By John Moffat 19
Where are the Girls?
This is the time-honored inquiry made by young men arriving at a party where the presence of the opposite sex isn’t immediately apparent. The same inquiry may also be made in relation to the glaringly apparent absence of the fairer sex in what the media like to term “the extreme right wing of Australian politics.” What is meant by this is nationalism. If the...
Read MoreBy Anthony Hilton 1
A Letter from a Grandfather to his Genes, Part 5 (Conclusion)
Read Part 1 here.Read Part 2 here.Read Part 3 here.Read Part 4 here.13. How do you explain the fact that a major football rivalry for Tunisians seems to be with other North Africans, Moroccans, rather than with people more distantly related?Because Morocco is there. Close by. That’s one answer. But this is a frequent phenomenon in sport and is essentially the same issue as in...
Read MoreBy Rob Freeman 7
Seeing America as a Battle for Economic Niches
I happened to see this tidbit by Peter Brimelow from VDARE:Wendy Gramm, wife of Republican presidential candidate Phil Gramm. During the Iowa caucus race, Mrs. Gramm dismissed complaints about low wages paid by the meatpacking giant IBP, of which she was a director, with a knee-jerk platitude from her days as an economics professor: “Wages of labor, like other prices, are set...
Read MoreBy Anthony Hilton 2
A Letter from a Grandfather to his Genes, Part 4
Read Part 1 here.Read Part 2 here.Read Part 3 here.11. Doesn’t the success of multiculturalism show that having the same ancestry is not necessary for a harmonious society as long as people do speak a common language? It depends on how much “harmony” you would settle for. To achieve the harmony of an ethnically homogeneous nation, you would need more than just a common...
Read MoreBy Alex Kurtagic 18
Tired of Low Quality?
Are you not tired of paying top dollar for an item and seeing it fall apart after a few years? I certainly am. My philosophy as a (reluctant) consumer has always been to spend a little more and purchase a high-quality item, rather than pinch my pennies and purchase whatever will do the job, and purchase it again and again, each time it breaks, ad infinitum. As time has passed,...
Read MoreBy Michael Bell 1
American Secondary Teachers
I have been inspired over the last several months by many of the critiques of different aspects of modern society put forth by Alex Kurtagic. The sardonic yet brutally honest way in which he tackles airport security, telephone technical assistance, television—and in his novel Mister, virtually everything comprising modern democratic civilization—corresponds to the way I think...
Read MoreBy Anthony Hilton 1
A Letter from a Grandfather to his Genes, Part 3
Read Part 1 here.Read Part 2 here.6. How do we reach reciprocity from “might-makes-right”?The same way it was done in the Wild West. Try to introduce the “rule of law” (a form of reciprocity insofar as it results from social contract, not imposition) and hire good sheriffs who shoot straight—something never appreciated by the outlaws or by governments of powerful...
Read MoreSam Francis on the Jewish Question
At the beginning of the twenty-first century, it ought to be obvious that the dominant powers and authorities in the United States and other Western countries are either indifferent to the accelerating racial and cultural dispossession of the historic peoples of America and Europe or are actually in favor of it.–Samuel Francis in Race and the American Prospect Among the many...
Read MoreBy Hunter Wallace 16
Jews & The American Conservative
I got an email this morning from a conservative reader. The headline was “Amconmag Goes Neocon.” It appears that someone has signed me up on a conservative email list. I don’t think the author will mind me sharing its contents:It’s officialRon Unz, the Jewish owner of the American Conservative, has become a mestizo apologist.American Conservative now reads like the neocon...
Read MoreBy Anthony Hilton 3
A Letter from a Grandfather to his Genes, Part 2
Read Part 1 here.3. Why aren’t the nearly 100 percent of our genes that everyone shares more important than those few that vary?Indeed, around 99.9 percent of all the genes that a human being carries can be found in all other humans, and 98 percent in chimpanzees. Similar percentages of shared genes are found in most other animal species. So obviously it’s the tiny handful of...
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