Counter-Currents
  • Private Events
  • T&C
  • Contact
  • Webzine
  • About
  • Books
  • Podcasts
  • Videos
  • Donate
  • Paywall
  • Crypto
  • RSS
    • Main feed
    • Podcast feed
    • Videos feed
    • Comments feed
  • Advertise

LEVEL2

Donate Now Mailing list
  • Webzine
  • About
  • Books
  • Podcasts
  • Videos
  • Donate
  • Paywall
  • Crypto
  • RSS
    • Main feed
    • Podcast feed
    • Videos feed
    • Comments feed
  • Advertise
  • Recent posts

    • Who Drinks More, the Rich or the Poor?

      Jim Goad

    • Remembering Savitri Devi (September 30, 1905–October 22, 1982)

      Greg Johnson

      3

    • The Counter-Currents 2023 Fundraiser: A Question of Degree

      Mark Gullick

    • Politics vs. Self-Help

      Greg Johnson

      30

    • The Fountainhead: 80 Years Later

      Jef Costello

      13

    • It’s Not All About You

      Spencer J. Quinn

      2

    • Who Drinks More, the Rich or the Poor?

      Jim Goad

      21

    • The Stolen Land Narrative

      Morris van de Camp

      7

    • Neema Parvini’s Prophets of Doom: Cyclical History as Alternative to Liberal Progressivism

      Mike Maxwell

      1

    • Counter-Currents Radio Podcast No. 554 How Often Does Pox Think About the Roman Empire? . . . & Other Matters

      Counter-Currents Radio

    • The “Treasonous” Trajectory of Trumpism

      Stephen Paul Foster

      7

    • A Haunting in Venice: Agatha Christie Is Back

      Steven Clark

      4

    • Counter-Currents Radio Podcast No. 553 Endeavour & Pox Populi on the Latest Migrant Invasion & More

      Counter-Currents Radio

      2

    • White Altruism Revealed

      Gunnar Alfredsson

      2

    • The Union Jackal, September 2023

      Mark Gullick

      18

    • The Metapolitics of “Woke”

      Endeavour

      2

    • The Matter with Concrete, Part 2

      Michael Walker

      2

    • Remembering Martin Heidegger: September 26, 1889–May 26, 1976

      Greg Johnson

    • The Worst Week Yet: September 17-23, 2023

      Jim Goad

      39

    • Paper Boy: The Life and Times of an Ink-Stained Wretch

      Steven Clark

      1

    • Richard Hanania’s The Origins of Woke

      Matt Parrott

      5

    • The Matter with Concrete, Part 1

      Michael Walker

      2

    • The Virgin Queen Chihuahua Has Spoken!

      Jim Goad

      5

    • Pox Populi and Endeavour on the Latest Migrant Invasion

      Greg Johnson

    • Crowdsourcing Contest! Our Banner

      A. C. C. Reader

      47

    • Adult Cartoons Are a Disaster for Western Civilization, Part 2

      Travis LeBlanc

      18

    • Having It All: America Reaps the Benefits of Feminism

      Beau Albrecht

      12

    • The Captivity Narrative of Fanny Kelly

      Spencer J. Quinn

      7

    • The Virgin Queen Chihuahua Has Spoken!

      Jim Goad

      52

    • Adult Cartoons Are a Disaster for Western Civilization, Part 1

      Travis LeBlanc

      40

    • Plastic Patriotism: Propaganda and the Establishment’s Crusade Against Germany and German-Americans During the First World War

      Alex Graham

      9

    • Race and IQ Differences: An Interview with Arthur Jensen, Part 2

      Arthur Jensen

      2

    • Donald Trump: The Jews’ Psycho Ex-Girlfriend

      Travis LeBlanc

      14

    • Bad to the Spone: Charles Krafft’s An Artist of the Right

      Gunnar Alfredsson

      1

    • Independence Day

      Mark Gullick

    • The Unnecessary War

      Morris van de Camp

      1

    • Bad Cop! No Baklava!

      Beau Albrecht

      7

    • Counter-Currents Radio Podcast No. 552 Millennial Woes on Corporations, the Left, & Other Matters

      Counter-Currents Radio

      6

    • Remembering Charles Krafft: September 19, 1947–June 12, 2020

      Greg Johnson

    • Marx vs. Rousseau

      Stephen Paul Foster

      4

    • The Worst Week Yet: September 10-16, 2023

      Jim Goad

      22

    • The Tinkling Cherub of Mississippi

      Beau Albrecht

      2

    • A Deep Ecological Perspective on the Vulnerability of Eurodescendants

      Francisco Albanese

      3

    • Remembering Francis Parker Yockey: September 18, 1917–June 16, 1960

      Greg Johnson

      1

    • The Counter-Currents 2023 Fundraiser: Idealism Alone Can’t Last Forever

      Pox Populi

      3

    • Ask Me Anything with Millennial Woes

      Greg Johnson

    • Most White Republicans at Least Slightly Agree with the Great Replacement Theory

      David M. Zsutty

      13

    • Field of Dreams: A Right-Wing Film?

      Morris van de Camp

      2

    • Rich Snobs vs. Poor Slobs: The Schism Between “Racist” Whites

      Jim Goad

      99

    • Memories of Underdevelopment: Revolution & the Bourgeois Mentality

      Steven Clark

      2

  • Classics Corner

    • Remembering Maurice Bardèche
      (October 1, 1907–July 30, 1998)

      Greg Johnson

      4

    • Why Race is Not a “Social Construct”

      Greg Johnson

      19

    • Remembering T. S. Eliot:
      September 26, 1888–January 4, 1965

      Greg Johnson

      2

    • Leo Strauss, the Conservative Revolution, & National Socialism, Part 1

      Greg Johnson

      22

    • Leo Strauss, the Conservative Revolution, & National Socialism, Part 2

      Greg Johnson

      3

    • Leo Strauss, the Conservative Revolution, & National Socialism, Part 3

      Greg Johnson

      13

    • Remembering H. Keith Thompson
      September 17, 1922–March 3, 2002

      Kerry Bolton

      1

    • Be All You Can Be: On Joining the Military

      Ash Donaldson

      22

    • Transcript of FOX News’ Banned Report on Israel & 9/11

      Spencer J. Quinn

    • The Banned FOX News Report on Israel’s Role in 9/11

      Spencer J. Quinn

      12

    • The Psychology of Conversion

      Greg Johnson

      43

    • Animal Justice?

