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[Majorityrights Central] Empires, the Chinese Mind, a theoretical nationalism of ethnicity Posted by Guessedworker on Saturday, 14 February 2026 01:54. [Majorityrights Central] Gemini - not an identical twin to ChatGTP Posted by Guessedworker on Friday, 06 February 2026 16:58. [Majorityrights News] Warburg on the impact of Russian forces’ loss of access to Starlink Posted by Guessedworker on Friday, 06 February 2026 10:17. [Majorityrights News] Toast à la Little Saint James Posted by Guessedworker on Wednesday, 04 February 2026 23:48. [Majorityrights News] Southport, migrant hotels, the national flag, and Amelia Posted by Guessedworker on Monday, 02 February 2026 00:14. [Majorityrights Central] Argot Rosetta Stone For GW/Heidegger/Etter Posted by James Bowery on Saturday, 31 January 2026 17:18. [Majorityrights Central] ChatGPT redux Posted by Guessedworker on Thursday, 29 January 2026 01:11. [Majorityrights News] The national revolution in Iran cannot be stopped Posted by Guessedworker on Saturday, 10 January 2026 00:38. [Majorityrights Central] Into the authoritarian world redux Posted by Guessedworker on Saturday, 03 January 2026 17:56. [Majorityrights News] Moscow Times: Valdai residents report no sign of drones attacking Putin residence Posted by Guessedworker on Tuesday, 30 December 2025 11:33. [Majorityrights News] Paul Warburg on America’s self-destructive new strategy Posted by Guessedworker on Tuesday, 16 December 2025 12:32. [Majorityrights Central] Thoughts on Mark Collett’s strategy for nationalism in the British future Posted by Guessedworker on Friday, 24 October 2025 15:01. [Majorityrights Central] Living in the Jewish Mind: Part One Posted by Guessedworker on Monday, 29 September 2025 09:37. [Majorityrights News] Nationalism on the Kramatorsk front. Posted by Guessedworker on Saturday, 20 September 2025 15:55. [Majorityrights Central] And Chat GPT just the same Posted by Guessedworker on Monday, 08 September 2025 15:18. [Majorityrights Central] Grok the modern nationalist Posted by Guessedworker on Sunday, 07 September 2025 19:14. [Majorityrights Central] Principles, parts, processes of ethnic nationalism, Part 1: inflection? Posted by Guessedworker on Thursday, 31 July 2025 12:03. [Majorityrights Central] A window onto a world of Russo-Chinese hegemony Posted by Guessedworker on Tuesday, 08 July 2025 20:47. [Majorityrights Central] The DT takes the first step on the journey Posted by Guessedworker on Thursday, 03 July 2025 05:02. [Majorityrights News] Iranian comment machine switched off by Israeli bombs Posted by Guessedworker on Wednesday, 25 June 2025 09:07. [Majorityrights Central] After Casey and the ensuing child sexual exploitation inquiry Posted by Guessedworker on Tuesday, 17 June 2025 00:21. [Majorityrights News] 4 minutes and 43 seconds of drone warfare history - updated Posted by Guessedworker on Wednesday, 04 June 2025 16:50. [Majorityrights Central] An approaching moment of Russian clarity Posted by Guessedworker on Sunday, 11 May 2025 12:34. [Majorityrights Central] “It’s started. You ignored us. See where it’s going to get you.” Posted by Guessedworker on Sunday, 04 May 2025 00:42. [Majorityrights News] Another dramatic degradation of Russia’s combat capacity Posted by Guessedworker on Wednesday, 23 April 2025 08:49. [Majorityrights Central] A British woman in Ukraine and an observer of Putin’s war Posted by Guessedworker on Monday, 14 April 2025 00:04. [Majorityrights News] France24 puts an end to Moscow’s lie about the attack on Kryvyi Riy Posted by Guessedworker on Monday, 07 April 2025 17:02. [Majorityrights News] If this is an inflection point Posted by Guessedworker on Thursday, 03 April 2025 05:10. [Majorityrights News] Sikorski on point Posted by Guessedworker on Friday, 28 March 2025 18:08. [Majorityrights Central] Piece by peace Posted by Guessedworker on Wednesday, 19 March 2025 08:46. [Majorityrights News] Shame in the Oval Office Posted by Guessedworker on Saturday, 01 March 2025 00:23. [Majorityrights News] A father and a just cause Posted by Guessedworker on Tuesday, 25 February 2025 23:21. [Majorityrights Central] Into the authoritarian future Posted by Guessedworker on Friday, 21 February 2025 12:51. [Majorityrights Central] On an image now lost: Part 2 Posted by Guessedworker on Saturday, 15 February 2025 14:21. This evening the BBC News website is running an article headed Violent immigrants fuelling crime:-
Now, I checked the Met’s website to see if there was a press release about this rather interesting new research. There wasn’t. But there were seven “news headlines” listed to the right of the front page, on each of which I clicked. The first link was to an all too typical “triple success story”. That was followed by two links to the jailing of the Crevice terrorists, then one to another six charged with terror offences, one to a top-brass speech on counter-terrorism, one to the jailing of four bank-robbers and, finally, one to a typically surreal PeeCee campaign the Met is running under the name of Communities Together. Elsewhere on the front page, and in true soviet style, the Met talks up its role in making London one of the safest cities in the world with, apparently, falling crime and rising detection rates. Meanwhile, the BBC website’s leading front page news story concerns growing