By Gregory Hood 5
Birth of a People, Rebirth of a Nation
One of the major disadvantages American white nationalists face is that American nationality can plausibly be separated from white racial identity. This is a huge difference compared to the European situation.As Paul Gottfried notes, European countries are now defining their identity in terms of abstract human rights and some kind of egalitarian universal history. ...
Read MorePatrick Buchanan on Rising White Racial Consiousness
“New Tribe Rising”April 20, 2010Quotes:“There is no such thing as a Palestinian people,” said Golda Meir. When she said it, she may have been right. But as generations have grown up under the occupation and two intifadas and a Gaza War, the Palestinians are a people today.Adversity and abuse increase the awareness of separate identity and accelerate the...
Read MoreBy George Hocking 6
Ethnic Hegemonies in American History, Part 4
The Rise of Neo-ConservatismSo many negative consequences arose from the Civil Rights Movement that the Democratic Party won few subsequent elections. Its reputation as the anti-white party that idealized black criminals and sought America’s destruction was only briefly overcome when it nominated southerners like Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton.[81] America’s Jewish...
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Ethnic Hegemonies in American History, Part 3
The Rise of Jewish Hegemony Political and economic power in the Eisenhower years was still tightly held by a Greater New England establishment narrowly located in two places: (1) an axis from Fairfield County, Connecticut to Manhattan and (2) in and around Washington, D.C. But it soon began to be challenged by an increasingly powerful Jewish establishment, which lobbied...
Read MoreBy George Hocking 3
Ethnic Hegemonies in American History, Part 2
Civil War and EmpireSince colonial times Southerners had used imported African slave labor. Consequently they lived symbiotically with the most genetically different of Earth’s peoples.[23] Slavery continued after the Revolutionary War and became increasingly important as commercial cotton cultivation spread westward through the Gulf Coastal region at the start of Scots-Irish...
Read MoreBy George Hocking 1
Ethnic Hegemonies in American History, Part 1
Political Philosophy and Human Genetic DiversityWestern Political philosophy tends toward moral and political universalism: the idea that norms are valid for all human beings. This presupposes either that human beings are biologically pretty much the same, or that human biodiversity is irrelevant to moral and political issues. Nevertheless, Western political philosophers initially...
Read MoreBy Hunter Wallace 1
The Road to Disunion
The Road to Disunion: Volume II: Secessionists Triumphant, 1854-1861William W. FreehlingNew York: Oxford University PressIn his second volume of The Road to Disunion, William W. Freehling explores the climax of the secessionist movement in the American South. Secessionists Triumphant, 1854-1861 takes the reader from the Kansas-Nebraska Act, which reignited anti-slavery controversy...
Read MoreBy Hunter Wallace 3
What Hath God Wrought:
The Transformation of America, 1815-1848
What Hath God Wrought:The Transformation of America, 1815-1848Daniel Walker HoweNew York: Oxford University Press, 2009In the Oxford History of the United States series, Daniel Walker Howe’s What Hath God Wrought picks up where Gordon S. Wood’s Empire of Liberty left off in the War of 1812. It takes the reader from Andrew Jackson’s victory over the British at the Battle of...
Read MoreBy Hunter Wallace 2
Empire of Liberty
Empire of LibertyA History of the Early Republic, 1789-1815by Gordon S. WoodNew York: Oxford University Press, 2009I have always enjoyed the escapism of reading a good book about the White Republic. It is a relief to return on occasion to an earlier chapter of American history when the racial and cultural foundations of our national identity were unquestioned. White men once...
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