Tag: overpopulation
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In a previous essay, “Towards a New European Palingenesis,” I argued that the first step towards returning to some semblance of civilizational normality begins with the Dissident Right’s realignment back towards the timeless principles of the natural world, namely hierarchy and order. (more…)
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Shortly after publishing the article discussing “The War Against Whites in Advertising,”I received a lot of comments, messages, and social media posts – the support for the article was tremendous, thank you. One message we received was in regards to the “Banned German oral sex Sprite commercial.” The reader wrote us and asked us to look into the commercial. What I found was far more interesting than even the reader might have known. The video is below. (more…)
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In 1814, the Russian writer Ivan Krylov wrote a fable entitled “The Inquisitive Man”: a man visits a museum and observes all sorts of exhibits while completely overlooking an elephant on show. (more…)
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One of the many paths to power for alt-right ideas would be to control substantial elements of the federal government. This scenario has major limitations given the Constitution and the inertia that exists in the American system due to the nebulous divisions of sovereignty it imposes. (more…)
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Editor’s Note:
The following is an excerpt from chapter 16 of Savitri Devi’s The Lightning and the Sun. The title is editorial.
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Editor’s Note:
The following is an excerpt from chapter 16 of Savitri Devi’s The Lightning and the Sun. The title is editorial.
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September 23, 2014 Marian Van Court
Ask a Eugenicist
Fear of a Brighter Future786 words
1. Lately, the issue of over-population has pretty much gotten drowned out by other problems in the world. But wouldn’t well-educated people be more likely to know about it, and take it seriously, than poorly-educated people? (more…)
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October 29, 2012 Jack Donovan
The Cycle
Fecundity Demands a Cruel Balance in Anthony Burgess’ The Wanting Seed
“. . . one could not perhaps, after all, and it was a pity, make art out of that gentle old liberalism. The new books were full of sex and death, perhaps the only materials for a writer.”