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Culture War Roundup for the week of October 16, 2023

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At least some of them have concrete - albeit quite small - policy proposals. An example is the "Idaho Project" which consists of getting the legal right to turn most of Idaho (i.e. all of it except Boise) into the white ethnostate. Idaho ex Boise is chosen because it is already like 97% white and 3% native American, and they don't seem to care much about the Native Americans.

I kind of support them. If they can turn Idaho into a white paradise, let them do it. I've never been to Idaho, I don't really have any plans to go, and don't see why anyone else should care either.

It's a pretty basic, well-accepted principle of a modern citizenship that a citizen of some country be allowed to move in and to whatever other part of the country they wish to occupy without this being illegal.

Democratic Czechoslovakia in 1930s had police keep a registry of Gypsies (the name then used for the 'Roma') who were and are prolific, mercifully mostly petty criminals and restricted them from downtown areas of large cities and so on. I don't think this was universal, more on a clan by clan basis.

All I'm saying is, it's not unprecedented.

This is not true in modern day China, you by and large can't just up and go from a rural farm to Shangai, they have a system called Hukou that pretty strongly limits where a person can live and work.

Should probably have specified that I'm talking about non-authoritarian countries, generally. Hukou is a part of the general command-style society in China.

I drove through Idaho with my dad on the way to a week in Seattle with relations. We had a very pleasant breakfast at a Denny's near the Oregon border; we'd probably still have no problems in Ida-White (what else could you name it?), as I doubt our very nice waitress recognized an old Jew when she saw one — because anyone who looks at my dad has seen one!

But what if the Parliament of Idawhite passed a law adding a couple of episodes of Curb Your Enthusiasm to the elementary school curriculum? My dad has been confused with Larry David.

What about black drivers? My old roommate is now an adjunct professor at Portland State University, and between the job interview and the move, that's three times a black lesbian has driven past the exact same Denny's—and we have yet to ask anyone in thar demographic lucky enough not to share a lease with me about any omelettes they've ordered whilst en route to the Pacific Northwest.

What happens, if we give Idaho to the white nationalists, when the rest of us want to drive to Seattle? Are we just expected to not have a Grand Slam?

ETA: You could also name it Ida-Cracker. Obviously.

I was going to flip out at you for passing on White-aho, but then I read your edit, Ida-cracker is great.

Well, how about Native American reservations? And as for those: you can't, in general, move there, only the tribe that owns it can; but you can drive through and even stop at a restaurant. Any 'realistic' (for whatever value of that...) Ida-White would need to follow a similar model.

It wouldn't be in their interest to block or harass people who pass through.

I've never been to Idaho, I don't really have any plans to go, and don't see why anyone else should care either.

The extent to which the progressive project has this totalizing nature is striking, isn't it? If the wignats want to turn a chunk of Idaho into their paradise, no skin off my ass. I can see how this would become a problem if it was so successful that lots of other places wanted to do the same thing, but the idea that it's very important that a sparsely populated place remain maximally required to abide by federal "fair housing" laws and such is just weird to me. This seems like a real difference in intuition and preferences between the more libertarian-minded and authoritarians in general. I understand the desire to exert strong control over a local environment, but I just don't understand wanting to send federal authorities a thousand miles away to force integration.