Montanans descend from pioneers, and at White Lives Matter Montana we carry on that tradition of trailblazing into our activism. Today, we will be showcasing our newest distribution technique so recently blessed by the kvetching of our enemies – Bookmarking.
What Are “Books”?
In the days before brain-rotting smartphones, there were physical devices called “books”. Unlike the digital scrolls we’ve regressed to, these bound-paper tomes contain information on all manner of subjects independent of keystroke censorship. A reader can instantly jump to any portion of the text with a simple swipe of the hand, and save those positions temporarily with another device called a “Bookmark”. In big repositories called “Libraries”, tens of thousands of these devices containing much of the collective wisdom of our societies were stored for open access to the public.
Incredible stuff, I know!
Turns out that libraries still exist, however mismanaged by homosexually-dominated organizations like the American Library Association. Many have become breeding dens of furtive anti-Whites who have wormed their way into these temples of knowledge, unbeknownst to even most of the honest bookworms who might have guarded the gate more closely had they ever lifted their heads out of their beloved pages.
These sneaking specters amongst the shelves have increasingly spread the likes of Drag Story Hours and the anti-White agenda to all the public, particularly the youth. “Books are sacred!” these creatures whimper and sniff, while ferrying the most disgusting rot straight into the minds of the vulnerable. They demand you worship bound paper as inviolable while ignoring the contents within, like eating rat poison because it’s wrapped like candy.
Unfortunately, even under the Big Sky, the rot is well established and growing. Out of the city cesspools spills forth this foulness, grooming children and adults alike to become unwitting plague-bearers. Private bookstores are even worse than the libraries in many respects.
Livingston’s Drag Story Hour was hosted by Lisa Snow in the bookstore Wheatgrass Books in May 2023. It did not go unopposed. As one of WLM MT’s most successful demonstrations to date, we united Nationalist organizations across the Pacific Northwest to voice our displeasure at the degeneracy taking place.
Whether private or public, book distributors have an unpleasant tendency to become prime vectors of community contagion. One corrupting agent gets into a book-centric organization, and over time the wallflowers are turned into social weeds, and spores spread all throughout town. To challenge these overtaken institutions in some manner is necessary, and it happens that books provide a clever way of message distribution.
Activist Bookmarking
Recall how pre-Zoomer peoples would navigate their screenless text devices? Bookmarks can be made with virtually any flat object. Candy wrappers, leaves, dollar bills (if anyone had any to spare anymore), or message-bearing pieces of paper in the forms of stickers, pamphlets, and handouts.
Books are marvelous little devices. Their construction allows any number of pieces of paper to be hidden among their pages, completely obscure from outside observation until someone comes along interested enough to pull that book from the shelf. At the moment they open it, out springs a message that may have laid in wait there for weeks, months, or even years.
Traditional public stickering broadcasts its message to anyone passing by. However, books naturally facilitate a slight maneuvering of potential audience simply by choosing the subject matter of the book. Those who are going to read historical newspapers will tend to be a bit different than the audience getting excited over children’s books.
By bookmarking, messages can be made to align with the interests of self-selected audiences while remaining hidden from those who do not share those interests. Additionally, as there is no outward sign that a book has received additional literature, destroying these messages is a time-consuming endeavor even for our greatest haters. What takes seconds to deploy may take days or weeks to uproot.

In The Field
Bookmarking as an activist tactic has, to this author’s knowledge, only remained a little-known hypothetical in general Nationalist circles. That is, until White Lives Matter Montana brought it into practice last month in Great Falls, Montana.
For context, the Great Falls Public Library is no exception to the general corruption of our learning institutions. In 2021, after receiving backlash from the public about promoting “Family Pride Week 2021”, the director Susie McIntyre “miscommunicated” an order to hide the Youtube videos that were promoting it to avoid further criticism.
Even though our venture to this library was simply due to it being a repository of books, it turns out the GFPL was even more deserving place to spread our message than we first imagined. After hacking the security cameras, crawling through the vents, avoiding the laser-mines and poison-fanged attack dogs, and–
Actually, none of that. Libraries typically have very little security in still good (ahem, White) parts of the country like ours. Still, we are careful. Though our public service announcements are absolutely legal and harm-reducing, the book banshees dwelling within surely would not enjoy their captured tomes being touched by knowing, virtuous hands.
Our operatives were able to deploy our educational payload in short-order and then left. The entire operation took just a few minutes and went off without incident. One of them collected footage which we shared in our last video of November 2023:
No books or lawns were harmed in the making of this film.
The bookmarking footage had a particular charm to it. Tongue-in-cheek jokes could be made with the choice of book, and that presents a whole world of visual communication hitherto unexplored. The process is simple, non-damaging, and good fun. We may have checked out a few books then too…
It was mission accomplished as far as our metrics were concerned. Bookmarking is generally a slow-burn kind of activism. A very slow burn. Some books haven’t been opened in years and could remain so for a very long time. That our video directly inspired others to get to their own similar activism meant it already met our highest expectations. It was a very nice cherry on top of the proof-of-concept cake.
But then, our “monitoring friends” threw an absolute conniption!
The (Over)Reaction
After being informed by this “monitoring group” that we dastardly devils had infiltrated the Dark Web to post our nefarious bookmarked public service announcements for all you terrible people, they claimed we had placed propaganda into 16 books.
Now librarians are no mathematicians, but our footage clearly shows 18 books. Counting is just as important as literacy, friends. And those 18 are just what we decided to show. The rest are either still waiting for discovery, or have already gone home with people.
A sudden barrage of articles rained down from the library and local newspapers about these bookmarks. They said our bookmarks came from Neo-Nazi White Supremacists aiming to threaten and intimidate. They even said our message was a threat to children, which is rich coming from those who aggressively put on child grooming sessions on our public property. Slander like this is already going into a file for future legal recompense. Despite having all the confidence of their lies, they all so far have refused to show any of the so-called “hate”.
We at WLM, unlike the MSM, believe in showing and speaking the truth for our people to decide. So here were some of the new stickers our chapter distributed that day:
But that’s not all. If you find any of these awful, horrible, no-good racist stickers or flyers, they want you to call the police, the city, and even the county commissioners! Hell, if those departments want some stickers so bad, they just need to ask nicely.

