Oct 31, 2009

By 3

Avant-Garde Fascism

Avant-Garde Fascism: The Mobilization of Myth, Art, and Culture in France, 1909–1939Mark AntliffDurham and London: Duke University Press,  2007Mark Antliff, a professor of Art, Art History, and Visual Studies at Duke University, has put together a useful analysis of the cultural-aesthetic memes utilized by French fascists of 1909-1939 to promote their visions of national...

Read More
Oct 31, 2009

By 1

Louis de Bonald, On Divorce, Part I

On Divorce Louis de BonaldTranslated and edited by Nicholas DavidsonNew Brunswick, N.J.: Transaction Publishers, 1992On the European continent, Louis de Bonald has long been named alongside Edmund Burke and Joseph de Maistre as a foremost first generation critic of the French Revolution and founder of modern conservatism. De Maistre himself, late in life, wrote to Bonald: “I have...

Read More
Oct 30, 2009

By 1

Guillaume Faye and the Jews

Few postwar thinkers in my view have played a greater role in ideologically resisting the forces assaulting Europe’s incomparable bioculture than Guillaume Faye. This was publicly evident at the international conference on “The White World’s Future” held in Moscow in June 2006, which he helped organize. It’s even more evident in the six books he’s written in the last...

Read More
Oct 30, 2009

By 2

Entrepreneurialism & Community Service:
A Strategy for Ethnic Interest Activism

Entrepreneurialism, Economic Sanctions, and TribalismPrior to attacking Serbia and Iraq militarily, the US used so-called “economic sanctions” against these countries. One hears the term, “economic sanctions,” and thinks that it only applies to whole countries. Think again.On October 29, 2009, the MetroWest Daily News, which covers the area west of Boston,...

Read More
Oct 30, 2009

By 1

Review of Thomas Wheatland, The Frankfurt School in Exile,
Part II: The Critique of Mass Culture

From The Occidental Observer, October 28, 2009. . . In reading the views of the Frankfurt School on the importance of cultural control, it struck me that those of us attempting to preserve the traditional peoples and culture of the West are in a similar situation to the Frankfurt School and the New York Intellectuals. Their complaints about the American culture of the 1930s through...

Read More
Oct 29, 2009

By 3

“Killing America’s Kids”:
Fred Reed on War and Journalism

From Fred on Everything, September 27, 2009The web is covered in stink today because of a reporter for the Associated Press, Julie Jacobson, who photographed the death of a Marine whose legs had just been blown off. The kid was Joshua Bernard, a Lance Corporal of 21 years. When the photo appeared, Robert Gates, the Secretary of Defense [sic] furiously tried to get the AP to quash...

Read More
Oct 29, 2009

By 0

“Surprised by Disaster”:
Fred Reed on Military Culture

From Fred on Everything, October 25, 2009In re Afghanistan, why, you might ask, is the world’s hugest, expensivest, most begadgeted military unable to defeat a few thousand angry tribesmen armed with AKs and RPGs?Easy: Character. The men running the war are mentally the wrong ones to do it.Think about this for a moment. Suppose that your boss at the lab or law firm or newsroom...

Read More
Oct 28, 2009

By 2

The Southeast Imperative?

Minority-Coddling Leftists, Greedy Tax-Consumers, Rapacious Unions Drive Boeing to South CarolinaBoeing has decided to build its second 787 production line in South Carolina, not in the Puget Sound region. This move accelerates the departure of Boeing from the Puget Sound region and is part of the long term decline of the regional industrial economy, an economy despised and openly...

Read More
Oct 27, 2009

By 10

Call to Young Europeans

Translated by Greg Johnson, with thanks to Michael O’MearaFrom Réfléchir & Agir, no. 9 (Summer 2001).To avoid repeating myself, I must first point out the statement that I made at the beginning of the manifesto Why We Fight. Now let us summarize, following this statement, some suggestions referred to in this manifesto. Because of our historically unprecedented...

Read More
Oct 27, 2009

By 2

The Next Step

At The Occidental Quarterly Online there is an interview posted with French New Rightist Guillaume Faye. Faye, a graduate of the elite French school known as Sciences-Po (Instituts d’etudes politiques) and leader of the French New Right in the 1980’s, has a lot of interesting things to say in this interview, but nothing more interesting than this:Question: In the review...

Read More
Back to Top