the political reliability of the U.S. Army. It
wants to follow up its destruction of our nuclear capability immediately
with a massive invasion which will finish us off in a day or
two.
Worse, the System has an alternative plan which
calls for the nuclear annihilation of all of southern California. It will
carry out that plan if it fails to regain complete confidence in the
reliability of its military ground forces within the next couple of
weeks.
We still don't know the System's exact timetable,
but we have reports that more than 25,000 of the wealthiest and most
influential Jews and their families have quietly packed up and left the
New York area within the last ten days, most of them taking 0 only a
moderate amount of luggage with them-perhaps enough
for a two- or
three-week vacation.
Thus, our entire strategy against
the System has been undermined. If we could hold the enemy off
indefinitely-or even for a year or two-with our threat of nuclear
retaliation, then we could pull him down. With California as a training
and supply base, and with a population of more than five million Whites to
recruit from, we could steadily escalate our guerrilla war throughout the
rest of the country. But without California we can't do it-and the System
knows that.
So what we must do-immediately-is to
disperse a large number of nuclear weapons outside California. We will
then detonate at least one of those weapons to convince the System that a
new situation exists. If the System attacks California after that, we will
be obligated to detonate all or most of our dispersed weapons, in an
effort to destroy the System's capability for organized
resistance.
Unfortunately, much of the White population of
the country is bound to be lost if we are forced to that extremity. The
country will also be open to the danger of invasion by other nations. A
grim prospect, indeed.