Taking Our Own Side
We all have natural partialities: for family over non-kin, friends over strangers, fellow countrymen over foreigners, racial brethren over members of other races. Philosophers from Aristotle to Carl Schmitt have recognized that these partialities are the heart of political life.But most moralists eye these partialities with suspicion. Moral laws, they claim, apply to everyone,...
Read MoreBy Hunter Wallace 1
Obama’s White Flight Problem
The Washington Times has a new editorial on March 30th called “Obama’s White Flight Problem.” The article notes that White voters are abandoning Zod-Obama in droves. Only 38% of Whites now approve of his performance. This is down from 63% when he took office.In particular, White women are disillusioned with America’s first black president. According to a recent Quinnipac...
Read MoreAgainst Nihilism: Julius Evola’s “Traditionalist” Critique of Modernity
With the likes of Oswald Spengler, whose Decline he translated for an Italian readership, and Jose Ortega y Gasset, Julius Evola (1898 – 1974) stands as one of the notably incisive mid-Twentieth Century critics of modernity. Like Spengler and Ortega, Evola understood himself to owe a formative debt to Friedrich Nietzsche, but more forcefully than Spengler or Ortega, Evola saw the...
Read MoreBy Hunter Wallace 9
Anger Building
I continue to be amazed by the sheer magnitude of the rage and acrimony unleashed by the healthcare debate. Here’s a priceless gem from the Washington Post. Courtland Milloy, a negro columnist, writes:I know how the “tea party” people feel, the anger, venom and bile that many of them showed during the recent House vote on health-care reform. I know because I want to spit on...
Read MoreA Warning From the Past: Lothrop Stoddard and The Rising Tide of Color
by James P. LubinskasAmerican Renaissance, January 2000Modern liberals like to praise W. E. B. Du Bois for predicting that race would be the defining issue of the 20th century. But another man, writing at the same time, also made that prediction. Lothrop Stoddard (1883-1950) is not as well remembered as Du Bois and his name is usually paired with words like “racist” and...
Read MoreNew Views of Nietzsche
One hundred years ago [1887] Thus Spoke Zarathustra appeared. The most celebrated work of Nietzsche, it has been read and cited by even moderately educated people. The German philosopher has a stormy reputation due to his tirades against Christianity and his aristocratic rejection of conventional moral views. Nietzsche provokes all kinds of reactions. Each reader may have his own...
Read MoreBy Tomislav Sunic 5
Louis Ferdinand Céline—An Anarcho-Nationalist
In his imaginary self-portrayal, the French novelist Louis-Ferdinand Céline (1894–1961) would be the first one to reject the assigned label of anarcho-nationalism. For that matter he would reject any outsider’s label whatsoever regarding his prose and his personality. He was an anticommunist, but also an anti-liberal. He was an anti-Semite but also an anti-Christian. He...
Read MoreBy Alex Kurtagic 6
The Golden Thread
El Cordón Dorado: Hitlerismo EsotericoMiguel SerranoBogota, Colombia: Editorial Solar, 2001As far as I am aware, this is the first published review in English of The Golden Thread: Esoteric Hitlerism, the first volume in Miguel Serrano’s Esoteric Hitlerist trilogy. Having woven a shadowy conspiracy of Esoteric Hitlerists into my dystopian novel Mister, and having recently...
Read MoreBy Troy Southgate 4
Interview with Robert Steuckers
When and why did you decide to become involved in politics?I was never actually involved in politics, as I was never a member of a political party. Nevertheless I am a citizen interested in political questions but of course not in the usual plain and trivial way, as I have no intention to become a candidate, council deputy or Member of Parliament.For me “politics” means...
Read MoreBy Andrew Hamilton 3
Murder in Dubai: The Investigation
The death from natural causes of an unknown foreign guest in a Dubai hotel room would have been the end of it had it not been for the unanticipated reaction of a tenacious Arab detective, Lt.-Gen. Dahi Khalfan Tamim, Chief of the Dubai Police Force—ultimately the key figure in this mystery.Previously Tamim’s force had solved the high-profile 2007 “Pink Panther”...
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