Nationalism in motion?  Or liberalism reformed?

Posted by Guessedworker on Thursday, 23 April 2009 01:41.

The BNP is currently engaged on posting a series of brief résumés of it policy positions.  Recently we had one on immigration policy.

But a few days ago the party set out a number of attractive proposals on civil liberty.  Unquestionably, a future British National Party government enacting these into law would command wide popular support.  The Human Rights Act would be removed from the statute book, naturally.  We would see an end to those monumentally unloved ID cards, the national DNA database and the spiders web of the surveillance society.  On the new legislation side, the country would gain a parliament for England, binding referenda on major, probably constitutional issues, and a Bill of Rights.

All these would be highly significant undertakings, particularly the parliament which could well create a permanent English consensus against the Labour Party.  But none of them are anti-liberal in any systemic or revolutionary sense.  They would not act like acid on the radical individualist template on which multi-ethnicism is scored, burning both radical individualism and race-replacement out of politics in Britain for all time.

Instead, the party hierarchy (for which read Nick Griffin) seems to be relying in an Inevitablist fashion on the people freeing themselves.  Plenty of “patriotic feeling” and “good common-sense” is expected to be released by two other proposals in that civil liberties post:-

Abolish all restrictions on traditional free speech - common law provisions against incitement to violence are the only proper limits in a free society;

Abolish “anti-discrimination” laws which prevent people from making a free choice.

READ MORE...


Snappy Refutations, Exercise 6

Posted by Guessedworker on Wednesday, 22 April 2009 23:31.

In between doing other things, I’ve been debating for a couple of days with a Guardian liberal of a scientific bent here.  He came up with the following definitons of the dreaded r-thing, claiming that I qualify on both counts.

They are:-

1. The belief that certain races are superior/inferior to others.

2. The belief that people’s race is more significant than their individuality.

Now, I answered this person in the least snappy way I could, putting both racial superiority and Man as individual and tribalist into their proper contexts.  But I can’t say that it worked any better than a well-chosen, sharp riposte could have.

So what should I have said?  Is there even such a thing as “evil racism”?  Or is it all just a handy exaggeration, a silencer and an ethnic smear?


Physiognomy and Liking: My Experience

Posted by Guest Blogger on Tuesday, 21 April 2009 09:25.

by Happy Cracker

Why is it that the glimpse of a related physiognomy opens so innocently the floodgates of affection? Why is so much of our ‘liking’ dependent on the face of the person we interact with?

I had a chance to ponder this last month, as I filled a temporary position working for a catering company, and interacting with several thousand party guests - each of whom I had to greet, make small talk with, answer their questions and hand them off to be seated. I myself was determined - regardless of the type of person I was interacting with - to be a non-stop fountain of charm. I did my best to smile as wide, and think as warmly of the other person as possible. This is a technique I’ve learned to convey the most positive image to the other person: think about them as warmly as possible. And although I am committed to the 14 words and the existence of my people, I don’t think giving lukewarm receptions to wogs is going to advance the white cause. So I did everything possible to beam charm at everything that came before my eyes. I looked into thousands of faces, always the same eye contact, and performed the same motions thousands of times.

What I discovered is that physiognomy reigns over us - pre-determining the trajectory of our interactions far more than we would like. There are secret stores of human affection whose access is restricted based on physiognomy - and these secret stores don’t represent gifts which one is conscious of, and thus eager to distribute fairly, but primordial feelings of liking, which spring up innocently from within us and are beyond conscious control. They are thus hard to quantify - it is even hard for people to recognize the subtle influence these feelings have on their dealings with others, in the case of people with limited introspection.

READ MORE...


‘La Loi’ de Frédéric Bastiat

Posted by Guest Blogger on Tuesday, 21 April 2009 00:39.

by Happy Cracker

image

Frédéric Bastiat was a Frenchmen who lived from 1801 to 1850, in the last decade of his life producing several treatises on free market economics and political economy. He was an enemy of socialism and wrote several books demonstrating the absurdity of socialist economic premises. His writing is notable for its clarity and conciseness; and readers who value their time will no doubt be grateful for his mercifully paired-down writing style, which lets several of his works be read in an afternoon. In addition to these traits, he has value to us for being a non-Jewish voice in the advocacy of economic liberty and against socialism.

