By 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 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 Jerry Woodruff 2
The New Relevance of Oswald Spengler
Prophet of Decline:Spengler on World History and Politics John FarrenkopfBaton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 2001With the victory of the democracies and their communist allies over fascist Europe in 1945, Oswald Spengler’s view of history quickly fell into obscurity. Though it once enjoyed intellectual respectability and even popularity throughout the Western...
Read MoreBy George McDaniel 3
America’s Racialist Moment, Part I:
The Radical Racialists
Editor’s Note: George McDaniel’s essay “America’s Racialist Moment: Racism as Reform” (TOQ, vol. 6, no. 1), belongs someday in an anthology of The Best of the Occidental Quarterly. The article is available in full elsewhere on this site. I am republishing it here in two parts, with illustrations and links, to bring it to the attention of readers of TOQ...
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