>>6101
>White people in America have some sense of "community" insofar that they look the same.
There's more gemeinschaft if you stay in the region you're born in. If you've moved around alot in the US, you'll understand this pretty well, by becoming intensely aware of how far into utangard your "native" region's customs really are.
>America is still fairly young, and most people can't really call it "home" in the ancestral sense.
The only people I know who can't do this are
a) people who can't accept who they are
b) post civil war immigrants.
Most people outside of major cities in the US are of a general anglo-saxon stock (mostly the english, and ulster scots) who arrived in the nation in the early-mid 1600s.
I mean, really think about that time scale: there's more distance between me and my last Ulster-born Scot ancestor than there would have been between Snorri Sturluson and his last Norwegian ancestor towards the end of the freestate period.
If Snorri is "an Icelander", then it is almost certain that I'm "an American", and more specifically, a national of my home state and ecoregion.
You only really hit the "young country" problem when you start cavorting with the micks, daygos and vodka drunkinskiys that ended up imported after our constitution was raped in the reconstruction era.
>>6097
>(I'm looking at you, Americans living in the atomized postmodern wasteland)
please, you fucking eurocentric faggot. it was the likes of heidegger, derrida, foucault and other european swine that invented post-modern thought to begin with.
>Christians living in the South are more "volkisch" than you.
This is actually very true, and if examined in the context of the origins of Asatru in the US, it's laughably true.