I’m going to publish here a smattering - no, make that two smatterings - of various quotes from his work ‘La Loi’ (The Law), a work primarily aimed against socialism and the laws inherited from the government of Robespierre.

Bastiat is credited with the analogy of the Broken Window (sometimes called the Broken Window Fallacy) which basically refutes the idea, common to certain readings of economics, that the breaking of a window as a consequence of a children’s ball game could be seen as causing economic growth, because the glazier has to be paid to put in a new window, thus generating money. He disproves this by showing that the store proprietor has to pay the cost of the broken window; thus while the broken window does lead to increased “economic activity”, it doesn’t in fact result in net wealth creation. Some important statistics frequently used by modern economists have this fallacy built into them, for example, the national GDP - probably the most commonly cited economic indicator in the economic press - would reflect the action of the glazier to repay the window, and could thus be explained by pundits (or any public figure) as signifying economic growth. [Chip in on the comments thread if you know the other reasons why GDP is less useful than commonly supposed.]

READ MORE...


Spengler’s Denouement: World-Historical Judaeo-Supremacy

Posted by Guest Blogger on Sunday, 19 April 2009 22:10.

By Happy Cracker

Once in a while a document is published, which puts the human soul so nakedly on display, that one cannot help but stare at it, one’s mouth obscenely gaping, at a lack for words; one is held transfixed for a moment by a mixture of emotions: fascination, repulsion, disbelief tinged with the feeling of having one’s deepest suspicions finally confirmed. That cold rush of adrenaline - a feeling different from the hot rush that comes from racing cars or chatting up girls or getting in fights or soccer - the cold rush grips one, the eery visitor, slithers down one’s back and coils in a knot at the base of the spine.

That’s the feeling I had when famous internet commentator “Spengler” outed himself, and finally, at long last, cast aside the trappings of internet pseudonymity, the oblique angles of attack permitted a detached voice in cyberspace, and finally told the true story of who he is and where he is coming from. He sets the stage thus:

During the too-brief run of the Asia Times print edition in the 1990s, the newspaper asked me to write a humor column, and I chose the name “Spengler” as a joke - a columnist for an Asian daily using the name of the author of The Decline of the West.

Half-way into the story of his pseudonymous origins, he cuts to the chase and presents us with his vision of our death scene:

The old and angry cultures of the world, fighting for room to breath against the onset of globalization, would not go quietly into the homogenizer. Many of them would fight to survive, but fight in vain, for the tide of modernity could not be rolled back.

(That’s us, in case you missed it.)

In the next breath, Goldman aka Spengler points the way to our resurrection - as Jews! :

READ MORE...


Another Terminal Multicultural Euphoria:  Dubai

Posted by James Bowery on Sunday, 19 April 2009 17:36.

By popular demand:

“Dubai’s Lesson to America: How the Middle East’s Shangrai La Became a Hell on Earth”

From the request for this article:

When a group/nation/city/state/territory/etc is not held together by common ethnic/cultural bonds and are instead just a very loose or diverse multiethnic collection of people who merely tolerate and use each other in the greedy pursuit of money and wealth (like the citizens of Dubai did and do) it is only natural that the foundations of such a place or society are rotten and will collapse in short order.

From the article:

I approach a blonde 17-year-old Dutch girl wandering around in hotpants, oblivious to the swarms of men gaping at her. “I love it here!” she says. “The heat, the malls, the beach!” Does it ever bother you that it’s a slave society? She puts her head down, just as Sohinal did. “I try not to see,” she says. Even at 17, she has learned not to look, and not to ask; that, she senses, is a transgression too far.


Map of Unemployment Epidemic

Posted by James Bowery on Saturday, 18 April 2009 23:49.

image


Returning to Old Order vs. Letting a New Order blossom from the Understanding of Original Order

Posted by Guest Blogger on Saturday, 18 April 2009 01:14.

by Happy Cracker

LindsayWheeler brought up an interesting point yesterday about a return to the Old Order, which he defines as being monarchical rule and Christianity. Permit me to think aloud ...