      Greg Johnson

      18

    • Uppity White Folks and How to Reach Them

      Greg Johnson

      6

    • Lord Kek Commands!
      A Look at the Origins of Meme Magic

      James J. O'Meara

      7

    • Major General J. F. C. Fuller
      (September 1, 1878–February 10, 1966)

      Anonymous

      5

    • Remembering Johann Gottfried von Herder
      (August 25, 1744–December 18, 1803)

      Martin Lichtmesz

      2

    • Moral Seriousness

      Greg Johnson

      13

    • Columbus Day Special
      The Autochthony Argument

      Greg Johnson

      8

    • Remembering Knut Hamsun
      (August 4, 1859–February 19, 1952)

      Greg Johnson

      8

    • Sir Reginald Goodall: An Appreciation

      Greg Johnson

      3

    • 7-11 Nationalism

      Richard Houck

      28

    • Philip K. Dick’s Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? as Anti-Semitic/Christian-Gnostic Allegory

      Greg Johnson

      7

    • Eraserhead:
      A Gnostic Anti-Sex Film

      Trevor Lynch

      17

    • Remembering Revilo Oliver
      (July 7, 1908–August 20, 1994)

      Greg Johnson

      17

    • Lars von Trier & the Men Among the Ruins

      John Morgan

      16

    • Heidegger without Being

      Greg Johnson

      17

    • Junetarded Nation

      Jim Goad

      8

    • Counter-Currents Radio Podcast No. 338
      Ted Talk

      Counter-Currents Radio

      3

    • Hegemony

      Greg Johnson

      11

    • Cù Chulainn in the GPO:
      The Mythic Imagination of Patrick Pearse

      Michael O'Meara

      5

  • Paroled from the Paywall

    • Salon Kitty: The Ultimate Nazisploitation Movie

      Travis LeBlanc

      14

    • The Relentless Persistence of Stalinism

      Stephen Paul Foster

    • Counter-Currents Radio Podcast No. 548 Ask Me Anything with Greg Johnson, Pox Populi, & David Zsutty

      Counter-Currents Radio

    • Metapolitics in Germany, Part 1: An Exclusive Interview with Frank Kraemer of Stahlgewitter

      Ondrej Mann

      3

    • Counter-Currents Radio Podcast No. 546 Greg Johnson on Plato’s Gorgias, Lecture 5

      Counter-Currents Radio

    • A Call For White Identity Politics: Ed Brodow’s The War on Whites

      Dave Chambers

      6

    • The Fiction of Harold Covington, Part One

      Steven Clark

      21

    • Death by Hunger: Two Books About the Holodomor

      Morris van de Camp

      4

    • A Child as White as Snow

      Mark Gullick

      6

    • Jonathan Bowden’s Final Lecture on Video: Charles Maurras, Action Française, and the Cagoule

      Jonathan Bowden

      1

    • Who Was Lawrence R. Brown? Biographical Notes on the Author of The Might of the West

      Margot Metroland

      16

    • California Discontent, Part 2: Frank Norris’ The Octopus

      Steven Clark

      1

    • California Discontent, Part 1: John Steinbeck’s East of Eden

      Steven Clark

    • 12 More Sex Differences Due to Nature

      Richard Knight

      4

    • Counter-Currents Radio Podcast No. 545 Pox Populi and Morgoth on the Age of Immigration and More 

      Counter-Currents Radio

    • When White Idealism Goes Too Far: Saints of the American Wilderness

      Spencer J. Quinn

      10

    • A Compassionate Spy?

      Beau Albrecht

      11

    • Counter-Currents Radio Podcast No. 544 Pox Populi, American Krogan, & Endeavour on the Metaverse

      Counter-Currents Radio

    • Nietzsche and the Psychology of the Left, Part Two

      Collin Cleary

      2

    • Thoughts on an Unfortunate Convergence: Doctors, Lawyers, and Angry Women

      Stephen Paul Foster

      5

    • Against Liberalism: Society Is Not a Market, Chapter I, Part 3: What Is Liberalism?

      Alain de Benoist

    • Against Liberalism: Society Is Not a Market, Chapter I, Part 2: What Is Liberalism?

      Alain de Benoist

      1

    • Against Liberalism: Society Is Not a Market, Chapter I, Part 1: What Is Liberalism?

      Alain de Benoist

      1

    • Misrepresentative Government: Why Democracy Doesn’t Work, Part IV

      Kenneth Vinther

      2

    • Misrepresentative Government: Why Democracy Doesn’t Work, Part III

      Kenneth Vinther

      1

    • Counter-Currents Radio Podcast No. 543 Greg Johnson on Plato’s Gorgias, Lecture 4

      Counter-Currents Radio

    • Misrepresentative Government: Why Democracy Doesn’t Work, Part I

      Kenneth Vinther

      1

    • Jack London’s The Iron Heel as Prophecy, Part 2

      Beau Albrecht

    • The Scottish Mr. Bond? An Interview with Mystic

      Travis LeBlanc

      2

    • Counter-Currents Radio Podcast No. 542 Greg Johnson on Plato’s Gorgias, Lecture 3

      Counter-Currents Radio

  • Recent comments

    • Greg Johnson

      Politics vs. Self-Help

      Can you link it? Thanks!

    • Liam Kernaghan

      Politics vs. Self-Help

      Very young White man: "How do I get out of this mess?" Older White man: "I know the answer...

    • Scott

      The Stolen Land Narrative

      I love that quote, he he.I got banned from a major discussion forum just for quoting Napoleon (...

    • ArminiusMaximus

      Politics vs. Self-Help

      I looked for a speech of his in front of a crowd as a candidate for CC. Here is what I found from...

    • Nah

      Paper Boy: The Life and Times of an Ink-Stained Wretch

      Great article about a good man. Thank you, Mr. Clark. I get the impression that Howie Carr is...

    • Jud Jackson

      The Fountainhead: 80 Years Later

      It has been a long time since I read "The Fountainhead" but I did like it although it was too long...

    • Daniel Ross

      Who Drinks More, the Rich or the Poor?

      I agree. It's real hard to have much sympathy for the proverbial worms under the boot that Kant...

    • Just Passing By

      The Fountainhead: 80 Years Later

      "Ayn Rand’s writings are often silly" : indeed. For lack of time, I'll use a Google translation,...

    • Greg Johnson

      Politics vs. Self-Help

      Thanks. I will ask Jared about that. You aren't the first person to recommend it. It is a great...

    • Greg Johnson

      Remembering Savitri Devi (September 30, 1905–October 22, 1982)

      Thanks Mark!

    • Margot Metroland

      The Fountainhead: 80 Years Later

      Ayn Rand's writings are often silly, but there is a purity of intention in The Fountainhead that...

    • Mark Gullick

      Remembering Savitri Devi (September 30, 1905–October 22, 1982)

      Great reference piece. Yet another writer I discovered through CC.

    • Jim Goad

      Who Drinks More, the Rich or the Poor?

      Hey, don't go blaming the 1960s for alcoholism. Americans are drinking as much alcohol now as in...

    • Just Passing By

      The Fountainhead: 80 Years Later

      In *We the Living*, the ending has a nice "Live Free, Die Well" tone -- victory in defeat. With a...

    • Anon

      Politics vs. Self-Help

      Another high IQ piece from Greg Johnson. Don't ever stop. BTW I think content like this should be...

    • Francis XB

      The Stolen Land Narrative

      Let's assume that White settlers were actually the genocidal maniacs that the critics claim them to...

    • AdamMil

      Remembering Savitri Devi (September 30, 1905–October 22, 1982)

      The link to "The Last Days of Savitri Devi" is broken. This appears to be the correct link. It might...

    • Connor McDowell

      The Fountainhead: 80 Years Later

      I never read The Fountainhead, but I did read We the Living and slogged through John Galt’s speech...

    • Wotan1

      Who Drinks More, the Rich or the Poor?

      "People who can’t handle life are constantly puffing on something or downing something." Or...

    • Wotan1

      Who Drinks More, the Rich or the Poor?

      From the "trying new things" angle, I suppose; those who score high on Openness for the "Big Five"...

