The Tyranny of Individualism in a Liberal Democratic Society by Welf Herfurth (This article contains one sick photo. I included it in the article to show how perverted society has become, at least in my opinion - Welf Herfurth) 1. Introduction This is an article divided up, roughly, into two halves. The first concerns liberalism, or what liberalism has become. It details a transition in liberalism – from a cult of elections and parliaments, to a cult of doing your own thing (even if that involves sexual and other debauchery). The second half outlines what I consider to be the New Right antidote to the poison of modern liberalism, and explores some of the ideas of a liberal democratic anti-intellectual, Karl Löwenstein, who, in 1937, wrote a paper describing some of the political techniques used by the fascist political movements of the time. Some of those techniques are still being used by nationalists around the world (Hungary, Sweden, Russia, Britain, etc.), and, in my opinion, we in Australia can apply them equally as successfully here. 2. What is liberalism really? Nowadays, one can read, in the Western liberal democratic press, daily denunciations of General Musharaff of Pakistan and the Burmese Junta. The two dictatorships have attracted media attention recently because of their flagrant crackdowns on ‘liberal democratic’ political opponents (or at least, opponents who the Western media assumes are liberal democratic). Now and then, other dictatorships and/or authoritarian regimes will occupy the spotlight. One recent case is Georgia, which is led by an American-backed liberal democrat, Mikhail Saakashvili, who came to power through an ‘Orange Revolution’-type coup (nicknamed the ‘Rose Revolution’) in 2003, but is now in danger of being overthrown, and now, as a result, has declared a state of emergency and is using state repression – including tear gas and rubber bullets – to subdue the populace. A perennial target of the Western media is Vladimir Putin. Despite his massive support among the Russian people, and massive election results in his favor, the Western media still considers him to be ‘undemocratic’ and ‘illiberal’, and upholds his critics – small groups of ‘liberal democratic’ dissidents, who have no popular support, and no agenda beyond being anti-Putin – as being more ‘democratic’, and certainly more morally worthy. So we have a collection of countries – Burma, Pakistan, Fiji, Russia and others – which are manifestly illiberal and democratic in the eyes of Western liberal democrats. But what is it, exactly, that makes our liberal democracies so good? Why are they preferable to these dictatorships and authoritarian regimes? The answer is, simply, that people in liberal democracies are ‘more free’ – in fact, they are ‘free to do their own thing’. To explain. One of the objections the Western liberals have against Iran is that supposedly Iran (along with other conservative Islamic States) imposes a strict dress code upon women. Women are allowed to dress freely in the West, as well as engage in nude sunbathing and the like: part of that, in my view, is because of the Western cultural heritage (particularly in the northern European countries) which traditionally has given more freedom to women compared to, for instance, the Mediterranean cultures of North Africa and the Middle East. But according to the liberals, this freedom has nothing to do with the West and its cultural heritage, but is, or at least should be, universal. What is more, that freedom should be forced on to countries with a low regard for the freedom of women, and even on ones (like South Africa or Papua New Guinea) with a high incidence of rape. Israel is held up as a model to other Arab nations – ‘the only democracy in the Middle East’ – because of, among other reasons, its high degree of personal freedom (which translates into a thriving gay and ecstasy culture). Such a level of freedom is ‘Western’. Consistent liberals, however, will acknowledge that liberal freedom cuts both ways: a recent article in the British Guardian newspaper denounces the fact that the secularist regime in Tunisia encourages harassment of women wearing the hijab and men wearing beards. A country needs more than a high level of personal freedom to qualify as a ‘democracy’ in the eyes of the West, of course. For one thing, there must be a separation of powers: the executive, judiciary and legislature must be separate. And, as Carl Schmitt would say, there must be debate: all legislatures must go through the farcical process of debating the pros and cons of each piece of legislation before the members vote on it (even though the passage of each bill is determined, well in advance, along party lines). The Israeli parliament, the Knesset, allows plenty of debate, all right – mostly on the topic of how best to kill, starve or drive out the Palestinians, or who to bomb first (Iran or Lebanon or Syria?). Because of the daily debates in the Knesset, Israel qualifies as a ‘liberal democracy’. On top of that, there are other requirements: elections, a multi-party system… These days, however, there are many countries which do have elections, and an ostensible multi-party system, which are still condemned as ‘un-free’ and ‘un-democratic’: Russia, Belarus, Iran, Syria, Egypt, Tunisia, Venezuela. The Western liberals claim that the governments of these respective countries repress the political opposition, fail to hold elections which are completely, a 100% ‘free and fair’ (that is, meeting the Jimmy Carter electoral observer-standard), reduce the legislature to a rubber stamp, and censor journalists. The worst thing about these countries is that they do not see changes of government: an opposition party is rarely, if ever, voted in: so they are de facto single party States. So, then, these countries are situated in the hazy no-man’s land between complete dictatorship and complete liberal democracy. (And even pro-Western countries like Singapore and Malaysia fit into this category). Some are worse (or better) on the liberal democratic scorecard than others: Russia and Syria tolerate opposition political parties more than Syria and Iran – just barely. In many cases, e.g. Russia, Belarus and Iran, a real opposition exists. In other cases, e.g., Venezuela and Egypt, there is a political opposition which does win seats in parliament, but suffers from repression. Again, though, we have to ask: what is all this freedom for? Surely elections, multi-party systems, frequent changes of government, the freedom of the press to snipe and criticise the government of the day, parliamentary debates, cannot be an end in themselves? Was Iraq invaded to give the Iraqis these dubious blessings? No: the answer is that the Iraqis were not free, as the Israelis are (or as Americans are) – not free to be gay, for instance, or drop ecstasy pills, or consume pornography, or to cross-dress. The Iraqis, and the Iranians, must reach the lofty status of Israel, which sent a transvestite singer to the Eurovision song contest – and won. Ahmedinejad attracted much Western condemnation