pressure for a public enquiry into MI5’s handling of 7/7 intelligence. The lead story on the “England news page” ventures outside the capital to vibrant and unhideous Gorton in Manchester, where a “youth” managed to kill his 12 year old sister by shooting her in the head. Alone against this relentless torrent of diverse horrors, the BNP is putting up 880 candidates across the 10,500 council seats to be contested this Thursday in 312 English local authorities. That is immeasurably more realistic than the 1,000+ claimed by UKIP and the 1,419 of the Greens, and, of course, only a fraction of the effort being mounted by the three diversity-celebrating, mainstream parties. But it still represents a great step forward from the 363 who stood a year ago in that tranch of Britain’s 21,892 council seats where elections were then due. Media-wise, there has been some speculation that BNP councillors in Sandwell could increase from four to ten, and maybe snatch control of the council in the process. But by and large the concentration of the press and TV has been elsewhere, and little has been said about Nick Griffin’s boys and girls. The party itself, though, is brim-full of confidence from the warm public response it is receiving - even to the extent of running an article on its website advising giddy activists to keep their feet on the ground. So how high can they do?
If it were possible to sustainably support people at the current US standard of living with an ecological footprint (as little as 1/100 gha percapita) quite conceivably less than 1/10,000 of the current US ecological footprint (109 gha percapita)—and do so using reasonably low risk technologies at a capital cost (fitting the US’s entire footprint in a desert area the size of South Carolina) equal to one year’s GDP, you’d think some of the geniuses running our lives would come up with the solution. Well, maybe they just haven’t thought of this yet:
Just forty-eight hours of campaigning remain for the candidates in Super Thursday’s three elections in Britain. So this is as good a time as any to hazard a guess as to the outcomes. Or possibly not. There aren’t many experienced pundits prepared to do so because of complications inherent in all three elections. The council elections in England are horribly complicated because parties stand in some areas but not in others. Labour has candidates in only about half the seats on offer. No party is standing across the board. But the list systems employed for the Scottish and Welsh Assembly elections don’t make prediction easy, either. They were plainly designed to maintain the liberal-left pro-Westminster status quo, and to prevent nationalism (that’s the constitutional variety, of course) from ever placing a hand on the tiller. In Scotland, 73 of the 129 MSPs are elected to single-member constituencies and 56 are chosen for one of eight regions using proportional representation. The cost of this system to its architect, the late Donald Dewar, was the Genscherisation of Scottish politics. Labour, as the eternal largest party in Scotland, may never be able to govern alone. A permanent place at the governing table was, therefore, the Scottish LibDems for the asking. When I last ventured into Scottish political punditry, on January 13th I presumed that the SNP would be forced to make common cause with the Scottish Conservatives. At the time Labour and the SNP were pretty much neck and neck in the polls, but headed in opposite directions. So I predicted that the real poll would give the SNP 35% and Labour 30%, and these figures are now reported by the major polling organisations. But I also predicted that sufficient shy Conservatives would support David Cameron and his Scottish leader, Annabel Goldie, in the voting booth to make an SNP/Con coalition viable. In fact, the opinion polls have not been kind to the Conservatives, and it seems unlikely that they will gain on their 18 MSPs from the last Parliament. Meanwhile Labour is eyeing a “traffic light” coalition with the Scottish LibDems and Greens. The LibDems, however, are not to be trusted. They will want more from Alex Salmond than the Environment portfolio that would go to the Greens in the Labour’s three-party arrangement, and they will get it. One thing is certain. Whichever way the LibDem’s eventually go they will try to present the decision as one of high principle. Re-enter an administration with Labour and they are acting on their first duty is to preserve the Union. Go with Salmond and Co and they are acting on their first duty to the Scottish electorate, who made the SNP the largest party in the new Parliament. So, am I going to predict what evil little thoughts are spinning round and round inside LibDem brains? Surprisingly, yes. It is always possible to seek “assurances” and “guarantees” on a referendum three years in the future. But how, if such are forthcoming and are demonstrably reasonable, can the LibDems reject them and face the electorate again without bringing the entire system into disrepute, and risking grave and lasting damage to themselves? No, they will follow their ultimate self-interest. It will be Salmond who leads the next administration at Holyrood. And everything else I wrote about on January 13th, including the forthcoming death of the Labour Party (to the lasting benefit of the BNP), will come to pass in the fullness of time.