  • Book Authors

    • Beau Albrecht
    • Alain de Benoist
    • Kerry Bolton
    • Jonathan Bowden
    • Collin Cleary
    • Jef Costello
    • Savitri Devi
    • F. Roger Devlin
    • Buttercup Dew
    • Julius Evola
    • Jim Goad
    • Gregory Hood
    • Juleigh Howard-Hobson
    • Greg Johnson
    • Charles Krafft
    • Anthony M. Ludovici
    • Trevor Lynch
    • H. L. Mencken
    • J. A. Nicholl
    • James J. O’Meara
    • Christopher Pankhurst
    • Tito Perdue
    • Michael Polignano
    • Spencer J. Quinn
    • Fenek Solère
    • Irmin Vinson
    • Leo Yankevich
    • Francis Parker Yockey
    • Multiple authors
  • Webzine Authors

    Editor-in-Chief

    • Greg Johnson, Ph.D.

    Featured Writers

    • Beau Albrecht
    • Morris V. de Camp
    • Stephen Paul Foster, Ph.D.
    • Jim Goad
    • Alex Graham
    • Mark Gullick, Ph.D.
    • Greg Johnson, Ph.D.
    • Spencer J. Quinn

    Frequent Writers

    • Aquilonius
    • Anthony Bavaria
    • Alain de Benoist
    • Kerry Bolton, Ph.D.
    • Collin Cleary, Ph.D.
    • Jef Costello
    • F. Roger Devlin, Ph.D.
    • Richard Houck
    • Ondrej Mann
    • Margot Metroland
    • John Morgan
    • Trevor Lynch
    • James J. O’Meara
    • Kathryn S.
    • Thomas Steuben
    • Michael Walker

    Classic Authors

    • Maurice Bardèche
    • Jonathan Bowden
    • Julius Evola
    • Guillaume Faye
    • Ernst Jünger
    • Kevin MacDonald, Ph.D.
    • D. H. Lawrence
    • Charles Lindbergh
    • Jack London
    • H. P. Lovecraft
    • Anthony M. Ludovici
    • Sir Oswald Mosley
    • National Vanguard
    • Friedrich Nietzsche
    • Revilo Oliver
    • William Pierce
    • Ezra Pound
    • Saint-Loup
    • Savitri Devi
    • Carl Schmitt
    • Miguel Serrano
    • Oswald Spengler
    • P. R. Stephensen
    • Jean Thiriart
    • John Tyndall
    • Dominique Venner
    • Leo Yankevich
    • Francis Parker Yockey

    Other Authors

    • Howe Abbott-Hiss
    • Michael Bell
    • Buttercup Dew
    • Giles Corey
    • Bain Dewitt
    • Jack Donovan
    • Richardo Duchesne, Ph.D.
    • Emile Durand
    • Guillaume Durocher
    • Mark Dyal
    • Fullmoon Ancestry
    • Tom Goodroch
    • Andrew Hamilton
    • Robert Hampton
    • Huntley Haverstock
    • Derek Hawthorne
    • Gregory Hood
    • Juleigh Howard-Hobson
    • Alexander Jacob
    • Nicholas Jeelvy
    • Ruuben Kaalep
    • Tobias Langdon
    • Julian Langness
    • Travis LeBlanc
    • Patrick Le Brun
    • G A Malvicini
    • John Michael McCloughlin
    • Millennial Woes
    • Michael O’Meara
    • Christopher Pankhurst
    • Michael Polignano
    • J. J. Przybylski
    • Quintilian
    • Edouard Rix
    • C. B. Robertson
    • C. F. Robinson
    • Herve Ryssen
    • Alan Smithee
    • Fenek Solere
    • Ann Sterzinger
    • Robert Steuckers
    • Tomislav Sunic
    • Donald Thoresen
    • Marian Van Court
    • Irmin Vinson
    • Aylmer Wedgwood
    • Scott Weisswald
  • Departments

    • Book Reviews
    • Movie Reviews
    • TV Reviews
    • Music Reviews
    • Art Criticism
    • Graphic Novels & Comics
    • Video Game Reviews
    • Fiction
    • Poems
    • Interviews
    • Videos
    • English Translations
    • Other Languages
      • Arabic
      • Bulgarian
      • Croatian
      • Czech
      • Danish
      • Dutch
      • Estonian
      • Finnish
      • French
      • German
      • Greek
      • Hungarian
      • Italian
      • Lithuanian
      • Norwegian
      • Polish
      • Portuguese
      • Romanian
      • Russian
      • Slovak
      • Spanish
      • Swedish
      • Ukrainian
    • Commemorations
    • Why We Write
  • Archives
  • Top 100 Commenters
  • Private Events
  • T&C
  • Contact
Sponsored Links
Spencer J. Quinn Above Time Coffee Antelope Hill Publishing Identaria Paul Waggener IHR-Store Asatru Folk Assembly No College Club American Renaissance The Patrick Ryan Show Jim Goad The Occidental Observer
Print March 14, 2011 1 comment

Carl Schmitt’s Land & Sea, Part 6

Carl Schmitt

2,393 words

Part 6 of 9

Translated by Simona Draghici, revised by Greg Johnson

Twelve

Many other examples from history may be given, but all dim before the most thorough transformation of the planetary outlook and its consequences in all the known history of the world. It took place in the sixteenth and the seventeenth centuries, the age of the discovery of the Americas and of the first voyage around the world in a sailing ship. It was then that a new world was born, in the most challenging sense of those words. The global consciousness of Western and Central Europeans, and ultimately of all mankind, was overhauled from top to bottom. It was the first complete spatial revolution on a planetary scale, in the true meaning of those words.

A revolution unlike any other, it was not merely a quantitative enlargement of the geographical horizon, the result of the discovery of new continents and new oceans alone. That revolution had far greater repercus­sions. It would wipe out the traditional conceptions, ancient and medieval, and alter man’s overall awareness, his very image of the planet as well as the astronomical representation of the universe. For the first time in history, man was holding the terrestrial globe in his hand, the real one, as if it were a ball. A medieval mind, and even Martin Luther, had found ridiculous the idea that Earth was a sphere; it had been a fantasy, not to be taken seriously. Nonetheless, the spherical shape of our planet was becoming tangible reality, unswerving experience, undeniable scientific truth. From then on, Earth, once an allegedly fixed star, began revolving round the Sun. Still, that was not the most radical transformation. The truly decisive factor was the ap­pearance of the cosmic dimension and of the concept of the infinite void.

Copernicus was the first to demonstrate scientifically that Earth orbits around the Sun. His work on the revolutions of the celestial bodies, De Revolutionibus Orbium Coelestium, dates from 1543. Although he trans­formed our solar system, he stuck to the idea that space, the cosmos, was a limiting field. In this way, the world, in the cosmic sense, and with it the notion of space, remained unaltered. Several decades later, the boundaries vanished. In Giordano Bruno’s philosophical scheme, the solar system, in which Earth revolves round the Sun, is but one of the many solar systems in an infinite firma­ment. Galileo’s scientific experiments turned those philosophical speculations into mathematically demon­strable truth. Kepler calculated the ellipses of the planets but shuddered before the infinity of those spaces where the galaxies evolve free of conceivable boundaries and centers. With Newton’s theories, the new concept of space became part and parcel of the whole, enlightened Europe. The stars, masses of matter, move while the forces of attraction and repulsion balance each other in an infinite void, in virtue of the laws of gravitation.