for his insistence that ‘There are no gays in Iran’ (a mistranslation: he really said that there is no gay culture in Iran like there is in the West). The most strident criticisms against the Iranian political system is that it is run by Mullahs (democratically elected or not) who ‘repress the rights of women’ and repress gays. This freedom occurs within a context, a structure, of course: in the West, and in Israel, the consumption of drugs like ecstasy is not legal, or de facto legal. It is merely widespread and socially acceptable – the outcome of a liberal society. (Whereas the consumption of heroin and ice, on the other hand, is not socially acceptable). It is fine to use drugs like ecstasy, marijuana and cocaine, or be a homosexual, or dress as a Goth or an Emo, or for a man to dress as a woman, so long as it does not harm others (to the extent that the consumption of ice and heroin does). If women are to be allowed to dress immodestly (immodestly in comparison to Iranian standards), this does not stem from traditional Western freedoms granted to women, and to tolerance of nudity, but to a woman’s universal right to freedom of self-expression. Some countries are more socially conformist than others: Japan springs to mind. Ironically, America, up until the 1960s, used to be a very conformist country. One only has to look at the films from that time, the fashion magazines, newsreel footage, to see this. Francis Parker Yockey wrote on this topic in Imperium (in the chapter ‘America’, under the heading ‘World outlook’). The passage is lengthy, but is worth reproducing here in its entirety:
All one can say is: how things have changed. America is now the land of the non-conformist, in every way in which Europe was supposed to be. In Europe in the twentieth century, the cultivation of one’s personality – i.e., emphasising one’s differences from the rest, one’s eccentricities – was always tolerated, if not encouraged. (The one exception? Nationalism: if you are a nationalist, and against multi-cultism, you are a Nazi, fascist, racist, bigot, etc., etc). Non-conformism was part and parcel of the European aesthetic and intellectual tradition. America, though, had always resisted this – being the land of the conformist, the ‘square’, the ‘average man’. That was until the 1960s. I would hazard that the main cause was the shift in American popular culture. In the fields of music and film, the role of the individual genius, in revolt against society’s norms, came to the forefront. Even the films like Top Gun and Flashdance, which embody the ethos of the conservative 1980s – supposedly a return to traditional ‘American values’ – celebrate the heroic, non-conformist individual. There are still plenty of ‘average Joes’ depicted in American popular culture, but the protagonists of television shows like Desperate Housewives and House are eccentrics – the ‘average Americans’ are background characters. The odd thing is that this attitude of individualism, eccentricity and non-conformity has filtered through to the American (and Western) population at large, and, in the end, has become a new kind of conformity. Everyone has to be different: the subsumption of oneself to a group, or a higher ideal, or to anything besides one’s own individual desires and preferences is an offence against the liberal spirit of the age. And it is this individualism which lies at the heart of modern liberal democracy. A country like Germany may be only barely liberal democratic – with its State control of the media, its repression of nationalists and Holocaust deniers, its thousands of political prisoners. In this, it is not so different from a country like Egypt or Tunisia. But where Germany is genuinely liberal democratic is its parliamentary debates, its multi-party system – and its tolerance of ethical hedonism and individualism. One cannot wear a ‘fascist’-style political uniform: that would be ‘Nazi’. But one can prance around, high on drugs, in a strange costume, at the Berlin ‘Love Parade’, a kind of annual Mardi Gras event where the attendants openly consume party drugs like ecstasy – while the police turn a blind eye. (In Singapore, or Belarus, it would be a different story). 3. Freedom and degradation My own views on this are as follows. Freedom to take drugs in public, or for gays to marry one another, or to dress ‘differently’ (i.e., dress like Paris Hilton, Britney Spears or Lindsay Lohan) are low on my list of priorities. Freedom to take a revisionist view of German history, and the history of the Second World War, or to criticise immigration, are, on the other hand, very high. My view is that if that freedom is not possible, then other freedoms are not worth having at all. From my perspective, Russia is more free than the West. Russia, like the West, makes the Allied-Communist interpretation of the Second World War, part of its State ideology; but, unlike the West, it is indifferent to those who disagree with the government’s line on those subjects. Russia does not persecute people who take an alternative view of the history of WWII; and it could not care less if Russian nationalists oppose immigration. A German with a long history of nationalist activism, like myself, can walk the streets of Moscow a free man; but is in danger of arrest if he visits his own country. Regarding the other freedoms – which my liberal democratic countrymen prize so highly – I am largely indifferent: the consumption of drugs, liquor, pornography, etc., have been part of civilisation ever since it existed; likewise, individualism, the right to act ‘crazy’ or different’, is part of European culture and history. (One only has to look at the Weimar Republic, with its cult of drugs and individualism. Because of the lack of individual identification with the community and the State, the Republic fell apart; out of the ashes arose the Third Reich). But a recent incident has forced me to reconsider my views. Recently, I took a holiday in the United States, and, while in San Francisco, happened to be in a main street where a local, American version of the German ‘Love Parade’ was passing through. As in Germany, the revellers were high on drugs, prancing around to music, and wearing outlandish clothes. Being a good tourist, I started taking photos on my digital camera. I then saw, out of the corner of my eye, a grossly overweight, middle-aged bearded man, entirely naked except for a pair of sneakers. He had shaved all the hairs off his body (except for the hairs on his face), and, judging by his even tan, must have been a frequently-practicing nudist. I then became aware that he was masturbating – openly, in front of everyone. I must admit I was completely taken aback. Thinking that no-one back home would believe me, I took photos of the man. He looked up, saw me, and continued to masturbate – and even struck poses. Finally, he finished doing what he was doing. Another of the attendees – another overweight person, this time a woman, dressed in strange attire (somewhat reminiscent of a Viking costume) – came up and hugged him. The man clearly must