Month: June 2011
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June 16, 2011 Jonathan Bowden
H. P. Lovecraft: Árijský mystik
Publikováno na počest stodvacátého výročí narození H. P. Lovecrafta (20. srpna 2010).
English original here
“Homo homini lupus: Člověk člověku vlkem.” – Plautus
Howard Phillips Lovecraft se narodil v Providence na Rhode Island v roce 1890. (more…)
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George Michael
Willis Carto and the American Far Right
Gainesville, Fla.: University Press of Florida, 2008George Michael describes Willis Carto as “undoubtedly the central figure in the post-World War II American far right.” (more…)
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“Marine Le Pen apparaît en effet pour les Français comme le moyen actuel le plus évident d’exprimer désormais politiquement le rejet du Système.”
— Andrea MassariIn a number of opinion polls taken since January 16, when Marine Le Pen succeeded her father as head of the Front National (FN), she’s placed as one of the two presidential candidates likely to reach the second electoral round of May 2012. (more…)
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June 14, 2011 Edouard Rix
Tradice & Revoluce
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Bursting into the wealthy house where the bris for baby Glick Sacks is being held, the Monster Mohel and his scowling Orthodox thugs clutching automatic weapons look just like real-life religious fanatics.
Grinning evilly, the Monster Mohel demands, “Where is the child?” (more…)
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E. Christian Kopff
The Devil Knows Latin: Why America Needs the Classical Tradition
Wilmington, Del.: ISI Books, 1999E. Christian Kopff, classicist at the University of Colorado and occasional contributor to The Occidental Quarterly, has the knack of writing about difficult issues with an easy grace. The book under review is first of all a defense for our time of the value of classical learning. (more…)
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5,276 words
Editor’s Note:
To commemorate the birthday of William Butler Yeats (June 13, 1865–January 28, 1939), we are publishing this expanded version of Kerry Bolton’s essay on Yeats, which forms chapter five of his book Artists of the Right: Resisting Decadence, forthcoming from Counter-Currents. (more…)
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227 words
“W. B. Yeats” (1943)
“Translated into political terms, Yeats’s tendency is Fascist. Throughout most of his life, and long before Fascism was ever heard of, he had had the outlook of those who reach Fascism by the aristocratic route. He is a great hater of democracy, of the modern world, science, machinery, the concept of progress—above all, of the idea of human equality.”
“How do Yeats’s political ideas link up with his leaning towards occultism? (more…)
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It was one year ago today that the Counter-Currents Publishing/North American New Right website went online. Anniversaries are a good time to take stock of past achievements and set new goals. (more…)
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25 words
I want to thank Greg Paulson for making this brief video based on a portion of my Radio Free Indiana interview with Matt Parrot. — Greg Johnson, Editor
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If a criminal gang comes to power, then they will use criminal means to conduct their policies.
État Français
In May 1940 Germany invaded France and the Low Countries. Paris, the French capital, was occupied on June 14, 1940.
France was divided into a German occupation zone in the north and west, a small Italian occupation zone in the southeast, and an unoccupied zone, the zone libre (free zone), in the south. (more…)