From then on, man could fashion an idea of the void, which he could not do earlier, despite the fact that certain philosophers had already broached the sub­ject. Formerly, man had feared the void: he used to have a horror vacui. Then, lo and behold, he began to forget his fears and adjust to the idea that he and his world were in the void. In the eighteenth century, the writers of the Enlightenment, with Voltaire at their head, were taking pride in the very idea, scientifically demonstra­ble, of a world placed inside an infinite void. Try to imagine a truly empty space, a space that is not only an air vacuum but also free of the minutest and subtlest matter. Go on and try to distinguish between matter and space within your picture, separate one from the other, and think of one without the other. You may just as well think of absolute nothingness. Nonetheless, the thinkers of the Enlightenment mocked this horror vacui. Or perhaps it was only the quite understandable shudder before nothingness, the emptiness of death, before the nihilistic image and nihilism on the whole.

Such change, implicit in the notion of the infinite void, cannot be explained merely as a result of a purely geographical expansion of the known world. It is so essential and revolutionary that one may as well affirm the contrary, namely that the discovery of new continents and the voyage round the world were only the result and the manifestation of much deeper mutations. Only in that way could the landing on an unknown island inaugurate a whole era of discoveries. People coming from the West and from the East had landed in America before. It is known that about the year 1000, the Vikings had discovered North America on their way from Greenland, and that the Indians whom Christopher Columbus met also must have arrived from somewhere. Still, it has to be acknowledged that it was in 1492, and not before, that America was “discovered” by Columbus. The “pre-Colombian” discoveries had not brought about a planetary spatial revo­lution, nor were they the sequel of such a revolution. Otherwise, the Aztecs would not have remained in Mexico, nor the Incas in Peru. One fair day, they would have paid us a visit in Europe, world map in hand. It would have been they who discovered us, and not the other way around! A spatial revolution presupposes more than just setting foot on previously unknown land. It assumes the transformation of the notion of space at all levels and in all the aspects of human existence. The formidable about-face in the sixteenth and the seven­teenth centuries shows us all what that means.

In those centuries of change, Europeans simulta­neously imprinted a new idea of space on all the aspects of their creative spirit. Renaissance painting forsook the space of medieval Gothic art. From then on, the painters would place their human models and material objects in a space, which through perspective, attained a hollow depth. People and objects were now sitting and moving in space. It is in fact a different world, when compared to the space of a Gothic painting. The simple fact that the painters began to see differently, that the way they looked at things changed, is full of significance for us. Great painters are not only those who place something beautiful before our eyes. Art too is a historical step in the evolution of spatial awareness. Real artists are those who see people and things better and more accurately than the rest, more accurately in regard to the historical reality of their era. Nevertheless, the new space made itself manifest in other fields, too. Renaissance architecture erected buildings of a classical and geometrical conception, a world apart from the Gothic space. The statues of people in the Renaissance were free-standing, whereas in the Middle Ages they had been “hooked” to pillars and to walls. On the other hand, Baroque architecture surged into a dynamic movement, and for that reason, it resem­bled Gothic art in more than one respect. Nevertheless, it remained tributary to the new modern space, born of a spatial revolution to which it had brought its own contribution. Music broke free from the constraints of the ancient tonalities and placed its tunes and harmonies inside the acoustical splice of our so-called tonal system. On stage and at the opera, the characters would move in the empty depth of the stage space, separated from the audience by a curtain. All the spiritual trends of those two centuries—Renaissance, Humanism, Reforma­tion, Counter-Reformation, and Baroque—have each in their ways contributed to the spatial revolution as a whole.

It is no exaggeration to affirm that all walks of life and forms of existence, all the manifestations of man’s creative genius, the arts, science, and technology, had their share in the new idea of space. As a matter of fact, the great changes in the geographic image of our planet are but a superficial aspect of the deep-going mutation, as suggested by the phrase “spatial revolution,” so rich in consequences. What by turn has been called the rational superiority of the Europeans, the European spirit, and “Western rationalism” has had an irresistible impact ever since. It extended to the nations of Western and Central Europe, destroyed the medieval forms of hu­man community, set up new states, fleets, and armies, in­vented new machines, and subjected the non-­European peoples to its will. To the latter it gave the choice of adopting European civilization or being reduced to mere colonies of the former.

Thirteen

Every basic order is a spatial order. To talk of the constitution of a country or a continent is to talk of its fundamental order, of its nomos.[1] The true, the authentic, rests essentially upon distinct spatial delimitations. It presupposes clear dimensions, a pre­cise division of the planet. The beginning of every great era coincides with an extensive territorial ap­propriation. Every important change in the image of Earth is inseparable from a political transformation, and so, from a new repartition of the planet, a new territorial appropriation.

A spatial revolution as singular as that of the six­teenth and the seventeenth centuries had ineluctably to lead to an astounding and unprecedented territorial appropriation. New spaces were opened that seemed endless to the Europeans who swarmed out to those dis­tant expanses and treated the non-European and non-­Christian peoples and countries which they discovered as abandoned property, devolving to the first occupier arriving from Europe. All the conquerors, whether Cath­olic or Protestant, invoked their mission of dissemi­nating the Christian faith among the non-Christians. They could have done that without conquest and plunder. It was, however, the only motive and justification they would give. There were certain monks, such as the Spanish theologian Francisco de Vitoria, who in his lecture on the Indians (De Indis, 1532) pro­claimed that the right of peoples to their land was independent of their religious faith and with an as­tonishing broad-mindedness defended the rights of the Indians. That, however, did not change in the least the global historical reality of the territorial ap­propriation by Europeans. Later on, during the eighteenth and the nineteenth centuries, the mandate of the Christian mission expanded into a mandate to dis­seminate European civilization among the uncivilized peoples. It was out of such justifications that a Chris­tian European civil law came to be born, the law of the Christian commonwealth of Europe, distinct from the rest of the world. The Christian peoples would build up a “family of nations,” an inter-state order. Its civil law would be based on the distinction between Christian and non-Christian, or a century later, between civilized (in the Christian European sense) and uncivilized peoples. A nation that was not civilized in that sense of the word could not become a member of that community of states. It would be regarded not as a subject but as an object of that community’s civil law. In other words, it was part of the possessions of one or another of the civilized nations, as a colony or a colonial protector­ate.

Nevertheless, you must not think of that commonwealth of Christian-European nations as a flock of peaceful lambs. They waged bloody wars among themselves. Still, that does not change the historical reality of a kinship and a commonwealth of Christian-European civilization. World history is a history of territorial conquests. The conquerors did not, however, support each other at all times. Quite often they opposed each other and as often in bloody fratricidal wars. Notwithstanding, unlike indigenous peoples and the alien third par­ties, there was one thing that they shared.

