Cape Canaveral, Fla.: Howard Allen Enterprises, 1992
244 pages
paperback: $15
In an earlier book, The Dispossessed Majority, the author was hopeful that a sharp White backlash to minority racism and cultural degeneration might save what appeared to be the doomed United States. Twenty years ago he still believed it possible that his moribund country could revive, clean out its political and cultural Augean Stables, and establish a Pax Americana that would herald a new age of peace, plenty and progress. Now that more than two decades have passed, events are proving that America, as we have known it, is beyond saving. The Majority, that is, the Northern and Western European elements of the population, has lost whatever chance it had to recapture the country it ruled for more than two centuries. Defeatist as it may sound, this does not mean it is too late to save the Majority as a people. . . .
What is called for is a new form of government that would transform socially destructive into socially constructive forces. Race, now actively tearing countries apart, might be helpful in putting them back together, but this time in the form of autonomous, relatively self-sufficient collectivities that the author has chosen to designate as ethnostates.
CONTENTS
Foreword
Introduction
1. Up the Devolution!
2. The Mortality of Culture
3. Diversity Contra Pluralism
4. The Morale Factor
5. Enlightened Foreign Policy
6. Unitary Politics
7. Social Progress
8. Maverick Economics
9. Educational Benefits
10. On the Evolutionary Track
11. Futurology
12. Unguessing History
13. Less Law, More Justice
14. The Media Muddle
15. The Religious Gene
16. In Sum . . .
Appendix
Bibliography
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Wilmot Robertson is the pen name of the author of The Dispossessed Majority, The Ethnostate, and Ventilations. For 25 years, he was editor of the monthly magazine Instauration.


