have been on drugs: ecstasy, fantasy, ice, goodness knows what. The essential thing is, it dawned on me that: this is the ‘freedom’ that George W. Bush speaks of; that he defends; that he insists on imposing on other countries through the unilateral use of military force. Liberalism has changed: from a doctrine of pluralism (manifested through a multi-party electoral system, parliamentary debates, a free press giving dissenting views) to a doctrine of complete individualism free of any restraints. The liberal argument now is that individuals should be given the maximum amount of freedom, and be allowed to do what they like, so long as those people are not ‘hurting others’. With this principle in mind, the Netherlands allows the smoking of marijuana; it also allows gay men to organise sex parties. Unfortunately for the Dutch liberals, the principle was challenged recently, when it was revealed that gay men, infected with AIDS, would lure young men to these parties, drug them with a date rape drug (called, appropriately, ‘Easy Lay’) and inject them AIDS-infected blood. This caused a scandal. But, presumably, the liberal position is: organising sex parties is OK; gays should be allowed to do what they like; they only cross the boundary between right and wrong when they hurt others – and injecting men with AIDS-infected blood is ‘hurting others’. The same principle applies to the revellers in the San Francisco Love Parade: the revellers high on drugs, masturbating publicly in the nude, were not ‘hurting others’. There may be laws on the books against indecent exposure, and the consumption of party drugs, but these are written by prudes, moralists, ‘wowsers’ (as the Australians like to call them). It’s OK for people to let their hair down once in a while and break those minor laws. Why not let people be free individuals and do their own thing? What is wrong with that? 4. Freedom and Tradition The answer is long and complex. I will give it as follows. Evola, in his work, gives an outline of the various kinds of spiritualities, as they have appeared in human civilisations: he identifies, following Nietzsche, a ‘Dionysian’ spirituality, which is a spirituality of shamanism - achieving altered states of consciousness through the use of drugs, alcohol and revelry. Evola has ambivalent views towards ‘Dionysianism’: on the one hand, he believes that it is an attempt to reach a mystical state of being which is truly ‘Traditionalist’; on the other hand, he thinks that is a mindless, debased spirituality, which breaks down all barriers, all hierarchies – between the sexes, between the classes, between all ethnic groups. What is more, ‘Dionysianism’ is a feminine spirituality – which explains the frequent association of the god Dionysos with female worshippers and revellers. Evola, of course, has nothing against femininity: merely the feminisation of men. Evola’s preference, as his readers know, is for the ‘Olympian’, ‘Solar’, ‘Apollinian’ spirituality, which is ‘virile’ (from the word viros, meaning male). Now, all this is rather metaphysical: but Evola was a nationalist philosopher, or at least a philosopher of a kind of nationalism which many nationalists today are sympathetic with. Certainly they reject ‘Dionysianism’, or at least, the debased elements. And clearly, in my view, the phenomena of the Love Parade, and the behaviour I saw there, fits into the category of ‘Dionysianism’. As a New Rightist, then, I must reject it. Evola writes of the ‘lunar’ spirituality, which rejects hierarchy and authority, and regards all men as ‘one’ – no matter their race or social position. Certainly, the self-debasement of the Love Parade fits into that category too. And it is a small leap from the ‘lunar’ spirituality of the Love Parade to the ideology of the Antifa. The Antifa objects to nationalism because that ideology draws distinction between races, and refuses to acknowledge the non-Western immigrant as being the equal, and deserving equal rights, as the indigenous Westerner. The Antifa accepts the immigrant, and the gay, as ‘brothers’. The stereotype of the ‘Lefty’ or ‘Crusty’ is someone who wears his hair in dreadlocks, Rastafarian-style, to show his affinity with the Negro, and smokes marijuana, which, as anyone who has tried it knows, is a notoriously egalitarian drug (which makes one accepting of all people and all things). All rather complex and metaphysical, true: but Evola’s descriptions get right to the heart of things. He was an eloquent man; not surprisingly, he was a poet as well as a philosopher, and could be described as the ‘poet of fascism’. No-one managed to put the tenets of that ideology in clearer terms than he did. 5. New Rightism in action All of this raises one question: what is that we from the New Right offer, precisely, which is in contrast to the individualism of the Love Parade and George W. Bush’s America? It is all very fine to talk of he nationalist’s affinity for ‘Olympian’ spirituality – one can be as ‘spiritual’ as one wants – but how does it manifest itself in our actions? As part of the research for this article, I have been looking at a number of film clips of nationalist rallies on YouTube, from Hungary, Rumania, Russia, Italy, Sweden, Britain, Greece. Despite the national differences, a number of similarities emerged. (These similarities were even present in the film clips from different times: I watched one of National Front demonstration in the 1970s, and one in 2007). One writer who identified those core elements is an American political scientist, Karl Löwenstein, who wrote a classic article, ‘Militant democracy and fundamental rights’, in the ‘American political science review’, volume 31/no. 3, 1937. The article is one of the most influential ever written: it consists mainly of recommendations for a series of ‘anti-racist’, ‘anti-fascist’ laws (against wearing uniforms, ‘defaming ethnic groups’, etc.) which have been put into practice by Germany, France and a number of other Western countries which have sought to clamp down on resurgent ‘fascism’ and ‘Neo-Nazism’ in their midst. It ought to rank as the holy scripture of the Antifa movement: except that Löwenstein preaches the state repression of nationalism, not in the name of multi-cultism, but of liberal democracy. But I will not dwell on this side of the Löwenstein doctrine, important as it is, here. I will instead quote a number of things he has to say on the subject of ‘fascism’ (loosely defined). In my view, he could almost be speaking of nationalism today. He remarks on the surprisingly international character of fascism:
He writes, disparagingly, that:
So how precisely does the ‘fascist technique’ work? Löwenstein writes:
The quasi-military structure and attributes of fascism are one of its distinguishing features:
He then goes on to list a few more of the ‘essential techniques’, and lists means of combating fascism through legislation:
That ‘militarism’ is applied, by the fascist, as follows:
Löwenstein describes the method of the ‘provocative march’:
He details, interestingly, the use of the weapon of ‘political abuse’:
In an unintentionally amusing passage, he takes note of the distinctly fascist method of using martyrs to exalt one’s cause – and dubious martyrs at that:
6. Fascism as technique? At first, when I read Löwenstein’s article, I was somewhat offended by it – in particular, by his characterisation of fascism as being mere ‘technique’, not a real ideology. After all, fascism attracted many intellectuals who gave fascism a well thought-out philosophy, an intellectual basis. And certainly, the post-war ‘neo-fascist’ writers – Yockey, Thiriart, Evola – gave fascism a real intellectual grounding. But, the more I thought about it, the more I saw that Löwenstein’s contention was true. After all, it has to be admitted that nationalism – which Löwenstein would classify, rightly or wrongly, as ‘fascist’ (and certainly his followers in the Bundesrepublik do) – is vague. What the liberal democratic media calls ‘policy detail’ has never been our strong suit. We are not used to contesting in elections, like the mainstream liberal democratic parties, and, when we do, we do not produce budgeted, carefully-crafted plans to improve children’s health care, combat global warming, fix petrol-price gouging, etc., like the Labor and Liberal parties are doing at this Australian federal election. Part of this is sheer lack of experience and money – whereas the mainstream liberal democratic parties have plenty of both, and are very good at organising the logistics of elections. New Rightism, more than anything else, is an ‘action’ movement, not a ‘talking’ movement, and the heart of our policy, if not worldview, lies in our day to day living: living in community, working in the community, transforming it through our actions. Nationalism, of course, does tend to elevate people who have fallen in battle – either through actual military conflict, or in the context of a political struggle – into martyrs. Of the film clips I saw, one was a commemoration of a Swedish nationalist martyr – Daniel Wretström, a 17 year old Swedish nationalist killed by immigrants; the other, a wreath-laying ceremony in Hungary commemorating the country’s servicemen who had fallen in WWII. The ultimate historical fascist martyr figure is, of course, Horst Wessel. There is a scene in ‘Triumph of the Will’ where assembled National Socialist personages sing the Horst Wessel Lied, accompanied by the inevitable salutes and giant banners: the camera focuses on Göring for a few moments, and one can see the beginnings of a tear forming in the hard man’s eye. Without a doubt, nationalists – whether today in Greece or Hungary or Russia, or in yesterday in France or Germany – rely heavily on emotion. These emotions are: indignation, against our liberal democratic and communist enemies; a feeling of the rightness of the cause; self-sacrifice; self-abnegation (which comes from service to a higher goal)… All of this is transmitted through formalities and ceremonies: the Swedish nationalists, for instance, put on a candle-lit vigil and procession for the young Wretström. (Swedish nationalists have set up a site, outlining the rules for the annual march, and meeting points. Click here).Whereas, in a liberal democracy, the Berlin Love Parade has replaced the torchlight processions of the SS: individuality takes the place of community as an object of veneration in the Bundesrepublik. Even liberal democrats have to admit that, compared to the political street theatre of nationalism, their brand of conventional politics is mundane. There is nothing in mainstream conservatism, social democracy, environmentalism, liberalism, etc., to compare with it. There is a real pleasure in being part of a crowd of demonstrators, marching past communists who are swearing, spitting, jeering, singing communist anthems, who are being held by mounted police (as in one of the old National Front film clips). It is a peculiar pleasure, to be sure, and not for everyone. But once one has a taste of it, one becomes addicted. I am often chastised by liberal democratic friends, and I have plenty of them, for being part of the so-called ‘Neo-Nazi’ nationalist scene: I retort to them, ‘What am I meant to do? Join the Liberal Party, attend boozy functions, sit among fat, middle-aged men in suits, and listen to speakers like Tony Abbott and Peter Costello drone on about the unions?’ The mainstream liberal democratic parties do not give anyone much of a scope for real political activism. What they are about is power to political parties but not the people they claim to represent. New Rightism, on the other hand, is activist-based: and it has the potential to encompass nearly all spheres of life. One other advantage of nationalism is that it is virtually indestructible. The National Front imploded after reaching a peak in the late 1970s: but it is still in action, albeit with reduced numbers, and this time demonstrating against Islamic immigration and gay marriage. Certain of the problems afflicting Britain have changed, but others remain the same. The prime example of nationalist indestructibility, though, is Germany and Eastern Europe. The Allies and the Soviets embarked on a campaign of unprecedented genocide against Germany and its Allies – with the intention of eliminating ‘fascism’. But nationalism has grown back. Part of the reason for nationalism’s success is that, being a technique, it is easy to apply in all manner of times and places. So why do some nationalist movements in some countries grow and others do not? I am biased on this. My belief is that, if the British nationalists, for instance, invested as much time and effort in constant, round the clock demonstrations – and taking the ‘war’ to the enemy, the communists and Antifa – as they do in trying to win council seats, they would achieve better results (and certainly earn themselves more media notoriety that way). The Internet has proven to be a boon to nationalism, but it has also made nationalists stay at homes – preventing them from going out, mixing with other nationalists on group activities (like hiking trips), meetings, conferences and the like, and engaging in demonstrations and rallies. The demonstration is really at the heart of nationalist ‘technique’. Demonstrations are a public show of power: they are political street theatre. What matters in a demonstration is force, strength. Large numbers are required – and flags on poles to make the nationalist crowd look bigger than it really is. Loudhailers, loudspeakers mounted on cars, whistles, drums (the National Front in the 1970s made effective use of drums), ect, are all important for drowning out the hateful cries of the enemy (with their inevitable boring chant of ‘Nazis out!’). It becomes a pitched battle between the nationalist and the communist counter-demonstrators: and the biggest and loudest crowd wins. I myself recognise the supreme importance of this: and the importance of getting as many nationalists and New Rightists as possible to attend a demonstration, and take the blows directed at them by the communist enemy. But nationalists, it has to be said, spend