Intestine struggles, fratricidal clashes, and civil wars are, as everybody knows, the most gruesome of all wars. The more so in the case of land seized in common. The conflict is more intense, the higher the stakes. In this case, it was a matter of seizing a new world. In the sixteenth century, Frenchmen and Spaniards massacred each other for years in a most atrocious manner, particularly in Florida, where they spared neither women nor children. Spaniards and Englishmen confronted each other in a century-long, bitter war in which the most brutal hostility man is capable of seems to have reached the limit. Neither had too many scruples when it came to filling their combat ranks, openly or surreptitiously, with non-Europeans, Muslims or Indians, as auxilliaries or even as allies. The outbreaks of hostility were frightful: each side abused the other, calling it in turn such names as assassins, thieves, rapists, and pirates. One kind of abuse was missing though, the one which they would hurl at the Indians. Among themselves the Christian Europeans did not accuse each other of cannibalism. Otherwise, nothing was missing from their repertory of abuses and deadly hostility. Yet all that fades before the dominant fact: the collective conquest of the New World by Europeans. The meaning and the core of the Christian-European civil law, its fundamen­tal order, was the partition of the newly discovered Earth. Among themselves, and without much planned delib­eration, the Europeans were unanimous in regarding the non-European territory of the planet as colonial ter­ritory, in other words, as an object of conquest and exploi­tation. This aspect of the historical evolution is so important that one might as well, and more correctly, define the age of discoveries as the era of territorial conquests by Europeans. Heraclitus had already said it: war brings people together, while law divides them.

Note

1. The Greek noun nomos derives from the verb nemein, and like the latter, has three meanings. Firstly, nemein is the equivalent of the Geman nehmen, to take. Nence nomos means seizure. As the Greek legein-logos corresponds the German spechen-Sprache, so too, the German nehmen-Nahme corresponds to the Greek nemein-nomos. At first, it meant the seizure of land, and later it also meant the appropriation of the sea, much of which is part of our historical review here. In the industrial sector, one speaks of the appropriation of the means of production. The second meaning is the division and distribution of what was seized. Hence also the second sense of nomos, the basic division and repartition of the soil and the resulting ownership order. The third meaning is to tend, that is, to use, exploit, and turn to good account the partitioned land, to produce and to consume. Seizing-dividing-tending in that sequence are the three fundamental notions of every concrete order. More about the meaning of nomos can be found in my book The Nomos of the Earth (1950).

Related

  • Nueva Derecha vs. Vieja Derecha Capítulo 5: Reflextiones Sobre El Concepto de lo Político de Carl Schmitt

  • The Truth about Belgian Colonialism

  • The Bard Across Three Reichs: Germany, Shakespeare, and Andreas Höfele’s No Hamlets, Part II

  • Carl Schmitt and American Jurisprudence

  • Remembering Carl Schmitt (July 11, 1888–April 7, 1985)

  • Orbán Makes Massive Use of Foreign Labor in Hungary

  • John Alan Coey: Warrior for the West

  • Black Skin, White Masks, Part 1

Tags

Carl SchmittcolonialismgeopoliticsLand and Seaspacetranslations

Next

» Memories of Hitler & the Third Reich

1 comment

  1. Fourmyle of Ceres says:
    March 14, 2011 at 9:11 pm

    Three paragraphs are of particular importance.

    Carl Schmitt wrote:

    It is no exaggeration to affirm that all walks of life and forms of existence, all the manifestations of man’s creative genius, the arts, science, and technology, had their share in the new idea of space. As a matter of fact, the great changes in the geographic image of our planet are but a superficial aspect of the deep-going mutation, as suggested by the phrase “spatial revolution,” so rich in consequences. What by turn has been called the rational superiority of the Europeans, the European spirit, and “Western rationalism” has had an irresistible impact ever since.

    In reply:
    This is the standard Intellectual History of Western Civ I took lo these many years ago, and was as true then as it its now. However, Schmitt’s next sentence in this paragraph sets up a sentence that tie directly into the metapolitical project.

    Carl Schmitt continued:

    It extended to the nations of Western and Central Europe, destroyed the medieval forms of hu­man community, set up new states, fleets, and armies, in­vented new machines, and subjected the non-­European peoples to its will. To the latter it gave the choice of adopting European civilization or being reduced to mere colonies of the former.

    In reply:
    That sentence should be on everyone’s screensaver.

    The history of Mankind is a history of the deveelopment of Consciousness, and the idea that one small shift in thought laid the foundation for a New Order – indeed, a New World! – is why the metapolitical project is so important.

    This is why I keep referring to Harold Covington, and the Northwest Republic.

    Let’s shorten the last sentence to the section that matters most to us.

    Carl Schmitt wrote:

    It …. subjected the non-­European peoples to its will. To the latter it gave the choice of adopting European civilization or being reduced to mere colonies of the former.

    In reply:
    Schmitt took too much for granted, or was too much of a gentleman, to point out the obvious – that only one Race had the innate capacity that could transform the insights offered by the new spatial awareness into new capabilities.

    That is why, in fact, even today, the “non-European peoples” (the non-Whites) choose to try to become Europeans – Whites – in all but name, running as fast as they can from the colonies their homelands have become.

    Let’s review and extend this analysis to the White Race in America, a country with, demographically speaking, several nations inside of its physical borders.

    Is there anyone who doubts that the Africans-in-America colonies of Detroit, and half of St. Louis, for example, have people who simply do not have the inherent gentic capacity to accept and work with such ideas? Is there any doubt that, if one returned to the ruins of Detroit fifty years from now, it will resemble nothing so much as a wasteland inhabited by feral savages?

    Is there anyone who doubts that exact opposite case would apply to the Northwest Republic, formally established as a Racial Homeland for the White RAce – the only Race that can, for example, make technics and “democracy” work at all?

    No.

    THAT takes us to Schmitts second paragraph:

    Carl Schmitt wrote:

    Nevertheless, you must not think of that commonwealth of Christian-European nations as a flock of peaceful lambs. They waged bloody wars among themselves. Still, that does not change the historical reality of a kinship and a commonwealth of Christian-European civilization. World history is a history of territorial conquests. The conquerors did not, however, support each other at all times. Quite often they opposed each other and as often in bloody fratricidal wars. Notwithstanding, unlike indigenous peoples and the alien third par­ties, there was one thing that they shared

    In reply:
    An oversimplification of this stunning second section implies, and I speak with an excess of caution here, that we united Racially, with Christianity – PATRIARCHAL Christianity, Assertive Christianity, Masculine Christianity – as the transcendent organizing principle at the Racial level, among all Europeans.

    Carl Schmitt wrote:

    ….Yet all that fades before the dominant fact: the collective conquest of the New World by Europeans. The meaning and the core of the Christian-European civil law, its fundamen­tal order, was the partition of the newly discovered Earth. Among themselves, and without much planned delib­eration, the Europeans were unanimous in regarding the non-European territory of the planet as colonial ter­ritory, in other words, as an object of conquest and exploi­tation. This aspect of the historical evolution is so important that one might as well, and more correctly, define the age of discoveries as the era of territorial conquests by Europeans. Heraclitus had already said it: war brings people together, while law divides them.

    In reply:
    United transcendentally, we then united temporally in the common purpose of transforming the rest of the Earth into Civilization, creating a social order that all of the occupants of the former colonies wished to join, by any means necessary.

    Now, THAT is an excellent example of a metapolitical project!

    We can learn from this.

    0
    0

Comments are closed.

If you have Paywall access,
simply login first to see your comment auto-approved.

Note on comments privacy & moderation

Your email is never published nor shared.

Comments are moderated. If you don't see your comment, please be patient. If approved, it will appear here soon. Do not post your comment a second time.

  • Recent posts

    • Who Drinks More, the Rich or the Poor?

