Earth Day Special
Posted By John Morgan On In North American New Right | Comments DisabledToday is Earth Day, which has been an occasion to call for conservationism and environmental protection since it was first celebrated in America with bipartisan support in 1970, in response to the Santa Barbara oil spill of 1969. Although in recent decades, environmentalism has come to be identified with the political Left, taking stewardship of the Earth and seeking harmony in the relationship between man and nature has traditionally been an issue of the Right. Progressives, on the other hand, especially as manifested in Communism, have historically been proponents of mass industrialization, believing that it is as possible to transform the planet into a technological utopia as they consider it possible to alter human nature itself, and exhibited complete disregard for the destructive impact their projects had on the natural world.
Today, of course, despite some differences in their surface rhetoric, the mainstream Left and Right are united in viewing the Earth as nothing more than a resource to be exploited for economic growth, differing only in the details. But the True Right has always recognized that man must be understood within the context of the natural order as a whole, and that it is only by understanding and respecting our place within it that societies and individuals can truly grow and prosper without sacrificing their children’s futures.
We would like to draw your attention to the following articles which deal with these themes:
- Robert Stark Interviews Greg Johnson on Eco-Fascism [2] (French version here [3], Czech version here [4])
- Howe Abbott-Hiss, “Beaver Mindset [5]“
- Aquilonius, “The Problem with Foodie Cosmopolitanism [6]“
- Algis Avizieni, “The Promise and the Reality of Globalization [7]“
- Winston E. Bakewell, “Liberty and Justice for All: The Case for Canine Suffrage [8]“
- Winston E. Bakewell, “The Real Cost of a Traffic Jam [9]“
- Jim Baumer, “When Your Child Dies for a Cause [10]“
- Jonathan Bowden, “The E Word: Eugenics & Environmentalism, Madison Grant & Lothrop Stoddard [11]“
- Hubert Collins, “Ten Questions for Radical Environmentalist Derrick Jensen,” Part 1 [12], Part 2 [13]
- Mark Deavin, “Henry Williamson: Nature’s Visionary [14]“
- Diord Fionn, “Pentti Linkola’s Can Life Prevail? [15]“
- Thomas Goodrich, “Peaceful, Pastoral, Philosophical: The American Indian as Naked Naturalist [16]“
- Alex Graham, “Jorian Jenks: Farmer & Fascist [17]“
- Alex Graham, “Profiles of Early Conservationists [18]“
- Timo Hännikäinen, “Remembering Pentti Linkola [19]“
- Richard Houck, “Greta and Left vs. Right Environmentalism [20]“
- Buck Hunter, “The Great White Hunter [21]“
- Greg Johnson, “Animal Justice? [22]“
- Greg Johnson, “Heidegger & Ethnic Nationalism,” Part 1 [23], Part 2 [24]
- Greg Johnson, “Savitri Devi, Traditionalism, and Nature Religion [25]“
- Greg Johnson, “Toward a Right-Wing Environmentalism [26]“
- Greg Johnson, “West-Coast White Nationalism [27]“
- Greg Johnson, “Why Environmentalists Should Have Large Families [28]” (Czech version here [29], French version here [30])
- Ted Kaczynski, “Ted Kaczynski’s ‘Ship of Fools’ [31]” (German version here [32])
- Jackson Klott, “Asleep at the Wheel of a Bulldozer [33]“
- Pentti Linkola, “Bull’s Eye [34]“
- Pentti Linkola, “Humanflood [35]“
- Pentti Linkola, “Pentti Linkola : citations choisies [36]“
- Matt Parrott, “Ship of Fools [37]“
- J. J. Przybylski, “Butchering Cultured Meat [38]“
- Savitri Devi, “Race, Economics, & Kindness: The Ideal World [39]“
- Nicholas Slattery, “The Fundamental Trinity [40]“
- Mitch Smith, “Being Bill McKibben [41]“
- George P. Stimson, Jr., “Dimming Down America [42]“
- George P. Stimson, Jr., “Living with Predators [43]“
- George P. Stimson, Jr., “Open Season on Poachers [44]“
- George P. Stimson, Jr., “Paper or Plastic? Neither. [45]“
- George P. Stimson, Jr., “Radical Naturalism [46]“
- William de Vere, “Ecofascism Resurgent [47]“
- William de Vere, “Ecology Viewed from the Right [48]“
- William de Vere, “The Great Replacement and the Great Outdoors: Demographic Change and the Future of American Wilderness [49]“
- William de Vere, “Leftward Drift and Radical Ecology: The Tragedy of Earth First!” Part 1 [50], Part 2 [51]
- William de Vere, “Living Monuments [52]“
- William de Vere, “The Metaphysics of Integral Ecology [53]” (French version here [54])
- William de Vere, “Midsummer [55]“
- William de Vere, “The Politics of Meat: An Ecofascist Perspective [56]“
- William de Vere, “The Purgative Fantasy [57]“
- William de Vere, “The WASP in the Wilderness [58]“
- Michael Walker, “Environmentalism & White Nationalism: A Shared Destiny [59]“
- Michael Walker, “The Spotted Owl & the Elephant in the Room [60]“
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