What has Marco’s madness got to do with the West’s dark hour? In short, with their neo-Christian religion of equality of race, gender and sexual identity, the Aryan in general is as crazy as this poor Mexican. In my diary entry of 10 December last year, I wrote:
When I woke up and couldn’t reconcile sleep something came to mind that I had recently heard in an interview of Judge Napolitano with Colonel Douglas Macgregor. All, of course, to contextualise Marco’s psychosis because his madness is the same as the madness of the people in power. Let’s see.
The gringo Secretary of State, Antony Blinken, doesn’t want to see that Russia has won the war in Ukraine but, like Marco, reversed it all. This is what Blinken said: ‘NATO will continue to support Ukraine, assuring that Russia’s war of aggression remains a strategic failure’.
He went on to say that they will not allow anyone to change the borders of Europe (Russia has already changed them), and that Ukraine remains militarily and democratically strong! Blinken added: ‘Ukraine knows that its future is a free, vibrant democracy and its path to NATO and the European Union depends on its own methods’.
This is what I am seeing in a YouTube video. But the video I remember best is the interview with Macgregor. It’s a pity I can’t even locate it. Blinken said there that Ukraine will regain the lost territories, and that they will push Russia back [red emphasis in my diary].
This is pure Marco when he grotesquely deceives himself by telling me ‘the house you are going to occupy’ not giving a rat’s tail about everything I had told him. Marco’s pathology is as undetected by Marco as Anthony’s pathology by Anthony. What Marco does is common even in the highest echelons of power on the planet. There is no difference between the extent of Marco’s psychosis and the extent of the American Secretary of State’s psychosis. It is the same thing.
Macgregor mocked Blinken after Napolitano played him the clip I couldn’t find. The colonel said that, of the points Blinken made, he failed to say that another step is that the Ukrainians will soon develop technology to reach the moon. So, on a par with Marco’s delusions, is the Secretary of State of supposedly the most powerful nation on earth. And so is Biden. The judge, in other videos, has played several clips of Biden saying things very similar to what Blinken has just said.
If there is one thing I have noticed in my writings about the mental disorders of people I know, it is that they are less serious than the disorders of those in Western governments, universities and the media. Nutty Marco only harms himself and his cousin. Crazy elites harm the entire white race.
3 replies on “Narcissism, 6”
C.T. – Marco
This game was played in the park where I played chess in the Colonia del Valle, very close to where I lived with my grandmother. This park welcomed me in my teens when I fled from extremely abusive parents and school. It was a different place than the public parks where the outcast underclass used to take refuge to play chess and dominoes. It’s true that when I was repudiated by my parents I found myself as marginalised as the underclass, but in Las Arboledas Park there was a cultural level very different from that of the parks in the centre of Mexico City. It was there, in this park for middle-class people, that I really learned to play chess.
FRIENDLY GAME
Las Arboledas Park
(ca. 1985)
1 e4 e5
2 Bc4
This was my favourite move in the park. I won countless games with it. The idea was not to play the hackneyed lines of the Bishop’s Opening, but the gambit that ensues after 2… NKB3; 3. NKB3, NXP; 4. NB3!? whose theory no one knew. In this game Marco eluded the gambit and simply transposed to the Two Knights Defence, so he came out unharmed from the dangers of this opening.
2 … Nf6
3 Nf3 Nc6
4 d4
When I made this move Marco complained that it was a prepared book line. The advantage of friendly games over tournament games is that you can unleash your emotions; you can even curse and there is no rule against it.
4 … Nxe4
5 dxe5
Here Marco exclaimed: ‘Bishop takes pawn, check!’ in the sense that he had seen the threat. ‘Damn brother!’ Only Marco called me with the pleonastic nickname ‘El hermano brother.’
5 … Nc5
6 Nc3 Be7
7 Nd5 O-O
9 O-O Ne6
8 Nxe7 +
I remember that I was worried about the bishop on c5 and wanted to eliminate it as soon as possible.
8… Qxe7
10 c3 b6
11 Bb3 Bb7
12 Re1 Rad8
Since I wrote down this game from memory only when I got home, I don’t remember if the order of the last two moves was correct. Did I play the rook first and then the bishop?
13 Nd4 Rfe8?!
When Marco played this I was surprised. I thought that because of my next move he had to exchange knights. At postmortem he told me he didn’t want me to join my pawns. But he should’ve taken the knight (Kasparov says that when he manages to bring a knight to the f5-square he already feels won). I didn’t use computer systems to analyse this game. What I write down here were the memories of what I was thinking during the game in the mid-eighties, without outside help.
14 Nf5 Qc5
15 Qh5!
If now 15… Nxe5; 16 RxN, winning.
17 … g6
16 Ch6 + Kg7
17 Qf3 Qe7
18 Qg3 Kh8
19 Ng4 d6
One of the Arboledas players, Antonio Galán, who had been watching the game, told me alone when we were walking in the park while Marco reflected that black’s defence was collapsing.
20 Nf6 Nxe5
Otherwise a very dangerous attack on the king would come.
21 Nxe8 Rxe8
22 Bxe6! Qxe6
It took me a while to reassess this new position. In the post-mortem analysis Marco indicated that he intended to play 22…Ng7 if I hadn’t exchanged the knight.
23 Be3
The game is technically won, but this sets a trap Marco missed.
23 … c5?
24 f4
Marco made an angry exclamation and shook his head. The interest that we both had invested in the game was considerable because we hadn’t played for a long time with each other.
24 … Nc6
Marco was still flustered and visibly pissed off when he made this last move.
25 Bd4 + Nxd4
26 Rxe6 Nxe6
27 f5!
If this one survived among the countless games I played in the park, it was because of something that caught my attention. As I noted in my diary many years ago: ‘I had always wanted to checkmate Marco with a queen sacrifice right in this position a few moves later. Synchronicity?’
27 … Ng7
28 f6 Nf5
29 Re1
I remember Marco’s shock when he saw this move.
29 … Be4
30 Qf4 d5
31 g4 Nh4
32 Qh6 Nf3 +
33 Kf2 Rg8
34 Re3
I thought about this a lot, making sure that after—:
34 … Ne5
—I immediately made the following pseudo-sacrifice of queen to surprise my old buddy:
35 Qxh7 +
Marco removed both his king and my queen from the board as a sign that he was resigning.
“[T]he gringo Anthony Blinken.” It’s good to keep in mind that Blinken is a Jew, and that that is his race and ethnicity.
Hello Commander Kerr:
You’re right. When one writes in diaries—and I am quoting my private, uncensored diaries—one says things that, in public, one would modify the syntax.
Greetings,
C.T.