Counter-Currents
Editor’s Update
Greg Johnson talks to Spencer J. Quinn about his new novel Critical Daze on the Counter-Currents Book Club
Greg Johnson

You can order Spencer J. Quinn;s Critical Daze here.
135 words
1. This Saturday on the Counter-Currents Book Club :
Greg Johnson welcomes Spencer Quinn to talk about his new young adult novel, Critical Daze. Be sure to read:
- Kevin MacDonald review of Critical Daze here.
- Spencer Quinn’s print interview on Critical Daze here.
Join us at noon Pacific/3 PM Eastern/8 PM Central European Time on:
- Odysee: https://odysee.com/@countercurrents/ccradio
- DLive: https://dlive.tv/Counter-Currents
- Send questions & donations to Entropy: entropystream.live/countercurrents
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Greg Johnson
Editor-in-Chief
Editor’s Update
Greg Johnson talks to Spencer J. Quinn about his new novel Critical Daze on the Counter-Currents Book Club
Editorand%238217%3Bs%20Update%0AGreg%20Johnson%20talks%20to%20Spencer%20J.%20Quinn%20about%20his%20new%20novel%20Critical%20Daze%20on%20the%20Counter-Currents%20Book%20Club%0A
Editorand%238217%3Bs%20Update%0AGreg%20Johnson%20talks%20to%20Spencer%20J.%20Quinn%20about%20his%20new%20novel%20Critical%20Daze%20on%20the%20Counter-Currents%20Book%20Club%0A
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2 comments
Good broadcast. Really commendable work done here.
Excellent work, I may have to purchase Mr. Quinn’s books.
The discussion about alternatives to college was interesting, though I did have to look up what a “dowry” was. 46% of White women aged 18-24 are in college compared to 36% of White men. Considering that so many women desire a husband who earns more than them, it would be better if those numbers were reversed. Honestly even 30% of 18–24-year-olds being in college, male or female, seems too high. For a society that wants to encourage healthy birth rates and earlier marriages (which I think we should) it’s a big problem.
A few years ago, my mother was expressing her disappointment that one of her friend’s daughters (about 19 at the time) only seemed to care about finding a husband and having babies, even though she was clearly smart enough to succeed in college and find a good-paying job. Likewise, one of my female cousins (about 25 and a college grad) just wants to find a husband and be a stay-at-home mom, but some of my family thinks that’s very odd. Historically, of course, she’s completely normal.
The culture surrounding dating these days is bizarre. Getting married and having kids in one’s early twenties is “weird.” A 25-year-old dating a 20-year-old is “creepy.” But a 19-year-old guy sleeping with ten girls in a single year or an 18-year-old White girl having a one-night stand with a Black dude is seen as totally unremarkable.
Racially conscious mothers and fathers are correct to be hesitant about sending their kids, especially their daughters, to college.
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