      Jim Goad

    • Remembering Savitri Devi (September 30, 1905–October 22, 1982)

      Greg Johnson

      3

    • The Counter-Currents 2023 Fundraiser: A Question of Degree

      Mark Gullick

    • Politics vs. Self-Help

      Greg Johnson

      30

    • The Fountainhead: 80 Years Later

      Jef Costello

      13

    • It’s Not All About You

      Spencer J. Quinn

      2

    • Who Drinks More, the Rich or the Poor?

      Jim Goad

      21

    • The Stolen Land Narrative

      Morris van de Camp

      7

    • Neema Parvini’s Prophets of Doom: Cyclical History as Alternative to Liberal Progressivism

      Mike Maxwell

      1

    • Counter-Currents Radio Podcast No. 554 How Often Does Pox Think About the Roman Empire? . . . & Other Matters

      Counter-Currents Radio

    • The “Treasonous” Trajectory of Trumpism

      Stephen Paul Foster

      7

    • A Haunting in Venice: Agatha Christie Is Back

      Steven Clark

      4

    • Counter-Currents Radio Podcast No. 553 Endeavour & Pox Populi on the Latest Migrant Invasion & More

      Counter-Currents Radio

      2

    • White Altruism Revealed

      Gunnar Alfredsson

      2

    • The Union Jackal, September 2023

      Mark Gullick

      18

    • The Metapolitics of “Woke”

      Endeavour

      2

    • The Matter with Concrete, Part 2

      Michael Walker

      2

    • Remembering Martin Heidegger: September 26, 1889–May 26, 1976

      Greg Johnson

    • The Worst Week Yet: September 17-23, 2023

      Jim Goad

      39

    • Paper Boy: The Life and Times of an Ink-Stained Wretch

      Steven Clark

      1

    • Richard Hanania’s The Origins of Woke

      Matt Parrott

      5

    • The Matter with Concrete, Part 1

      Michael Walker

      2

    • The Virgin Queen Chihuahua Has Spoken!

      Jim Goad

      5

    • Pox Populi and Endeavour on the Latest Migrant Invasion

      Greg Johnson

    • Crowdsourcing Contest! Our Banner

      A. C. C. Reader

      47

    • Adult Cartoons Are a Disaster for Western Civilization, Part 2

      Travis LeBlanc

      18

    • Having It All: America Reaps the Benefits of Feminism

      Beau Albrecht

      12

    • The Captivity Narrative of Fanny Kelly

      Spencer J. Quinn

      7

    • The Virgin Queen Chihuahua Has Spoken!

      Jim Goad

      52

    • Adult Cartoons Are a Disaster for Western Civilization, Part 1

      Travis LeBlanc

      40

    • Plastic Patriotism: Propaganda and the Establishment’s Crusade Against Germany and German-Americans During the First World War

      Alex Graham

      9

    • Race and IQ Differences: An Interview with Arthur Jensen, Part 2

      Arthur Jensen

      2

    • Donald Trump: The Jews’ Psycho Ex-Girlfriend

      Travis LeBlanc

      14

    • Bad to the Spone: Charles Krafft’s An Artist of the Right

      Gunnar Alfredsson

      1

    • Independence Day

      Mark Gullick

    • The Unnecessary War

      Morris van de Camp

      1

    • Bad Cop! No Baklava!

      Beau Albrecht

      7

    • Counter-Currents Radio Podcast No. 552 Millennial Woes on Corporations, the Left, & Other Matters

      Counter-Currents Radio

      6

    • Remembering Charles Krafft: September 19, 1947–June 12, 2020

      Greg Johnson

    • Marx vs. Rousseau

      Stephen Paul Foster

      4

    • The Worst Week Yet: September 10-16, 2023

      Jim Goad

      22

    • The Tinkling Cherub of Mississippi

      Beau Albrecht

      2

    • A Deep Ecological Perspective on the Vulnerability of Eurodescendants

      Francisco Albanese

      3

    • Remembering Francis Parker Yockey: September 18, 1917–June 16, 1960

      Greg Johnson

      1

    • The Counter-Currents 2023 Fundraiser: Idealism Alone Can’t Last Forever

      Pox Populi

      3

    • Ask Me Anything with Millennial Woes

      Greg Johnson

    • Most White Republicans at Least Slightly Agree with the Great Replacement Theory

      David M. Zsutty

      13

    • Field of Dreams: A Right-Wing Film?

      Morris van de Camp

      2

    • Rich Snobs vs. Poor Slobs: The Schism Between “Racist” Whites

      Jim Goad

      99

    • Memories of Underdevelopment: Revolution & the Bourgeois Mentality

      Steven Clark

      2

  • Classics Corner

    • Remembering Maurice Bardèche
      (October 1, 1907–July 30, 1998)

      Greg Johnson

      4

    • Why Race is Not a “Social Construct”

      Greg Johnson

      19

    • Remembering T. S. Eliot:
      September 26, 1888–January 4, 1965

      Greg Johnson

      2

    • Leo Strauss, the Conservative Revolution, & National Socialism, Part 1

      Greg Johnson

      22

    • Leo Strauss, the Conservative Revolution, & National Socialism, Part 2

      Greg Johnson

      3

    • Leo Strauss, the Conservative Revolution, & National Socialism, Part 3

      Greg Johnson

      13

    • Remembering H. Keith Thompson
      September 17, 1922–March 3, 2002

      Kerry Bolton

      1

    • Be All You Can Be: On Joining the Military

      Ash Donaldson

      22

    • Transcript of FOX News’ Banned Report on Israel & 9/11

      Spencer J. Quinn

    • The Banned FOX News Report on Israel’s Role in 9/11

      Spencer J. Quinn

      12

    • The Psychology of Conversion

      Greg Johnson

      43

    • Animal Justice?

      Greg Johnson

      18

    • Uppity White Folks and How to Reach Them

      Greg Johnson

      6

    • Lord Kek Commands!
      A Look at the Origins of Meme Magic

      James J. O'Meara

      7

    • Major General J. F. C. Fuller
      (September 1, 1878–February 10, 1966)

      Anonymous

      5

    • Remembering Johann Gottfried von Herder
      (August 25, 1744–December 18, 1803)

      Martin Lichtmesz

      2

    • Moral Seriousness

      Greg Johnson

      13

    • Columbus Day Special
      The Autochthony Argument

      Greg Johnson

      8

    • Remembering Knut Hamsun
      (August 4, 1859–February 19, 1952)

      Greg Johnson

      8

    • Sir Reginald Goodall: An Appreciation

      Greg Johnson

      3

    • 7-11 Nationalism

      Richard Houck

      28

    • Philip K. Dick’s Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? as Anti-Semitic/Christian-Gnostic Allegory

      Greg Johnson

      7

    • Eraserhead:
      A Gnostic Anti-Sex Film

      Trevor Lynch

      17

    • Remembering Revilo Oliver
      (July 7, 1908–August 20, 1994)

      Greg Johnson

      17

    • Lars von Trier & the Men Among the Ruins

      John Morgan

      16

    • Heidegger without Being

      Greg Johnson

      17

    • Junetarded Nation

      Jim Goad

      8

    • Counter-Currents Radio Podcast No. 338
      Ted Talk

      Counter-Currents Radio

      3

    • Hegemony

      Greg Johnson

      11

    • Cù Chulainn in the GPO:
      The Mythic Imagination of Patrick Pearse

      Michael O'Meara

      5

  • Paroled from the Paywall

    • Salon Kitty: The Ultimate Nazisploitation Movie

      Travis LeBlanc

      14

    • The Relentless Persistence of Stalinism

      Stephen Paul Foster

    • Counter-Currents Radio Podcast No. 548 Ask Me Anything with Greg Johnson, Pox Populi, & David Zsutty

