Month: February 2026
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Saturday, February 28th: Greg Johnson and David Zsutty discuss the Iran crisis. Join us at the normal time:
Noon Pacific, 3pm Eastern, 9 pm Central Europe at:
- Odysee: https://odysee.com/@countercurrents/ccradio
- DLive: https://dlive.tv/Counter-Currents
- Send questions & donations to Entropy: entropystream.live/countercurrents
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February 27, 2026 F. Roger Devlin
Now at a Special Pre-Order Price until Saturday!
F. Roger Devlin’s Sexual Utopia in Power
(Expanded Edition)F. Roger Devlin
Sexual Utopia in Power
Expanded Edition
San Francisco: Counter-Currents, 2026
236 pagesRelease Date: February 28, 2026. Special pre-order price until then. (more…)
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You can order Greg Johnson’s Loving Our Own here

You can order Greg Johnson’s Loving Our Own here
1,382 words
A bandit hides a sack of gold by burying it in an orchard. Centuries pass. A farmer planting a tree discovers the bandit’s gold. Was this meant to happen? It seems not. The bandit’s purpose was to hide the gold. The farmer’s purpose was to plant a tree. When their purposes crossed, the gold was discovered. But it was neither man’s intention. It just turned out that way. We call such an event an “accident.”
If you find this argument unconvincing, the proper response is to offer evidence that the discovery was no accident. At this point, however, many people will dismiss the requirement to supply empirical evidence. Instead, they will declare a general metaphysical axiom: “There are no accidents.” (more…)
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Here is a tricky hypothetical dilemma which might not sit well with the American Dissident Right. But it may tell us a lot about ourselves.
If we had to choose between complete remigration from the United States or from Western Europe—with nothing in between—what would it be? What is dearer to our hearts? (more…)
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February 27, 2026 Jonathan Bowden
Jonathan Bowden’s Suck, Part 4
The Odinic Rite
You can buy Jonathan Bowden’s Extremists: Studies in Metapolitics here.

You can buy Jonathan Bowden’s Extremists: Studies in Metapolitics here.
3,202 words
Part 4 of 7
Edited by Greg Johnson and Peter Jacobi
In 1995, Jonathan Bowden self-published his Collected Works in 6 volumes (London: Avant-Garde, 1995), edited by Jürgen Schwartz, one of Bowden’s pen names. The six volumes comprise 27 distinct books, 12 of which had been previously published. Altogether, the Collected Works contain more than 2,600 pages of rare early Bowden. (more…)
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Ronald Beiner
Radical Right Ideologues in the Age of Trump: Heralds of Nihilism
New York: Routledge, 2026Ronald Beiner and I go way back. In 2018, Beiner published Dangerous Minds: Nietzsche, Heidegger, and the Return of the Far Right, which I reviewed at Counter-Currents.[1] Beiner’s book warns academics that it is dangerous to teach Nietzsche and Heidegger because they are profoundly illiberal thinkers who will corrupt the youth. As exhibits, he points to such Right-wing luminaries as Richard Spencer and Alexander Dugin. (more…)
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The ongoing buildup in the Middle East is unlikely to be symbolic or a bargaining ploy for the Art of the Deal. Israel’s (and thus Trump’s) conflict with Iran is not about Iran’s nuclear program which is perpetually 1-2 weeks away from making a bomb. It’s about establishing Greater Israel before American support ends due to the Epstein files and the great Boomer die off.
A poll I conducted for the Homeland Institute shows that support for Israel isn’t just declining. That decline is accelerating. (more…)
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Spencer Morrison
How Tariffs Will Bring Our Jobs Home & Revive the American Dream
Washington, D.C.: Calamo Press, 2025“In 1721 Prime Minister Robert Walpole instituted a coherent trade policy which was explicitly designed to turn England into the world’s factory. This was based on Walpole’s observation – the same observation made by King Edward III or Queen Elizabeth I before him – that it was far more profitable to sell refined goods than raw goods. It was better to sell cloth than wool, ships than lumber, and swords than iron ingots.”
–Spencer Morrison (more…)
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As Counter-Currents’ Royal Correspondent, I feel it is time I weighed in on l’affaire de Andrew, formerly known as Prince. I knew that Andrew was bad years before any of this Epstein stuff came to light. Of all the senior royals, he was the one the staff seemed to hate most. “F— off,” he is supposed to have told one servant who was assigned to wake him up in the morning. Then there’s the small matter of his stuffed animals, estimated at between 40 and 70, depending on who you talk to. These must be arranged on his bed in a specific order, or Andrew reportedly has a royal fit. (more…)
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2,144 words
More respondents now say that the US-Israeli relationship is a net negative than a net positive. Declining support for Israel is likely accelerating.
The number of respondents who said they support airstrikes on behalf of Israel fell from 37% in July, 2025, to 27.9%. This drop was largely driven by Republicans.
The 27.5% who support striking Iran are outnumbered by the 52.2% who oppose it.
A US strike on Iran could cost Republicans 4.7% of the white vote in the midterms, including 13.8% of white voters age 18-29.
48.3% of respondents said they can think of a concrete example of Israel hurting America interests, up from 41.9% in 2025 and 29.3% in 2024. Only 29.3% claim they can think of an example of Israel aiding American interests.
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The British political landscape has shifted more in the past five years than it did over the preceding century. By the mid-19th century, the Whig Party had disbanded (as the American Whigs also did at around the same time) or transformed into the Liberal Party. The turn of the 20th century saw the creation of the Labour Party, and a political binary that would last for over 100 years. (more…)
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Balaji Srinivasan
The Network State
Self-Published, 2022M.L. Cavanaugh, professional military strategist, defines strategy as “…the purposeful orientation toward success in a complex, competitive conflict.” Regardless of the situation at hand, whether Clausewitz’s “politics by other means” or just plain politics, strategic actions ought to be intelligently and systematically designed to gain control of the contested environment. In this respect, the Right’s current strategic posture can only be described as wanting. (more…)










