Henry Williamson was of the First World War generation from whose experiences emerged a new but eternal world-view. Williamson, like Knut Hamsun in Norway, saw man’s place in Nature as the ultimate source of one’s being, an idealization of nature as a reaction against the machine and the bank. The hope was of a new Springtime for the West in Spenglerian terms, the rural against the urban, the rootedness of the soil and of working the land against the nebulous city masses. It was what Spengler had called the final battle of “Civilization-Blood Against Money.”
Month: June 2010
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Portuguese translation here
One of the central concepts of Julius Evola’s philosophy of gender is the distinction between absolute man and absolute woman. But he seldom gives explicit definitions of these terms. Absolute man and woman can be likened to Platonic Forms, thus defining them can be as difficult as defining Justice, Truth, or Love.
The term “absolute woman” inspires more controversy than “absolute man.” (more…)
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June 16, 2010 Wilmot Robertson
The Dispossessed Majority
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Editor’s Note: In honor of the 50th anniversary of Francis Parker Yockey’s death in the San Francisco County Jail on the night of June 16-17, 1960, we are pleased to publish these poems by J. Howard-Hobson.
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Translated by Michael O’Meara
Ukrainian translation here
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. (more…)
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3,173 words
‘But where can we draw water,’
Said Pearse to Connolly,
‘When all the wells are parched away?
O plain as plain can be
There’s nothing but our own red blood
Can make a right Rose Tree.’
—W. B. Yeats -
June 13, 2010 Ragnar Redbeard
Might is Right or The Survival of the Fittest
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The North American New Right/ Counter-Currents website officially goes online with this post.
North American New Right is a journal of ideas. It offers a critique of liberal modernity in North America in the light of Traditionalism and the ideas of the European New Right.
North American New Right includes original articles, translations, interviews, and poetry, as well as reviews of books, films, and music.
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