      Counter-Currents Radio

    • Metapolitics in Germany, Part 1: An Exclusive Interview with Frank Kraemer of Stahlgewitter

      Ondrej Mann

      3

    • Counter-Currents Radio Podcast No. 546 Greg Johnson on Plato’s Gorgias, Lecture 5

      Counter-Currents Radio

    • A Call For White Identity Politics: Ed Brodow’s The War on Whites

      Dave Chambers

      6

    • The Fiction of Harold Covington, Part One

      Steven Clark

      21

    • Death by Hunger: Two Books About the Holodomor

      Morris van de Camp

      4

    • A Child as White as Snow

      Mark Gullick

      6

    • Jonathan Bowden’s Final Lecture on Video: Charles Maurras, Action Française, and the Cagoule

      Jonathan Bowden

      1

    • Who Was Lawrence R. Brown? Biographical Notes on the Author of The Might of the West

      Margot Metroland

      16

    • California Discontent, Part 2: Frank Norris’ The Octopus

      Steven Clark

      1

    • California Discontent, Part 1: John Steinbeck’s East of Eden

      Steven Clark

    • 12 More Sex Differences Due to Nature

      Richard Knight

      4

    • Counter-Currents Radio Podcast No. 545 Pox Populi and Morgoth on the Age of Immigration and More 

      Counter-Currents Radio

    • When White Idealism Goes Too Far: Saints of the American Wilderness

      Spencer J. Quinn

      10

    • A Compassionate Spy?

      Beau Albrecht

      11

    • Counter-Currents Radio Podcast No. 544 Pox Populi, American Krogan, & Endeavour on the Metaverse

      Counter-Currents Radio

    • Nietzsche and the Psychology of the Left, Part Two

      Collin Cleary

      2

    • Thoughts on an Unfortunate Convergence: Doctors, Lawyers, and Angry Women

      Stephen Paul Foster

      5

    • Against Liberalism: Society Is Not a Market, Chapter I, Part 3: What Is Liberalism?

      Alain de Benoist

    • Against Liberalism: Society Is Not a Market, Chapter I, Part 2: What Is Liberalism?

      Alain de Benoist

      1

    • Against Liberalism: Society Is Not a Market, Chapter I, Part 1: What Is Liberalism?

      Alain de Benoist

      1

    • Misrepresentative Government: Why Democracy Doesn’t Work, Part IV

      Kenneth Vinther

      2

    • Misrepresentative Government: Why Democracy Doesn’t Work, Part III

      Kenneth Vinther

      1

    • Counter-Currents Radio Podcast No. 543 Greg Johnson on Plato’s Gorgias, Lecture 4

      Counter-Currents Radio

    • Misrepresentative Government: Why Democracy Doesn’t Work, Part I

      Kenneth Vinther

      1

    • Jack London’s The Iron Heel as Prophecy, Part 2

      Beau Albrecht

    • The Scottish Mr. Bond? An Interview with Mystic

      Travis LeBlanc

      2

    • Counter-Currents Radio Podcast No. 542 Greg Johnson on Plato’s Gorgias, Lecture 3

      Counter-Currents Radio

  • Recent comments

    • Greg Johnson

      Politics vs. Self-Help

      Can you link it? Thanks!

    • Liam Kernaghan

      Politics vs. Self-Help

      Very young White man: "How do I get out of this mess?" Older White man: "I know the answer...

    • Scott

      The Stolen Land Narrative

      I love that quote, he he.I got banned from a major discussion forum just for quoting Napoleon (...

    • ArminiusMaximus

      Politics vs. Self-Help

      I looked for a speech of his in front of a crowd as a candidate for CC. Here is what I found from...

    • Nah

      Paper Boy: The Life and Times of an Ink-Stained Wretch

      Great article about a good man. Thank you, Mr. Clark. I get the impression that Howie Carr is...

    • Jud Jackson

      The Fountainhead: 80 Years Later

      It has been a long time since I read "The Fountainhead" but I did like it although it was too long...

    • Daniel Ross

      Who Drinks More, the Rich or the Poor?

      I agree. It's real hard to have much sympathy for the proverbial worms under the boot that Kant...

    • Just Passing By

      The Fountainhead: 80 Years Later

      "Ayn Rand’s writings are often silly" : indeed. For lack of time, I'll use a Google translation,...

    • Greg Johnson

      Politics vs. Self-Help

      Thanks. I will ask Jared about that. You aren't the first person to recommend it. It is a great...

    • Greg Johnson

      Remembering Savitri Devi (September 30, 1905–October 22, 1982)

      Thanks Mark!

    • Margot Metroland

      The Fountainhead: 80 Years Later

      Ayn Rand's writings are often silly, but there is a purity of intention in The Fountainhead that...

    • Mark Gullick

      Remembering Savitri Devi (September 30, 1905–October 22, 1982)

      Great reference piece. Yet another writer I discovered through CC.

    • Jim Goad

      Who Drinks More, the Rich or the Poor?

      Hey, don't go blaming the 1960s for alcoholism. Americans are drinking as much alcohol now as in...

    • Just Passing By

      The Fountainhead: 80 Years Later

      In *We the Living*, the ending has a nice "Live Free, Die Well" tone -- victory in defeat. With a...

    • Anon

      Politics vs. Self-Help

      Another high IQ piece from Greg Johnson. Don't ever stop. BTW I think content like this should be...

    • Francis XB

      The Stolen Land Narrative

      Let's assume that White settlers were actually the genocidal maniacs that the critics claim them to...

    • AdamMil

      Remembering Savitri Devi (September 30, 1905–October 22, 1982)

      The link to "The Last Days of Savitri Devi" is broken. This appears to be the correct link. It might...

    • Connor McDowell

      The Fountainhead: 80 Years Later

      I never read The Fountainhead, but I did read We the Living and slogged through John Galt’s speech...

    • Wotan1

      Who Drinks More, the Rich or the Poor?

      "People who can’t handle life are constantly puffing on something or downing something." Or...

    • Wotan1

      Who Drinks More, the Rich or the Poor?

      From the "trying new things" angle, I suppose; those who score high on Openness for the "Big Five"...

  • Book Authors

    • Beau Albrecht
    • Alain de Benoist
    • Kerry Bolton
    • Jonathan Bowden
    • Collin Cleary
    • Jef Costello
    • Savitri Devi
    • F. Roger Devlin
    • Buttercup Dew
    • Julius Evola
    • Jim Goad
    • Gregory Hood
    • Juleigh Howard-Hobson
    • Greg Johnson
    • Charles Krafft
    • Anthony M. Ludovici
    • Trevor Lynch
    • H. L. Mencken
    • J. A. Nicholl
    • James J. O’Meara
    • Christopher Pankhurst
    • Tito Perdue
    • Michael Polignano
    • Spencer J. Quinn
    • Fenek Solère
    • Irmin Vinson
    • Leo Yankevich
    • Francis Parker Yockey
    • Multiple authors
  • Webzine Authors

    Editor-in-Chief

    • Greg Johnson, Ph.D.