too much time on doctrinal disputes. On the National-Anarchist and New Right mailing lists, for example, there was a recent debate on whether or not ‘New Right’ and ‘National-Anarchism’ were appropriate names for our ideas. Should we not look for alternative names? Alternatives were suggested: e.g., ’New Left” (the affiliate of the New Right in Portugal actually calls itself ‘New Left’), ‘New Reason’ instead of ‘New Right’. One of the objections to the use of the term ‘New Right’ was that it may be confused with the Anglo-Saxon neo-liberal movement of the same name from the 1980s (as if the average man can remember back that far). As for ‘National-Anarchism’, are not nationalism and anarchism mutually exclusive concepts? All of this is somewhat missing the point. The early fascist activists cobbled together an ideology which was ‘Left’ as well as being ‘nationalist’: no doubt it confused a good many people. A typical response would have been: ‘I can’t tell if you people are Left or Right: your ideology is an incoherent mish-mash’. (Some commentators characterised German National Socialism, when it first appeared, as ‘conservative Marxism’). I am sure that Mussolini’s movement started off without a name: and that finally, at some point, someone felt that they had to give their rather loose collection of ideas a proper name, and someone came up with ‘fascism’. But what is in a name? And why do political ideas have to be consistently ‘Left’ or ‘Right’? Political theories, in my view, are not mathematical proofs, where every step proceeds logically from the other. The essential thing is to go out and do. The trouble is that the liberal democratic system wants the Left and Right to fight one another; it is happy with the Left-Right divide; it likes the simplicity of the concepts; it does not want people to think; rather, it wants them to be conditioned, to categorise themselves as green or socialist or conservative. That way, a person only sees himself in terms of that category: the ideology does the thinking for him. Which is why Greens feel that they have to fight nationalists, despite their similarities: Bob Brown and the Green Party have ordained that nationalism is evil, racist, and has nothing to do with environmentalism; so the individual ends up not thinking for himself, and instead obeys his party leaders and the dictates of the mainstream political consensus. 7. What to do Sometimes, when I look at the hostility nationalism generates – from the ‘militant democratic’ governments of Germany and France, in particular – I wonder why it is these governments are so afraid. Look at the footage of any nationalist march, and all you will see – in the last analysis – is a large group of men and women carrying flags and banners, walking along a road. But, from the way the liberal democrats and communists behave, such activities are heinous, and must be stopped by any means necessary. Nationalism will lead to a second Holocaust, etc., etc. (even when the marchers are British or Russian). My pragmatic response, though, is: so what? A bunch of people are marching down the street, waving flags with old Teutonic and Celtic symbols on them – what harm does it do? I wonder what would happen if the German government banned the prohibition of uniforms or Holocaust literature. Would mass riots and discord ensue? Would the Bundesrepublik cease to exist overnight? Simply because ‘fascism’ in the 1920s and 1930s became a Europe-wide movement, embracing millions of men and women, is no reason to believe that it will happen again. The pettiness and stupidity of the ‘militant’ liberal democrats expresses itself in actions like the withholding of two years worth of mail to Ernst Zündel, for example. Having said that: laws come, and laws go (Holocaust denial in Spain has just recently been legalised again) and there is no body of legislation in existence anywhere which has succeeded in shutting down nationalism completely. The Russian nationalists wear masks and uniforms at their rallies, and use the Roman salute; they also engage in paramilitary training, and even own their own Kalashnikovs. The Italians, on the other hand, labour under the same restrictions as the Germans: but that does not stop them from putting on large demonstrations. It is all a matter of working around the Löwenstein-style laws. The main strength of our movement is our organisation – our ability to mobilise large numbers of people for mass action. This, of course, occurs only under optimal circumstances – we waste a good deal of time debating doctrinal differences among ourselves, instead of going and doing what we do best. No doubt the demonstrators in Sweden, Hungary, Russia and other countries have, as individuals, a number of doctrinal differences with one another: but the main thing is that they were sufficiently united, and organised, to take to the streets in defiance of communism and militant anti-racism. Ideally, I would like political activists from all over Europe to converge on London – in particular, the financial district (the City of London) – for an annual pan-European anti-capitalist march. And if police and the media, and the communist enemy, descend en masse upon the march, all well and good. That will garner the attention that we need. Because of the location, we would be sure to get worldwide English media coverage, which is considerable. The main thing which is holding us back is wrong thinking – and lack of courage, or at least, an unwillingness to offend bourgeois proprieties. One German poster, at a mailing list I frequent, wrote recently: The so-called “free nationalists” are only free from responsible behaviours. They mimic American dress codes and copy antifa strategies which basically makes them appear as dangerous, violence-prone hooded hoodlums. If you disguise your face you not only have something to hide - you also won’t garner any sympathies from the populace…” That is a common fallacy among some nationalists. The fact of the matter is that the German populace have been trained to hate all forms of German nationalism; the same goes, to a milder extent, for the rest of the world. They are conditioned, Pavlov-style, to react with disgust. Non-German nationalism in the West is fast going the same way – that is, our liberal democratic masters in the media, the church, the parliament, the trade union leadership, the university, are training the Western masses to find it equally as abhorrent. The notion, then, that this hatred (and that is what it is) can be done away with by aping bourgeois manners, is wrong. Related to this is the fact that many people – especially young people – like outlaws and rebels. You can appeal to more people by trying not to appeal to anyone at all, by being yourself and by making your own values in contrast to the norms of the society you live. In popular culture, this fact has been known at least since the 1950s: James Dean, Marlon Brando, Elvis Presley, were marketed, deliberately, as moody, dangerous rebels – and all three of them made fortunes as a result. Many rock bands nowadays