Month: January 2014
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January 15, 2014 William Solniger
Le fardeau de l’Homme Blanc, 2013
English original here
Remerciements à l’original de Rudyard Kipling
Reprenez le fardeau de l’Homme Blanc –
Envoyez au loin les meilleurs d’entre vous,
Vers des pays et des peuples barbares,
Et répandez le credo évangélique :
La sainte écriture de la Liberté
Pour chaque besoin matériel,
La liturgie des Droits de l’Homme,
(more…) -
D. Jonathan Jones
3 Paths Through Midgard: A Rune Poem
Portland, Or.: Ravenshalla Arts, 2010 -
4,825 words
Preamble
“Rest assured . . . that after . . . years of suffering we have sufficient moral strength left to find an honourable exit from life.”[1]
It is in these very words that the soul of Corneliu Codreanu and his followers was expressed. Needless to say that Capitanul has been the noblest figure among the Far Right leaders in Europe during the interwar period. (more…)
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January 14, 2014 Greg Johnson
The Trial of Socrates:
Plato’s Theages -
Yukio Mishima was one of the giants of 20th-century Japanese literature. He has exercised an enduring influence on the post-World War II European and North American New Right. (more…)
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January 13, 2014 Collin Cleary
Какому Богу поклонялся Один?
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January 13, 2014 Jim Saleam
Sur l’histoire des idées de la nouvelle droite en Australie
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1,260 words
I do not intend to minimize the existential threat we whites face as a race. Whites are not merely being exploited, dispossessed, and victimized in order to support a growing non-white population. Our enemies, the anti-whites, are deliberately inflicting on our race conditions of life calculated to bring about our physical destruction. Their policy is genocide. (more…)
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To Francis Parker Yockey
In memoriamFollowing the end of the Greek Civil War in 1949, many of the defeated Communists fled to countries behind the Iron Curtain. (more…)
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Jack London was born John Griffith Chaney in San Francisco on January 12, 1876. An adventurer and Jack of all trades in his youth, London achieved fame and fortune as a fiction writer and journalist. But he never forgot his working class roots and remained a life-long advocate of workers’ rights, unionism, and revolutionary socialism. (See his essay “What Life Means to Me.”)
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Greg Johnson interviews Richard Spencer of the National Policy Institute and Washington Summit Publishers about his new webzine Radixjournal.com. (more…)