First the good news: 2022 is over. Now the bad news: 2023 is just beginning.
I am an incurably irascible person who wrote roughly 100 articles for Counter-Currents last year. (more…)
First the good news: 2022 is over. Now the bad news: 2023 is just beginning.
I am an incurably irascible person who wrote roughly 100 articles for Counter-Currents last year. (more…)
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Black-on-black violence is a serious problem that desperately needs to be swept under the rug.
If the American public were to ever be truly informed of how violent black people really are, especially to other black people, the embarrassing revelation may upset black people to the point where they get even more violent and kill even more black people. (more…)
The latest episode of Counter-Currents Radio is a solo Ask Me Anything with host Greg Johnson, and it is now available for download and online listening.
Topics discussed include:
00:01:05 Thank yous (more…)
Thomas Steuben was host Nick Jeelvy‘s guest on the latest episode of The Writer’s Bloc to review The Best Month Ever at Counter-Currents, going through the best and most interesting articles published, and it is now available for download and online listening. (more…)
One of my first memories of Will Smith is him decking the alien in Independence Day. I liked that film, with all of its subversive elements and even its anti-white moments. Before my red-pilling, I considered it a fun diversion. (more…)
Hollywood never expected such behavior from Will Smith, who was the black man who persuaded white Americans that he’d never rape their daughters. Photo: Wikimedia Commons
Hollywood never expected such behavior from Will Smith, who was the black man who persuaded white Americans that he’d never rape their daughters. Photo: Wikimedia Commons
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Last Sunday night, the world witnessed a black man being assaulted at the Academy Awards.
He was assaulted by another black man. Hopelessly complicating matters is the fact that the assailant was Will Smith, widely regarded as one of the most wholesomely antiseptic black celebrities on Earth.
In the late 1980s, when Smith, performing as part of duo DJ Jazzy Jeff & the Fresh Prince, won the first-ever Grammy for Best Rap Performance in honor of their almost toothache-inducingly corny song “Parents Just Don’t Understand,” there was an unspoken cultural consensus that when it came to blacks and whites, there were very fine people on both sides. (more…)