Free to Lose: Jews, Whites, and Libertarianism
The political philosophy of libertarianism has recently attracted a wave of support in the United States among the mainly White Tea Party movement, and the supporters of Ron and Rand Paul. The catalyst has been the perceived failings of the Obama administration’s response to the global financial crisis and subsequent recession: a response characterized by...
Read MoreBardèche’s Six Postulates of Fascist Socialism
Translator’s Note: When liberalism becomes “a foul tyranny masking an evil and anonymous dictature of money” (the basis of Jewish supremacy), everything is inverted and perverted, so that even our word “socialism” is tarnished, associated as it now is with Washington’s Judeo-Negro regime. I thought it appropriate, therefore, to post something...
Read MoreBy Troy Southgate 2
Robert Owen:
Welsh Radical & Co-operative Pioneer
It is no secret that the term “socialism” has been hijacked by the Left. Indeed, once we transcend the contemporary Marxist blur of ideological dogma, minority rights, and concomitant gender-bending, one soon discovers that the true definition of the term relates to “a political and economic theory of social organization which advocates [that] the community as a...
Read MoreBy F. Roger Devlin 7
Bonald’s Economic Thought
The French Age of Enlightenment witnessed and celebrated an economic revolution: the rapid growth of speculation and a money economy, and a corresponding diminution in the importance of landed wealth. Bonald believed that the change had been brought about by the practice of usury. He did not condemn all lending at interest as usury, but distinguished between the cases of lending...
Read MoreBy Alex Kurtagic 3
The Romantic Ethic & the Spirit of Modern Consumerism
The Romantic Ethic and the Spirit of Modern Consumerismby Colin CampbellAlcuin Academics, 2005As the title immediately suggests, this is meant to be a companion volume to Max Weber’s classic The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism. In Colin Campbell’s opinion, the latter only told half of the story (that of production), and left unanswered fundamental questions...
Read MoreBy Michael O'Meara 2
Foundations of the Twenty-First Century
A White Nationalist Reading of . . .Dominique VennerLe Siècle de 1914: Utopies, guerres et révolutions en Europe au XXe siècleParis: Pygmalion, 2006“To recreate a new aristocracy is the eternal task of every revolutionary project.” –Guillaume FayeAt the beginning of twentieth century, peoples of European descent ruled the world. They made up a third of its...
Read MoreBy Hunter Wallace 6
More from Hunter Wallace on Libertarianism
“Linder and Libertarianism”from Occidental Dissent, September 12, 2009Libertarians tend to think in abstract terms. They have all sorts of theories about government, economics, and ethics. I’m impressed less by their abstractions and more persuaded by the empirical results that follow their implementation.We’ve tried almost everything the libertarians recommend over...
Read MoreBy Hunter Wallace 2
Can The Ethnostate Be Justified?
OneSTDV, one of the more reasonable HBD [Human Bio-Diversity] bloggers, has a post up asking whether or not a White Nationalist ethnostate can be justified. Personally, he doesn’t agree with such a project, and instead thinks that “a capitalistic economy, a strong, unequivocally American cultural narrative, a majority white population, and a discouragement of racialist politics...
Read MoreBy Alex Kurtagic 3
Evolving into Consumerism — and Beyond It
Spent: Sex, Evolution, and Consumer BehaviorGeoffrey MillerNew York: Viking, 2009When I was asked to review this book, I half groaned because I was sure of what to expect and I also knew it was not going to broaden my knowledge in a significant way. From my earlier reading up on other, but tangentially related subject areas (e.g., advertising), I already knew, and it seemed more...
Read MoreBy Alex Kurtagic 1
Black Metal Lord Attends Quaker Meeting (and Discovers the Victorian Capitalists)
From The Occidental Observer, July 14, 2009Christopher Donovan’s recent article, “Notes from Central Pennsylvania: The Very Long Arm of Egalitarian Propaganda,” reminded me of the time I attended a Quaker meeting here in England, sometime in early 2004. Back then, I lived in one of two lonely rural cottages and had as my neighbor a recently divorced former police...
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