D. H. Lawrence on Benjamin Franklin
Chapter 2 of Studies in Classic American LiteratureThe Perfectibility of Man! Ah heaven, what a dreary theme! The perfectibility of the Ford car! The perfectibility of which man? I am many men. Which of them are you going to perfect? I am not a mechanical contrivance.Education! Which of the various me’s do you propose to educate, and which do you propose to...
Read MoreBy Jonathan Pyle 1
Jonathan Pyle on Leonard Zeskind’s Blood and Politics
from The Occidental Observer, July 2, 2009 Blood and Politics, published this May, is a history of “White nationalist” political activity between 1974 and 2004 by Leonard Zeskind, an anti-racist writer and activist who has monitored White political groups since the 1970s. The book consists of a chronologically ordered series of chapters on phenomena including ...
Read MoreD. H. Lawrence on Fenimore Cooper’s White Novels
Chapter 4 of Studies in Classic American LiteratureBenjamin Franklin had a specious little equation in providential mathematics:Rum + Savage = 0. Awfully nice! You might add up the universe to nought, if you kept on.Rum plus Savage may equal a dead savage. But is a dead savage nought? Can you make a land virgin by killing off its aborigines ?The Aztec is gone, and the...
Read MoreBy Richard Hoste 5
The Coming Chinese Superstate: Richard Lynn’s Eugenics
Eugenics: A Reassessmentby Richard LynnWestport, Conn.: Praeger Publishers 2001One of the only valid points made by the critics of The Bell Curve was that if the science was accepted, then eugenics, which Hernstein and Murray refused to endorse, becomes the rational solution to society’s ills. Steven Pinker, the next major public thinker associated with the hereditarian...
Read MoreFrancis Parker Yockey on the Subjective Meaning of Race
Race, as has been shown, is not a unit of existence, but is an aspect of existence. Specifically it is the aspect of existence in which the relation of the human being to the great cosmic rhythms is revealed. It is thus the non-individual aspect of Life, whether it be the life of a plant, animal, or human being.The plant exhibits — at least, not to us — no...
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