    Featured Writers

    • Beau Albrecht
    • Morris V. de Camp
    • Stephen Paul Foster, Ph.D.
    • Jim Goad
    • Alex Graham
    • Mark Gullick, Ph.D.
    • Greg Johnson, Ph.D.
    • Spencer J. Quinn

    Frequent Writers

    • Aquilonius
    • Anthony Bavaria
    • Alain de Benoist
    • Kerry Bolton, Ph.D.
    • Collin Cleary, Ph.D.
    • Jef Costello
    • F. Roger Devlin, Ph.D.
    • Richard Houck
    • Ondrej Mann
    • Margot Metroland
    • John Morgan
    • Trevor Lynch
    • James J. O’Meara
    • Kathryn S.
    • Thomas Steuben
    • Michael Walker

    Classic Authors

    • Maurice Bardèche
    • Jonathan Bowden
    • Julius Evola
    • Guillaume Faye
    • Ernst Jünger
    • Kevin MacDonald, Ph.D.
    • D. H. Lawrence
    • Charles Lindbergh
    • Jack London
    • H. P. Lovecraft
    • Anthony M. Ludovici
    • Sir Oswald Mosley
    • National Vanguard
    • Friedrich Nietzsche
    • Revilo Oliver
    • William Pierce
    • Ezra Pound
    • Saint-Loup
    • Savitri Devi
    • Carl Schmitt
    • Miguel Serrano
    • Oswald Spengler
    • P. R. Stephensen
    • Jean Thiriart
    • John Tyndall
    • Dominique Venner
    • Leo Yankevich
    • Francis Parker Yockey

    Other Authors

    • Howe Abbott-Hiss
    • Michael Bell
    • Buttercup Dew
    • Giles Corey
    • Bain Dewitt
    • Jack Donovan
    • Richardo Duchesne, Ph.D.
    • Emile Durand
    • Guillaume Durocher
    • Mark Dyal
    • Fullmoon Ancestry
    • Tom Goodroch
    • Andrew Hamilton
    • Robert Hampton
    • Huntley Haverstock
    • Derek Hawthorne
    • Gregory Hood
    • Juleigh Howard-Hobson
    • Alexander Jacob
    • Nicholas Jeelvy
    • Ruuben Kaalep
    • Tobias Langdon
    • Julian Langness
    • Travis LeBlanc
    • Patrick Le Brun
    • G A Malvicini
    • John Michael McCloughlin
    • Millennial Woes
    • Michael O’Meara
    • Christopher Pankhurst
    • Michael Polignano
    • J. J. Przybylski
    • Quintilian
    • Edouard Rix
    • C. B. Robertson
    • C. F. Robinson
    • Herve Ryssen
    • Alan Smithee
    • Fenek Solere
    • Ann Sterzinger
    • Robert Steuckers
    • Tomislav Sunic
    • Donald Thoresen
    • Marian Van Court
    • Irmin Vinson
    • Aylmer Wedgwood
    • Scott Weisswald
  • Departments

    • Book Reviews
    • Movie Reviews
    • TV Reviews
    • Music Reviews
    • Art Criticism
    • Graphic Novels & Comics
    • Video Game Reviews
    • Fiction
    • Poems
    • Interviews
    • Videos
    • English Translations
    • Other Languages
      • Arabic
      • Bulgarian
      • Croatian
      • Czech
      • Danish
      • Dutch
      • Estonian
      • Finnish
      • French
      • German
      • Greek
      • Hungarian
      • Italian
      • Lithuanian
      • Norwegian
      • Polish
      • Portuguese
      • Romanian
      • Russian
      • Slovak
      • Spanish
      • Swedish
      • Ukrainian
    • Commemorations
    • Why We Write
  • Archives
  • Top 100 Commenters
Sponsored Links
Spencer J. Quinn Above Time Coffee Antelope Hill Publishing Identaria Paul Waggener IHR-Store Asatru Folk Assembly No College Club American Renaissance The Patrick Ryan Show Jim Goad The Occidental Observer
Donate Now Mailing list
Books for sale
  • The Trial of Socrates
  • Fields of Asphodel
  • El Manifiesto Nacionalista Blanco
  • An Artist of the Right
  • Ernst Jünger
  • Reuben
  • The Partisan
  • Trevor Lynch’s Classics of Right-Wing Cinema
  • The Enemy of Europe
  • Imperium
  • Reactionary Modernism
  • Manifesto del Nazionalismo Bianco
  • O Manifesto Nacionalista Branco
  • Vade Mecum
  • Whiteness: The Original Sin
  • Space Vixen Trek Episode 17: Tomorrow the Stars
  • The Year America Died
  • Passing the Buck
  • Mysticism After Modernism
  • Gold in the Furnace
  • Defiance
  • Forever & Ever
  • Wagner’s Ring & the Germanic Tradition
  • Resistance
  • Materials for All Future Historians
  • Love Song of the Australopiths
  • White Identity Politics
  • Here’s the Thing
  • Trevor Lynch: Part Four of the Trilogy
  • Graduate School with Heidegger
  • It’s Okay to Be White
  • The World in Flames
  • The White Nationalist Manifesto
  • From Plato to Postmodernism
  • The Gizmo
  • Return of the Son of Trevor Lynch’s CENSORED Guide to the Movies
  • Toward a New Nationalism
  • The Smut Book
  • The Alternative Right
  • My Nationalist Pony
  • Dark Right: Batman Viewed From the Right
  • The Philatelist
  • Confessions of an Anti-Feminist
  • East and West
  • Though We Be Dead, Yet Our Day Will Come
  • White Like You
  • Numinous Machines
  • Venus and Her Thugs
  • Cynosura
  • North American New Right, vol. 2
  • You Asked For It
  • More Artists of the Right
  • Extremists: Studies in Metapolitics
  • The Homo & the Negro
  • Rising
  • The Importance of James Bond
  • In Defense of Prejudice
  • Confessions of a Reluctant Hater (2nd ed.)
  • The Hypocrisies of Heaven
  • Waking Up from the American Dream
  • Green Nazis in Space!
  • Truth, Justice, and a Nice White Country
  • Heidegger in Chicago
  • End of an Era: Mad Men & the Ordeal of Civility
  • Sexual Utopia in Power
  • What is a Rune? & Other Essays
  • Son of Trevor Lynch’s White Nationalist Guide to the Movies
  • The Lightning & the Sun
  • The Eldritch Evola
  • Western Civilization Bites Back
  • New Right vs. Old Right
  • Journey Late at Night: Poems and Translations
  • The Non-Hindu Indians & Indian Unity
  • I do not belong to the Baader-Meinhof Group
  • Pulp Fascism
  • The Lost Philosopher
  • Trevor Lynch’s A White Nationalist Guide to the Movies
  • And Time Rolls On
  • Artists of the Right: Resisting Decadence
  • North American New Right, Vol. 1
  • Some Thoughts on Hitler
  • Tikkun Olam and Other Poems
  • Summoning the Gods
  • Taking Our Own Side
  • Reuben
  • The Node
  • The New Austerities
  • Morning Crafts
  • The Passing of a Profit & Other Forgotten Stories
Copyright © 2023 Counter-Currents Publishing, Ltd.

Paywall Access





Please enter your email address. You will receive mail with link to set new password.

Edit your comment