They even recommend you put their anti-White sticker into your windows as a show of compliance – er, solidarity. This technique was famously employed by Not In Our Town (NIOT).
In 1993 Billings Montana, after a suspiciously-convenient rock flew through the window of the then-President of the Montana Association of Jewish Communities Brian Schnitzer, he utilized completely-normal connections with the local newspaper and politicians to inspire a totally-organic uprising of window-stickers to oppose “hate”. After glitzy documentaries and massive grandstanding, it has been manufactured into a false myth about how Nationalists are foiled by totally-not-astroturfed community rallying. It's an interesting tale in its ever-shifting details, but NIOT is a story for another day.
This NIOT-styled scaremongering continued into the City Council meeting on December 5th, where illustrious “concerned citizens” whom few have ever heard took to the podium during public comment to push their spiffy new campaign.
Susan McIntyre (9:20 – 12:50) said participating with WLM is “like joining a cult” while slavishly reading the speech prepared for her.
Sandy Filipowicz (13:05 – 16:30) accused WLM of “hate crimes” before giving a Propaganda Story Hour reading, courtesy of NIOT.
Aaron Weismann (16:30 – 17:45), helpfully related his deep connections to NIOT’s founders and angrily boasted about lighting Maccabean Revolt candles.

Jasmine Taylor (17:50 – 19:55) says our QR codes are targeting children – in childhood classic books like “The House of Rothschild” and “Guide to DNA Testing” no less! – and that stickers are leading to ~spooky unspecified violence~!

Marcus Collins (20:00 – 24:20) responded to the White Lives Matter “burgeoning crisis” by proclaiming all lives matter and fo-mah-lay requested public funds for a NIOT propaganda task force.

