Month: September 2010
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September 21, 2010 Kerry Bolton
D. H. Lawrence
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September 20, 2010 Robert Steuckers
Evola & Spengler
1,040 words
Translated by Greg Johnson
Czech translation here
“I translated from German, at the request of the publisher Longanesi . . . Oswald Spengler’s vast and celebrated work The Decline of the West. That gave me the opportunity to specify, in an introduction, the meaning and the limits of this work which, in its time, had been world-famous.” (more…)
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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 despised the Left and the Right. He rejected all dogmas and all beliefs, and worse, he submitted all academic standards and value systems to brutal derision. (more…)
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Jonathan Bowden
Louisiana Half-Face
London: The Spinning Top Club, 2010Louisiana Half-Face was published in the first half of 2010. (more…)
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September 19, 2010 Michael O'Meara
Liberalism as the Ideology of Consummate Meaninglessness, Part 3
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1,166 words
French translation here, Spanish translation here
It should go without saying that any cause is better served by doing something well than by doing it badly. But it needs saying, because in my ten years of observing and participating in the White Nationalist scene, I have seen more than enough poorly planned and executed events, botched demonstrations, inept videos, ugly websites, and bad writing, all of which do the cause more harm than good. They set us back rather than move us forward. (more…)
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September 18, 2010 Michael O'Meara
Liberalism as the Ideology of Consummate Meaninglessness, Part 2
1,305 words
Immanuel Kant, the first to philosophize the “question of freedom,” approaches the world like Descartes. He begins with Cartesianism’s dehistoricized, peopleless subject, which is seen as an “ends in itself,” something that is to be “freed” for the sake of its “self-assured self-legislation.”
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From The Occidental Observer, September 29, 2009
Note: In biology, “adaptive” means (very precisely) promoting the survival and reproduction of an organism’s genes. “Natural selection” is the logical and empirical process whereby forces of nature affect the survival and reproduction of some genes over others. The terms, “natural selection” and “selection pressures” (particular causes of selection) help one think clearly.
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September 17, 2010 News Item
For Personalized Signed, Numbered Copies of Toward the White Republic, Order Today
Michael O’Meara will personalize the signed and numbered copies of the limited (100 copy) hardcover edition Toward the White Republic that are ordered by 2:00 p.m., Sunday, September 19. The limited hardcover edition is selling out quickly, so order soon. A paperback edition will be available in October.
[wp_cart:Toward the White Republic:price:30:end]
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1,324 words
They’re killing us with their freedom.
Every dissolution of social order, every assault on the family, the unrelenting denigration of authority and heritage, and now our biological replacement by the Third World’s refuse–all justified, legislated, and celebrated in freedom’s hallowed name.
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September 17, 2010 Dominique Venner
For a Positive Critique, Part 5
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September 16, 2010 Frank Martell
Training for Power
Frank Martell concludes his study of the Vanguard system—“the most important organizational advance since hierarchy.” Read Part 1 here.
The accomplishments of the Mongols in the thirteenth century illustrate the immense energy and efficiency unleashed by real meritocracy. Nor was this an accident; as already noted in the first part of this article, the Mongols deliberately created a system for developing military and political genius among their brightest youngsters. The effect was dramatic.