By Alex Kurtagic 0
The Folly of White-Sponsored Development
From The Occidental ObserverIn the series, we see Mr. Parry eat the unthinkable, don a penis gourd, undergo penile inversion, ingest powerful hallucinogenics, and subject himself to ornamental mutilation. It is an extreme form of ethnography, turned into mass entertainment.The series was especially interesting to me for two reasons. First, in the episode Cannibals and...
Read MoreBy William Jones 1
Cecil B. DeMille’s The King of Kings (1927)
As the opening date for the release of director Mel Gibson’s film The Passion of the Christ approached in 2004, media-orchestrated anti-Christian hysteria reached a crescendo, Jewry sputtered with rage and clamored for censorship, and organized Judeo-Christians ran interference for the world’s most privileged, brutal, and censorial ruling group. The US Conference of Catholic...
Read MoreBy Alex Kurtagic 8
Mastery of Style Trumps Superiority of Argument
Olson is also correct in pointing out in “Whites – Are We Still Worthy?” that much of the reason for white inaction is the fact that, notwithstanding the decades of concessions to the Left, whites are still relatively comfortable; they are still wealthy and they are still able to find, albeit admittedly in diminishing quantities, geographical refuge and juridical...
Read MoreBy Michael O'Meara 0
Klansmen, Irishmen, & Nativists:
The Origins of Racial Nationalism in America
The heterogeneity of America’s European population has always posed a challenge to its national identity. Only late in the nineteenth century was this identity extended to European immigrants assimilated in its Anglo-Protestant values and, in the twentieth century, to Catholics, whose Church (the “Whore of Babylon”) had learned to accommodate the Protestant contours of...
Read MoreBy Kevin MacDonald 0
Secession and Implicit Whiteness
From The Occidental Observer, September 13, 2008. . . Secession is certainly an option that has occurred to whites intent on preserving the traditional people and culture of the US. At least on the surface, this is not the focus of the AIP. The AIP seems far more libertarian. On this audiotape, AIP founder Joe Vogler vents his grievances on overregulation, states’ rights, and...
Read MoreBy Trevor Lynch 2
Palefaces:
Stephenie Meyer’s Twilight on Film
Catherine Hardwicke’s movie Twilight is based on the first novel of a series by Stephenie Meyer. The books mostly appeal to young women, and the advertisements for the movie screamed “chick flick,” so I gave it a pass when it was released in theaters. But I admire Joss Whedon’s series Angel, about a vampire with a soul, and when I heard that Twilight...
Read MoreBy F. Roger Devlin 1
The Family Way
Third Ways:How Bulgarian Greens, Swedish Housewives, and Beer-Swilling Englishmen Created Family-Centered Economies—and Why They Disappeared Allan C. CarlsonWilmington, Delaware: ISI Books, 2007Economic science is so imposing an edifice viewed from outside—with its technical paraphernalia, its libraries full of books and journals, its endowed professorships and international...
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