Brett Doney (24:30 – 25:58) related how his latest SWOT analysis shows Great Falls needs more diversity and less Montanans for economic growth.
Jane Webber (26:10 – 26:53) implored the city to keep bringing her fellow non-Montanans in.
Brian Washington (27:00 – 28:55) wanted to remind everyone about racism. He did.
Mayor Bob Kelly (29:00 – 31:59) proclaimed himself the perfect ally against muh racisms and wrongthink, and then politely told the rest of the NIOT plants to shut up and let the council get on with real business.
Astute observers will note that at no time during that meeting was there a mention of any of the ideas presented on the stickers. But that is necessary. The moment the public sees these images and reads those words, the Neo-Nazi boogieman becomes harder to summon in their minds. These ringleaders claim to want more speech, yet do everything in their power to suppress increasingly popular ideas.
Then the Great Falls Tribune weighed in. More slanderous statements from Susan McIntyre stating our stickers were talking about things they didn’t and were designed to “target” people again. We’d prefer only curious and thoughtful Montanans would receive these randomly-distributed messages, which surely excludes those who might take offense about White advocacy!
One thing is for sure about this sudden, absurd reaction – it is as organic as a plastic orange. The outcry is the predictable ploy of a frustrated cabal afraid of effective tactics being used that they cannot rightly counteract. The thought of our ideas “escaping containment” into the minds of the populace keeps them up at night. The always-unidentified “violence” they fear is the violence of their power in Montana and this country being torn away from them and returned to its rightful heirs.
Jasmine Taylor told the Council to “trust the experts” that producing overwhelming noise and slanders and threats of police and governmental backlash will frighten us away. But we are White Lives Matter. We are Nationalists after our forefathers, American patriots seeking to secure our country as the Nation-State it was envisioned to be for our posterity. And we seek to educate our people to recognize the lies against our race and come to advocate for their own racial interests like all other peoples do.
All this noise and bluster tells me is that this Bookmarking technique can be more potent than we ever envisioned! And so, let more Nationalists learn to employ it.
Bookmarking Methodology
Cost: Dirt cheap. Can use simple printed paper tabs or any sort of flat medium.
Time: Very fast. Filming takes longer, but placing a bookmark normally takes seconds.
Complexity: Hard to get simpler than put paper into books, but it’s flexible messaging.
Risk: Quite low. Little security, delayed results, and non-harmful paper is not illegal.
Your mileage with Bookmarking will vary! Presumably you will not strike kvetching gold like we just did every time, but that should not deter you from considering it as part of your activism efforts. This is (usually) a subtle kind of methodology.
Method:
1. Print sticker designs or other aesthetic messages with links up to 4” x 5”. Use gloves.
2. Scout for cameras beforehand as a normal civilian. Take note of any features like desks, mirrors, cameras, walkways, etc.
3. Prepare an easy-to-reach, hands-free bookmark container. Use unassuming opsec.
4. Find ideal environments: Sensible book genres, sheltered shelving, no traffic, quiet.
5. Collect a random number of books per shelf within easy reach one at a time.
6. Place the bookmark in a random place in the book. The front-pocket maximizes discovery for browsers (and librarians). Middle reserves discovery until read more closely. Varying the locations can easily complicate purge attempts by staff.
7. If filming, remain quiet, set camera on silent, and do not make big movements. Shot Suggestion: Stabilize book > Place sticker > Close cover > Gesture (if applicable).
8. Always return the books where you got them from. It’s good courtesy, but also prevents Librarian examination as they return improperly stored books to their places.
9. Leave without borrowing any books. You can always return for normal trips.
10. At some point the Librarians will discover the bookmarks and conduct some attempt of purge, ranging from a basic sweep to a full-teardown. They will not find them all. Allow them to settle down before assessing the viability of future bookmarking efforts.
Avoid:
1. Children’s sections. Our message is for reasoning minds and capable hands. Parents rage at unapproved attempts to influence their children, and the MSM loves to say we, “targeted children”. Just avoid it. Stick to adult books to deny others all the opportunity to babyshield.
2. Return racks. Librarians check books before returning them. Returns have the highest risk of discovery and triggering a bookmark purge. Just ignore books that are waiting to be returned to shelves, and always return your books where they belong.
3. Other people. It’s easy to not be bothered by other people in a library as most everyone is trying to do their own thing. If people appear, casually move away.
4. Damage. Never damage any books, even if they’re abhorrent. Doing so will trigger a real police investigation over vandalism. Expose bad books by legal activism instead.
5. Panicking. Don’t make sudden, jerky motions. Most don’t pay attention to anything unless it’s out of the ordinary, like someone scrabbling to hide something.
6. Fast-Posting: Don’t post media the same day you acquire it. This general rule broadens the potential time window that your activism occurred. Longer window, less chance of any successful investigation into your activities.
Tips:
Purges are inevitable and normal parts of the bookmarking lifecycle. Don’t be disappointed. If you distribute well, even a teardown purge will not find them all.
Move around the library in large, irregular patterns. Sprinkle bookmarks among different aisles and floors. This increases purge resilience and broadens your audience.
Random bookmark placements significantly increase the time and cost of purges.
Don’t film every bookmarking. This increases your bookmarking rate while not hinting at which books a purge ought to begin.
For added fun, film placing bookmarks into some books, but replace those bookmarks elsewhere afterwards. This may befuddle those relying on footage for their purge.
Some library books have designations traceable to its library of origin, increasing the chance of a premature purge. Obscure those marks in editing whenever possible.
Don’t bookmark a library for some time after a purge has been announced. Enhanced security measures tend to be unpopular and costly, so they’ll eventually relax again.
Always recheck for new security measures, especially after purges. Never assume.
Librarians threaten loudly because they are powerless to stop legal bookmarking. It is not illegal, it is difficult to catch, and stopping it is expensive and unpopular.
Private bookstores tend to have more security and potentially different legal considerations, but possibly less interactions between staff and books than libraries.
Conclusion:
Bookmarking can be a viable means of legal activism when conducted with poise, preparation, and common sense. The hidden-yet-selective nature of the technique produces a much more specified passive audience acquisition. The messages are hard to discover or root out by most kinds of unfriendly actors. And bookmarking provides a unique avenue to trigger a media hysteria by prodding an unassuming-yet-heavily-networked class of social contaminators among the ranks of wholesome librarians.
However, there is no guarantee that a book will be picked up in a timely fashion. Direct acquisition through readers encountering the messages should not be your main of success with this technique. Instead, the main successes will be in displaying the good work that has been done and giving your bookmarks the best chance at reaching curious eyes.
That’s it for now. Happy distributing, activists!
I notice that all the people complaining are ancient. The political left is aging, and aging hard. The young progressives are too lazy to actually develop themselves into positions of power. Once the neolibs die off and retire, the modern left will lose their state protection.
Well done - thank you for informing us of these ancient devices and their wretched custodians. I look forward to your future endeavors.