By 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 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 MoreTraditionalism, Youth Music Subcultures, & White Nationalist Metapolitics
In his new article, “Apoliteic music: Neo-Folk, Martial Industrial and ‘metapolitical fascism’” (Patterns of Prejudice 43, no. 5, December 2009, pp. 431-57), Anton Shekhovtsov suggests that there are two types of radical right-wing music that are cultural reflections of the two different political strategies that fascism was forced to adopt in the...
Read MoreBy Stephan Chalandon and Philip Coppens 7
French Visions for a New Europe
Raymond Abellio claimed that the Flemish occultist S. U. Zanne (pseudonym of Auguste Van de Kerckhove) was amongst the greatest initiates of our time. But hardly anyone knows who he is. Some have placed Abellio in the same category — though he too is a great unknown for most. And those that have looked at Abellio, have largely concluded that he was a fascist politician, who...
Read MoreHunter Wallace in Czech
Editor’s Note: “Elite Status” by Hunter Wallace, a.k.a. Prozium, has been translated into Czech as “Vládnoucí elita” and published on the Delian Diver (Délský potápěč) site. The article was originally published on Occidental Dissent, but Delian Diver found it on TOQ Online and linked to us. Congratulations Mr. Wallace!Kdo by měl...
Read MoreBy Ted Sallis 3
Avant-Garde Fascism
Avant-Garde Fascism: The Mobilization of Myth, Art, and Culture in France, 1909–1939Mark AntliffDurham and London: Duke University Press, 2007Mark Antliff, a professor of Art, Art History, and Visual Studies at Duke University, has put together a useful analysis of the cultural-aesthetic memes utilized by French fascists of 1909-1939 to promote their visions of national...
Read MoreBy Ted Sallis 5
Roman Apocalypse:
Cola di Rienzi and the Politics of Proto-Fascism
Ronald F. MustoApocalypse in Rome: Cola di Rienzo and the Politics of the New AgeBerkeley: University of California Press, 2003A young Italian nationalist leads his followers on a march through Rome, seizing power from corrupt elites to establish a palingenetic regime. Declaring himself Tribune, his ultimate aim is to recreate the power and glory of Ancient Rome. However, a...
Read MoreBy Hunter Wallace 12
Elite Status
Who should rule?Logging on this morning, I see that this has once again become a burning issue among the commentators. So far, I haven’t had much to say about the topic. I don’t aspire to rule over anyone. Becoming a politician isn’t a good fit with my introverted personality type. It is a task that I would prefer to leave to others. We have already had one commentator storm...
Read MoreBy Ted Sallis 1
Ted Sallis on Why We Write
I have been asked to contribute to the “Why We Write” series. I have both the fortune and the misfortune to follow three very good and comprehensive contributions which have left to me not much to add. However, I have some comments to make, first, by quoting my predecessors in this endeavor, and then by outlining several issues I see as important.Dr. Kevin MacDonald...
Read MoreBy James Alexander 0
Vilfredo Pareto: The Karl Marx of Fascism
Part IV: Pareto and Fascism
Pareto and FascismBefore we enter into the controversy surrounding Pareto’s sympathy for Italian leader Benito Mussolini, let us take pains to avoid the error of viewing events of the 1920s through the spectacles of the post-World War II era, for what seemed apparent in 1945 was not at all evident twenty years before. Inarguably, throughout the whole of the 1920s, Mussolini...
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