Greg Johnson and David Zsutty discussed current events and took listener questions in this episode of Counter-Currents Radio. It’s now available to download or listen to online. (more…)
Month: May 2025
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Markus Pruss
Lara in Dresden: Auf den Spuren des Feuersturms
Florian Schur, 2025Lara is back! If you recall, I hadn’t been too impressed with the first YA novel featuring our young heroine. (more…)
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Normally when people think about the province of Saskatchewan, they picture pastoral prairieland filled with golden wheat, towering grain elevators, spectacular summertime lightning storms, windswept snowscapes, and that old joke about how the land is so flat you only have to stand on a milk-crate to see Halifax. (more…)
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For a book with “shaman” in the title, Dutton spends remarkably little time on shamans or shamanism, words which occur less than 20 times in the 333 pages of text. Bowden is a shaman, or shamanistic, in the sense that he can, sort of like a shaman, travel to other spaces or dimensions, obtaining knowledge which can be brought back to his tribe to heal or inspire them. (more…)
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A friend recently sent me an excellent video in which Jared Taylor discussed the connection between white guilt and Rapid Onset Gender Dysphoria (ROGD). As a young woman who spent several years identifying as a member of the LGBT community, I would like to thank Mr. Taylor for pointing this out and share my experiences. (more…)
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You know you’re reading a great novel when you effectively stop your life in order to finish it. This is what happened to me when I picked up and devoured Franz Werfel’s 1933 novel The Forty Days of Musa Dagh. The elevator pitch is exciting enough. Several thousand Armenian villagers hole up in a mountain during the First World War in order to escape deportation and genocide from the Turks. (more…)
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Black fatigue UK
Not all imports from America to the UK are healthy, but there is one which is definitely welcome in beleaguered Britain, tariff or no tariff: black fatigue. This construction has gone viral in the US, and British commentators are beginning to follow suit. It’s an interesting little buzz-phrase, “black fatigue”, because it means two totally different things at the same time. The term has cognitive dissonance. (more…)
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Now that singer Jermaine Jackson—brother of Michael, Janet, La Toya, and the eternally rotund and underappreciated Tito—has legally changed his name to Jermaine Jacksun, I think it’s high time to talk about American blacks and the ridiculous things they do with their names. (more…)
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The recent decline in Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) programs has exposed a harsh reality: black women are facing disproportionate job losses. While supporters claim DEI is a moral imperative, its removal indicates that many black professionals, especially women, relied on artificial hiring preferences rather than competitive skills. (more…)
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Lee Scrivner
Casinolabs
Exeter House Publishing, 2025Casinolabs is a satirical mystery, a psychological thriller novel set in Las Vegas by Lee Scrivner. The book’s protagonist Morton Waterhouse works as a greeter at the Roman themed casino, Caesars Empire, which is based on Caesars Palace. (more…)
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3,503 words
The recent death of Joe Nickell, the leading American skeptic of the paranormal, brought to mind a few questions about just what precise sort of things the committed investigator might have been skeptical about in life. Going around laughing at supposed backwoods rednecks saying “Hahaha, you believe in Bigfoot!” might have been OK, but skeptically questioning uncritical witness testimony about the existence and habits of certain other unlikely North American primates like Martin Luther King was quite another. (more…)
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Kelvin Pierce & Carole Donoghue
Sins of My Father: Growing Up with America’s Most Dangerous White Supremacist
Independently published, 2020The white advocate who achieved both notoriety and prominence in the 1990s, William Luther Pierce, had twin sons by his first wife Patricia Jones. One of his sons, Kelvin Pierce, wrote a memoir of growing up a child of an extremely prominent pro-white political activist. (more…)
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South Africa has recently been prominent in the US media. As we are all painfully aware, the mainstream media in the US, as in the West in general, is politically left-wing, and South Africa is not a good look for them just at the moment. In the 1980s, when their hero Nelson Mandela was ascendant, you couldn’t turn on the TV without being vexed by some documentary about apartheid. (more…)












