2,388 words
Edited by Alex Kurtagić
Part 2 of 2
Editor’s Note:
The following is an excerpt from Jonathan Bowden’s Vermin. (more…)
2,388 words
Edited by Alex Kurtagić
Part 2 of 2
Editor’s Note:
The following is an excerpt from Jonathan Bowden’s Vermin. (more…)
3,017 words
Edited by Alex Kurtagić
Part 1 of 2
Editor’s Note:
The following is an excerpt from Jonathan Bowden’s Vermin. The book was written sometime between 1990 and 1991. The text has only been lightly edited for punctuation, spelling, and capitalization.
1,594 words
English original here
Quando ele chegou na Alemanha em 1978, Aleksandr Zinoviev havia trabalhado por anos nos campos da lógica e da metodologia científica aplicadas a sistemas sociais. Sua pesquisa e experiência pessoais no mundo soviético lhe permitiram publicar muitas obras dedicadas a seu país e ao sistema comunista. (more…)
A persistent theme among critics of Jews—particularly those on the pre-World War II right—has been that the Bolshevik revolution was a Jewish revolution and that the Soviet Union was dominated by Jews. This theme appears in a wide range of writings, from Henry Ford’s The International Jew, to published statements by a long list of British, French, and American political figures in the 1920s (more…)
for Robert Conquest
I.
Each day Naftaly greets a prison train.
Two days ago: spies and reactionaries,
yesterday: kulaks from Ukraine,
this morning: counter-revolutionaries.
Tikkun Olam*
(Ekaterinburg, Russia, 17 July 1918)
His mouth agape, as though still asking questions,
the Tsar lies at the end of his long reign.
(Blue lips almost struggle to explain,
caught in the halfway realm of last expressions.) (more…)
English original here
Durant l’été 1942 – alors que les Allemands étaient au sommet de leur puissance, totalement inconscients de l’approche de la tempête de feu qui allait transformer leur pays natal en enfer – le philosophe Martin Heidegger écrivit (pour un cours prévu à Freiberg) les lignes suivantes, que je prends dans la traduction anglaise connue sous le titre de Hölderlin’s Hymn “The Ister”: [1] (more…)
1,239 words
Edited by Kerry Bolton
Editor’s Preface:
The first of these reflections was written in June of 1950. It shows that Yockey had already adopted a “neutralist” position for Europe vis-à-vis America and Russia during the “Cold War.” (more…)
French translation here
In the Summer of 1942 — while the Germans were at the peak of their powers, totally unaware of the approaching fire storm that would turn their native land into an inferno — the philosopher Martin Heidegger wrote (for a forth-coming lecture course at Freiberg) the following lines, which I take from the English translation known as Hölderlin’s Hymn “The Ister”:[1] (more…)
Published in December 1952 as “What is Behind the Hanging of the Eleven Jews in Prague?”
On Friday, November 27, there burst upon the world an event which, though small in itself, will have gigantic repercussions in the happenings to come. It will have these repercussions because it will force a political reorientation in the minds of the European elite. (more…)
If a criminal gang comes to power, then they will use criminal means to conduct their policies.
État Français
In May 1940 Germany invaded France and the Low Countries. Paris, the French capital, was occupied on June 14, 1940.
France was divided into a German occupation zone in the north and west, a small Italian occupation zone in the southeast, and an unoccupied zone, the zone libre (free zone), in the south. (more…)