are still being marketed as being as rebellious as the Rolling Stones or the Sex Pistols. Although rock and roll rebellion has now become something of a tired old cliché, the youngsters never seem to get tired of it, as we see with the continuing popularity of likes of the EMO cult. Almost everyone understands this, except for the nationalists who are desperately trying to look respectable and liberal-democratic. Instead of acting independently and doing what has to be done, they are more concerned about what the apolitical consumer-orientated Zombies thinks about, and trying to appease them. Other nationalists have described their reluctance to refer to the Antifa enemy as precisely that: the Antifa. Why? Because if the Antifa are anti-fascist, it implies that their enemies – us – are ‘fascist’. And we can’t have that. I am surprised that Australians, of all people – a people who wrested this country from the Aborigines, and built a country and a State literally from the dirt, facing great personal hardship and struggle – are afraid of a mere word. To conclude: what we in the New Right offer is an alternative. Löwenstein is quite right when he says that ‘fascism’ is a method, of confrontation – and investing the political struggle with an honour, dignity and nobility (although he would not use those words). At the risk of sounding ‘irrationalist’ or ‘anti-intellectual’, we New Rightists have to make use of the method (and I am stressing the word method) and get to work – the time for talking is over. We have to show the world our anti-liberal alternative – our alternative to the tyranny of individualism in a liberal democratic society. Welf Herfurth is a political activist who lives in Sydney / Australia. He was born and raised in Germany. He can be contacted .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address). Comments:2
Posted by Welf Herfurth on Wed, 21 Nov 2007 05:28 | # I would say that the New Right here in Australia would use the graphiti answer if we would be reminded by the system to be polite to our enemies as well as towards the system…........ No more Mr Nice Guy 3
Posted by Chestertonian on Thu, 22 Nov 2007 02:28 | # Our problem is one of etiquette. Just as relations between races, religions, and sexes have been perverted and politicized by Jewish intellectuals, so to has etiquette been warped. A “Neo-etiquette” has arisen. This billboard is not a revolt against modern etiquette, but a confirmation of it. Today “Be polite” is seen as an authoritarian command and therefore an insult. Despite the majority of people now behaving like pigs, the implicate assumption contained in the statement—-that one needs to be reminded to be polite—- is a violation of neo-etiquette. Neo-etiquette encourages blindness by considering only individuals and never groups. If there is a single outlier in a set, no matter how many correspond to the assumption, the statement is classed as bad form. The same applies when considering races, religions, and sexes, and as a general concept carries the moniker “political correctness”. “Go f*** yourself”, while also something of a modern gaff, is infinitely less so than “Be polite”. Such swearing statements serve to lower everyone equally and are therefore encouraged to be used whenever possible. Every advanced civilization has had a standard of etiquette. Apparently ours “peaked” with the Victorians. It peaked insofar as it contributed positively to our societies. We can bring back civilization, but it will entail calling political correctness by its actual name: warped etiquette. Until we control our education, and therefore, our etiquette, a society-sustaining protocol in the West will remain a thing of history. 4
Posted by Duncan Tyyne on Sun, 25 Nov 2007 17:55 | # A thought-provoking essay with many interesting ideas. I think Mr. Herfurth should be invited for an interview on Majority Rights Radio. (Bring back the radio interviews, Soren!) With regards to Putin, Justin Raimondo of Antiwar.com does a fine job, in many articles, of defending him and Russia against Western liberal invective. Herfurth’s comments on the Western liberal attitude towards governments perceived as “undemocratic” reminded me of something I came across in the Chicago Sun-Times several years ago. In one of his columns, the loathsome Neil Steinberg remarked, after the Madrid train bombing and subsequent election of the anti-war Zapatero, that it was not surprising that Spain had “caved in to terrorism,” since its people were weak enough to put up with Franco for 36 years. Of course, the Spanish people were largely against the Iraq war long before the bombings, and many were willing to “put up with” Franco for a variety of reasons, not the least of which was his suppression of obese men masturbating in the streets. See http://www.revilo-oliver.com/rpo/Evils_of_Fascism.html And .in the words of Noam Chomsky: “Even a dictatorship can’t do everything it wants. It’s got to have some degree of popular support” (emphasis mine). It would not be alarming if Steinberg, who is a drunken idiot, were the only one who did not understand this. But his garbage is representative of the current party line. States that will not kowtow to the USA are undemocratic, no matter how popular their governments and leaders are. On the other hand, states that are in the USA’s pocket, no matter how repressive, are painted as “free,” or at least get the benefit of having their more barbarous features overlooked (as in the case of Saudi Arabia). In fact, in his discussion of the emphasis on personal freedom at the expense of what we might call real “political” freedom, Herfurth hits on a main tenet of current neocon propaganda. “So what if the middle class heart of America is being destroyed by globalism?” it seems to say. “We still have the freedom to take drugs, cross-dress, have sex with male prostitutes, and get rip-roaring drunk, all while waving Chinese-made American flags. The Islamofascists running Iran would never allow all that good stuff!” If this seems over the top, just look at the neocon favorite for president in 2008: Guiliani. A thrice-married, pro-choice, pro-homosexual politician who has appeared publicly in drag, he is nevertheless held up as a hero for his willingness to continue pulverizing the Middle East at the behest of Norman Podhoretz and other such lovelies. Any trace of what could be called conservative values are thus not only buried but even opposed: paleoconservatives who argue for them are smeared as “neo-fascists” in loose alliance with their Islamic counterparts. http://frontpagemag.com/Articles/Read.aspx?GUID={1E39E2B4-95CE-40D5-AD56-C50822DE1FBC} As for term “fascist” itself: it is little more than a smear in modern political discourse, especially as used by the neocons and the “Antifa” rabble with whom they have common ideological origins. When people remark to me that my own opinions sound “fascist,” however, I have always responded in the same way. If being a fascist means favoring the existence of a mega-powerful state that regulates every minute detail of people’s lives, I’m among the least fascist people who have ever lived. If, on the other hand, it means exclusiveness over inclusiveness, the primacy of the spiritual, and the holding of objective standards and commitment to excellence in public life, then guilty as charged. 5