Going from The Top 100 cities with Youngest Population (pop. 5000+), the ones with people looking like they’re reproducing the fastest are:
* Estimated by empirical formula based on known data from Kiryas Joel: Median Age/1.5
Dr Tomislav Sunic writing under his heading of “American neo-paganism in his book, Homo americanus. Now, I’ve put together this quote because it contains both halves of what I suppose we must call the Christianity Question, namely:- 1) The role of the Bible in communicating the Jewish materialistic worldview, out of which came the obsessive 20th Century drive for world improvement. All liberalism’s children, including communism, democratism, predatory capitalism, even anti-semitism in Tom’s view, are just secular offshoots of this strange, borrowed Levantine faith. And there is no end to it as long as we draw water from that well. 2) The desirability and grave difficulty of recovering mythological value for Europeans (which Tom qualifies as “the quest for their ancestral heritage”). I am going to make a few observations about both issues. I do so with some nervousness about treading on hallowed ground. I am a stranger to faith myself and would not, even if I was able, wish to follow Richard Dawkins’ tasteless precedent. I am not, therefore, making a case against faith. My case against Christianity is the case against the leaden characteristics of the Jewish god. With that caveat then, here goes.
Tucson, Arizona is known for its cowboys. I recall visiting there circa 1990 and seeing civilians walking the streets with holstered fire arms. With that sort of culture, I don’t think you can simply dismiss some of the threats, that are made within this town meeting, against the vicious traitors running Tucson these days:
Two new experiences for me over the last few days have been commenting at the Guardian - twice - and at Alex Linder’s blog. The Guardian stuff was a little tricky in terms of striking a publishable note. But there was something very familiar about the thinking of its commenters. A bit like Samizdata without the guns. Or maybe This Inverted World without the race-realism (hell, when I think about it, I get into trouble every place I go). But one of our wise and honoured commentariat said it was possible to get published on the Guardian threads, and he was right. The second new experience was just a single comment on a very good Michael O’Meara piece at VNN. It was his take on Le Pen’s disappointing result - superior to my effort on the same subject, I think. Michael is a deep thinker, and I suspect that he understands as much about the desirability of a synthesis between a philosophy of the right and racial nationalism as any man in America. Today, the VNN blog (not the main page) put up a post that read “VNNForum.com Arranging New Server:”. VNN’s existing hoster had informed them that “The content on your sites is not something that we are able to accept or are willing to host here at cari.net. Per our CEO your account will be terminated immediately.” That’s something you’ll never read at the Guardian. But you’ll never read Michael O’Meara, either.
My father, an Englishmen, served in 1944 as a Flight Lieutenant and pilot with 75 Squadron Royal New Zealand Airforce. My grandfather was a medical orderly in the Gallipoli Campaign of April-December 1915. Through these tenuous links I claim some small interest in ...
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Of Note MR Central & News— CENTRAL— Gemini - not an identical twin to ChatGTP by Guessedworker on Friday, 06 February 2026 16:58. (View) ChatGPT redux by Guessedworker on Thursday, 29 January 2026 01:11. (View) Into the authoritarian world redux by Guessedworker on Saturday, 03 January 2026 17:56. (View) — NEWS — Toast à la Little Saint James by Guessedworker on Wednesday, 04 February 2026 23:48. (View) Comments![]()
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