Jul 1, 2009

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Francis Parker Yockey on the Subjective Meaning of Race

Race, as has been shown, is not a unit of existence, but is an aspect of existence. Specifically it is the aspect of existence in which the relation of the human being to the great cosmic rhythms is revealed. It is thus the non-individual aspect of Life, whether it be the life of a plant, animal, or human being.The plant exhibits — at least, not to us — no...

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Jun 19, 2009

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Spengler: An Introduction to His Life and Ideas

Oswald Spengler was born in Blankenburg (Harz) in central Germany in 1880, the eldest of four children, and the only boy. His mother’s side of the family was quite artistically bent. His father, who had originally been a mining technician and came from a long line of mineworkers, was an official in the German postal bureaucracy, and he provided his family with a simple but...

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Jun 18, 2009

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Preparing the Next Rebirth

Men–Art–WarMikulas KolyaLincoln, Nebr.: iUniverse, 2006Men-Art-War is a self-published collection of ten philosophical short stories-stories, that is, which appear intended to illustrate the author’s Weltanschauung. Self-publishing seems destined to assume greater importance in American life, as the cultural gatekeepers become ever more ruthless to our people and...

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Jun 9, 2009

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Spengler: Criticism and Tribute

Editor’s Note: Oswald Spengler’s Man and Technics and Revilo Oliver’s America’s Decline: The Education of a Conservative and The Jewish Strategy are available from the TOQ Online Bookshop.Conceived before the First World War is Oswald Spengler’s magisterial work, Der Untergang des Abendlandes (Munich, 1918). Read in this country chiefly in the...

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Jun 6, 2009

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Yukio Mishima

Yukio Mishima was born into an upper middle class family in 1925. Author of a hundred books, playwright, and actor, he has been described as the “Leonardo da Vinci of contemporary Japan,” and is one of the few Japanese writers to have become widely known and translated in the West.The Dark Side of the SunSince World War II, the West has forgotten the Shadow soul of...

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Jun 3, 2009

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Nietzsche and Spengler:
Preface to Thinkers of the Right

Friedrich Nietzsche and Oswald Spengler loom large over the horizon of twentieth-century European thought. Nietzsche was influential in the thinking of Spengler, whilst either one or both had a major impact on the thinking of most of the writers we deal with herein.Both were primarily concerned with questions of decay and the possibilities of regeneration. Both held that Western...

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May 14, 2009

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Life in the Ruins

From The Brussels Journal, January 2, 2009. . . Do we not live under daily threat of wanton violence perpetrated against the civilized by the savage, who wish to reduce everything to savagery because civilization measures for them their own productive sterility and so inspires them with bloodthirsty invidia against real achievement?Is travel not now arduous, humiliating, and risky...

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May 10, 2009

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Relativism

Printed source: “Vaincre le relativisme?,” Rivarol, March 6, 2009Internet source: http://unitepopulaire.org/index.php?limitstart=10Translated by Michael O’MearaOf all the pathologies afflicting our society, “philosophical” relativism is undoubtedly one of the most dangerous, for its diffuse character, pseudoscientific logic, and air of tolerance...

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Apr 30, 2009

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Uneasy Listening

Standing in Two CirclesThe Collected Works of Boyd RiceEd. Brian M. ClarkWashington, D.C.: Creation Books, 2008Boyd Rice (b. 1956) is a remarkable figure. He is a composer, poet, artist, essayist, photographer, filmmaker, actor, and self-educated scholar of both pop culture and Western esotericism, particularly Grail lore. It is tempting to call Rice a pop culture phenomenon...

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