Posted by James J OMeara on Mon, 26 Nov 2007 00:13 | # Welf, A lot of good stuff here, which would be well pondered by anyone in opposition to today’s establishment. However, I feel that you have taken the wrong turning in several places; and that these missteps are both common enough, and significant enough, to warrant some kind of rejoinder. For instance, right here, it seems as if the drugs you must have secretly given in SF began to kick in: “The essential thing is, it dawned on me that: this is the ‘freedom’ that George W. Bush speaks of; that he defends; that he insists on imposing on other countries through the unilateral use of military force.” Kozmik, dude! Unfortunately, just as true as any hippie’s revelation of our planet as a molecule in some big dude’s fingernail. Please allow an American to point out that Bush’s America does not at all resemble the Love Parade, nor does it intend to. The Love Parade is, literally, just a sideshow for the marks. Of course, there are the ‘San Francisco Democrats’ who serve as a false opposition. Your naked guy undoubtedly votes for them, precisely because he thinks they will put an end to Bush; more likely, he has figured out that they are a scam and doesn’t vote at all. The House Democrats are, in fact, led by a real, live, San Francisco Democrat; having been elected to oppose Bush, she has in fact facilitated him at every turn. You can’t attack everything you hate by pinning it on Bush. Your use of Evola, to present some kind of chain of links from the Love Parade to Bush, is equally off the mark: “Evola, in his work, gives an outline of the various kinds of spiritualities, as they have appeared in human civilizations: he identifies, following Nietzsche, a ‘Dionysian’ spirituality, which is a spirituality of shamanism - achieving altered states of consciousness through the use of drugs, alcohol and revelry. Evola has ambivalent views towards ‘Dionysianism’: on the one hand, he believes that it is an attempt to reach a mystical state of being which is truly ‘Traditionalist’; on the other hand, he thinks that is a mindless, debased spirituality, which breaks down all barriers, all hierarchies – between the sexes, between the classes, between all ethnic groups. What is more, ‘Dionysianism’ is a feminine spirituality – which explains the frequent association of the god Dionysos with female worshippers and revellers. Evola, of course, has nothing against femininity: merely the feminisation of men. Evola’s preference, as his readers know, is for the ‘Olympian’, ‘Solar’, ‘Apollinian’ spirituality, which is ‘virile’ (from the word viros, meaning male). “And clearly, in my view, the phenomena of the Love Parade, and the behaviour I saw there, fits into the category of ‘Dionysianism’.” [Not sure about that ‘clearly’] “As a New Rightist, then, I must reject it. Evola writes of the ‘lunar’ spirituality, which rejects hierarchy and authority, and regards all men as ‘one’ – no matter their race or social position. Certainly, the self-debasement of the Love Parade fits into that category too. And it is a small leap [Really?] from the ‘lunar’ spirituality of the Love Parade to the ideology of the Antifa.” I don’t have the time, space or interest to develop a full scale critique here, but let’s say this is all very…unhelpful. Evola does not set up the Dionysian and Apollonian as polar [as it were] opposites. They are dialectical moments, and the trick, the knack, the goal, is to reconcile them in a higher synthesis, as did the Greeks themselves. See, for instance, the first sections of Ride the Tiger, which take up the challenge laid down by Nietzsche. The two paths, A & D, wet and dry [The Hermetic Tradition], male and female, are what they are. It is the men who follow them who differ, and in fact it is how they use them [or let themselves be used by them] that reveals who they are. For some, the Dionysian path leads to a ‘promiscuous’ submergence into a Cosmic All, a night in which all cows are black, perhaps indeed the mindless happiness of the E user. But for the ‘differentiated man’, the Evolian, it is a challenge, to be overcome as a test of will, emerging [if successful] with a new, perhaps eternal, body and soul. Drugs are a perfectly valid tool [the ‘corrosive waters’ of the Hermetic and Tantric traditions] provided one has the proper attitude, that of the ‘differentiated man’, the man of Tradition. I hardly think Evola held men like Ernst Junger or Gottfried Benn to be ‘feminized’, or as likely to be found naked and masturbating on a street. Indeed the entire Classical world was permeated through and through with the insights of drug induced experiences. Consider this chain of quotes from the researches of Michael Hoffman [www.ego death.com]: “Ancient Greek ‘mixed wine’ specifically meant visionary-plant mixtures (Ruck 1978).” “A common standard “banqueting tradition” practice with reclining at table while drinking ‘mixed wine’ ran across many seemingly disparate cultural practices throughout antiquity (Smith 2003).” “‘Mixed wine’ was central to every aspect of Hellenistic-Roman religion and culture.” Etc. In general, please see Taylor-Perry: The God who Comes: Dionysian Mysteries Revisited. And particularly a propos to your disparagement of the Love Parade, Hoffman again: “Entheogen use was the center of Hellenism and Christianity, particularly through ‘mixed wine’. If Electric Kool-Aid in an Acid Test type of gathering were switched with ‘mixed wine’ in a Hellenistic symposium, neither party would notice much difference.” If you prefer the Northern tradition, please read Christian Ratsch’s “The Sacred Plants of Our Ancestors”, in the second issue of that infamous journal of feminine spirituality, TYR. Now as for sex, or rather, your apparent disparagement of even consensual non-heterosexual practices. I fear it leads you to a contradiction that ultimately stultifies your valuable suggestions for an appeal to fascist youth. To start, please look over The Hermetic Tradition and note each time the Perfect Man which is the goal of the hermetic process is described as an Androgyne. The solar goal is NOT to produce the hard, rigid, rather stupid Fascist Man of Breker’s sculptures. The Hermetic Androgyne is not a ‘feminized man’ but a male who has acquired [or rather, re-acquired] feminine qualities by conquest, dominating them, and integrating them into a new, higher, synthesis. To anticipate: this male appropriation of ‘feminine’ traits is precisely what stunned and scandalized the 50s public when they saw James Dean, Marlon Brando, or Elvis. [It is also what observers like Wyndham Lewis saw as the most significant characteristic of…Adolph Hitler; and, as a reviewer wrote in the recent issue of Occidental Review, precisely what was lacking in the failed leadership of Oswald Mosley] Here is the ‘fascist philosopher’ and advocate of ‘virile’ spirituality, writing on Taoism: “How disheartening to those who uphold the myth of manhood based on muscles and metallic strength: this [the Taoist androgyne] alone is the true man, the absolute man! He [who] absorbs within himself the ambiguous virtue of the female.” [“Serpentine Wisdom” in Magic vol. 1] And so with this in mind, we come to your suggestions on organizing fascist ‘outlaws and rebels.’ All well taken. But talking of a “large fighting body… with the fullest outfit of military paraphernalia, such as military hierarchy, uniforms and other symbols, and if possible arms.” and so on. Really, isn’t this all a little…gay? I mean, in contemporary society, all this concern with flags, banners, marching, uniforms…would all just be dismissed as ‘gay’. And rightly so, as we shall see. But first, just look at your proposed heroes: “In popular culture, this fact has been known at least since the 1950s: James Dean, Marlon Brando, Elvis Presley, were marketed, deliberately, as moody, dangerous rebels – and all three of them made fortunes as a result.” What a remarkable, yet valid selection. Dean, Brando, and Presley. Tight jeans, leather jackets, torn t-shirts, jeweled jumpsuits. Role models for Aryan youth? Evola, who wore a tuxedo when visiting Soviet Russia, would find them sloppy at best. At worst, some might suggest they pioneered the uniform of the Gay Clone. And all three most famous for introducing a new, rather ambiguous notion of male sexuality. All abusers of various drugs. After tut-tutting about the Love Parade, this is an alternative model? Dean of course was the original ’die young’ guy, so he remains young and dishy. But even Brando and Presley, who became fat self-parodies, continued their twisted paths. Oddly enough, Presley started to take the real, manly, conventional path, and it destroyed him; the all-male US Army introduced him to amphetamine [also popular with the Reich‘s aces]. How does your naked masturbator on E compare to Dean’s nude modeling, Brando’s filmed buggery, Presley’s swiveling hips that had to be censored for the good of America’s youth? [Not to speak of his teenage bride and the catfights he enjoyed staging.] At best, your alternate role models are precisely the androgynous ’men’ that made the Love Parade possible. You want to retrofit them to inspire your fascist youth as they did the youth of the 50s, but without understanding exactly what they represented, and how it enabled them to achieve cultural dominance. You see, despite allowing the San Francisco Democrats to run for office, or hold their parades, our society is quite intensely anti-gay, anti-drug, and anti-fascist, and these things are all interrelated. Bush’s America is Christian America, i.e. Semitic America. The New Jerusalem. Gay bad, drugs bad, hierarchy bad [’we are all God‘s children‘]. Now, if this were Aryan America, we would have, like the Classical and Renaissance periods, drugs, hierarchy, and buggery. In America, and the Americanized world, gay is bad, and fascism [boots, banners, hierarchy] is gay. [“Much of the imagery of far-out sex has been placed under the sign of Nazism”—S. Sontag]. White is gay, style [which is just a manifestation of hierarchy] is gay, and fascism [being white style] is gay. Real masculine men are black, and wear identical baggy jeans and long t-shirts. Fags are white men dressed like Dean, Brando and Presley. Your essay, Welf, illustrates precisely why fascism failed, and why it will continue [at this rate] to fail. Starting with its denigration of drugs and ‘perversion’, and ending with an appeal to a New Teddy Boys, it brilliantly embodies the modern ‘fascist’ dilemma: you have completely internalized the Semitic world view, and conspire with it by ruthlessly expelling from your ’fascism’ all the elements that produced and sustained real, historical fascism: above all, a rigorously non-heterosexualist mentality. [That is to say, where even heterosexuals do not, as in Semitic patriarchal cultures, take ’the family’ as the axis of civilization, but rather the male group]. Modern society is perfectly correct in viewing fascism as [in their sense] ‘gay’. Left to their own devices, men [real men, not the natural man, or the ’good provider’ socialized by feminine society who exists only to reproduce] will design all the snappy uniforms, stylish banners, and intricate marching maneuvers you‘d need, all in the name of embodying and preserving the group and its hierarchy. They may also consort with women; indeed, they have to, in order to produce more offspring for the Fatherland, but women and marriage are not their main concern. They concentrate on the ’more real’ reproduction, as Socrates would say, of raising spiritual offspring, building the state, and creating civilization. The German fascist movement was produced by such men, and, with its ‘feminized’ leader, cross-dressing air marshal, gay Grail researchers and runologists, and homo-erotic SA bully boys, [along with its nontraditional female filmmakers and test pilots] went from triumph to triumph. Then, after it became ‘respectable’ by purging those ‘guilty of unnatural perversions’, concentrating instead on Happy Families, it ended in disastrous failure, leaving Germany at the mercy of post-war ‘re-education‘ as documented by Dr. Sunic in his Homo Americanus. [As for your use of Yockey; you seem unfamiliar with his debt to Bluher and other German homoerotic theorists. Apart from his friendship with George S. Viereck, bi-sexual pornographer and pro-German agitator, Yockey’s relations with the homoerotic origins of fascism are covered quite well in ch. 35 of Coogan’s Dreamer of the Day, which also informs us that “In the early 1950s [Yockey] also began experimenting with sado-masochism—more specifically, whipping women, Yockey’s attraction to S/M was equally evident in his series of S/M themed ‘John Priapus’ stories, which the FBI found in his suitcase in 1960.“ Sadist and pornographer! Make room on the Love Parade!] One final insight from Evola: the notion of there being a ‘spiritual’ component of race, different and more important that mere physical characteristics. Another example of why Evola was ‘useless’ from Himmler’s perspective, which was Semitic ‘sex is for babies and race can be measured‘ materialism. As we have seen, the Aryan genius is one of dialectic and synthesis. Now, the Semitic mind works by creating oppositions, and valorizing one and demonizing the other: day and night, heaven and earth, male and female, silk and wool [fabric not to be mixed], Jew and goy, etc. I would think that your essay could be read with entire agreement by the most Orthodox of rabbis. By Plato, not so much. So I ask you: is the mode of thought that seems to affect several parts of your fine essay Aryan, or Semitic? 6
Posted by prospects for revolution - Welf Herfuth on Sat, 12 Dec 2015 22:17 | #
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Posted by Peter Ramus on Wed, 21 Nov 2007 01:09 | #
Does the New Right side with “Be Polite” campaogn or with the graffiti?