It seems to me that a fraction of New Right thinkers, who may or may not be represented on this website, desire a return to an even Older Order - i.e. to an order which predates Christianity.

Now we can “return” to an old order, if that order was historically well-documented, simply by imitating the outlines and defining characteristics of that order. In fact, there is no other way we can return except by pretending to uphold the old order and declaring its advent politically. What we are essentially doing is trying to re-enliven a set of past historical circumstances by aping the essential features of those circumstances in our own lives. A fitting analogy would be to say that this is like trying to relive a specific phase of your adolescent past, by gathering together the items you have from those days and doing the activities you did in that phase.

The first thing to understand about this is that this would be a profoundly superficial process. It would necessarily be a matter of recreating the outward symbols and manifestations of the Old Phase, while the context of these actions and the meanings attached to them have been irretrievably altered by intervening experience. One would walk through the forests of one’s youth, dressed in clothes harkening back to those bygone days, all the while listening to music that one listened to at the time: yet the old context cannot be fully retrieved, and what can be retrieved will be viewed through an intervening layer of meta-context which knows this to be a re-enactment of past events. Its strange for human beings to behave in this insincere way.

READ MORE...


Page 163 of 338 | First Page | Previous Page |  [ 161 ]   [ 162 ]   [ 163 ]   [ 164 ]   [ 165 ]  | Next Page | Last Page

Venus

Existential Issues

DNA Nations

Categories

Contributors

Each author's name links to a list of all articles posted by the writer.

Links

Endorsement not implied.

Immigration

Islamist Threat

Anti-white Media Networks

Audio/Video

Crime

Economics

Education

General

Historical Re-Evaluation

Controlled Opposition

Nationalist Political Parties

Science

Europeans in Africa

Of Note

Comments

Thorn commented in entry 'A year in the trenches' on Wed, 07 Jun 2023 11:21. (View)

Thorn commented in entry 'A year in the trenches' on Wed, 07 Jun 2023 10:44. (View)

Guessedworker commented in entry 'A year in the trenches' on Wed, 07 Jun 2023 07:40. (View)

Al Ross commented in entry 'A year in the trenches' on Wed, 07 Jun 2023 03:37. (View)

Al Ross commented in entry 'A year in the trenches' on Wed, 07 Jun 2023 01:59. (View)

Al Ross commented in entry 'A year in the trenches' on Wed, 07 Jun 2023 01:13. (View)

Al Ross commented in entry 'A year in the trenches' on Wed, 07 Jun 2023 00:41. (View)

Thorn commented in entry 'A year in the trenches' on Tue, 06 Jun 2023 11:14. (View)

Al Ross commented in entry 'A year in the trenches' on Tue, 06 Jun 2023 03:36. (View)

Thorn commented in entry 'A year in the trenches' on Mon, 05 Jun 2023 23:51. (View)

Timothy Murray commented in entry 'A year in the trenches' on Mon, 05 Jun 2023 17:04. (View)

Thorn commented in entry 'A year in the trenches' on Mon, 05 Jun 2023 10:25. (View)

Thorn commented in entry 'A year in the trenches' on Sun, 04 Jun 2023 23:15. (View)

Guessedworker commented in entry 'A year in the trenches' on Sun, 04 Jun 2023 21:44. (View)

Al Ross commented in entry 'A year in the trenches' on Sun, 04 Jun 2023 03:29. (View)

Al Ross commented in entry 'A year in the trenches' on Sun, 04 Jun 2023 02:55. (View)

Thorn commented in entry 'A year in the trenches' on Sat, 03 Jun 2023 16:36. (View)

Thorn commented in entry 'A year in the trenches' on Sat, 03 Jun 2023 16:22. (View)

Thorn commented in entry 'A year in the trenches' on Sat, 03 Jun 2023 11:32. (View)

Thorn commented in entry 'A year in the trenches' on Sat, 03 Jun 2023 11:07. (View)

Al Ross commented in entry 'A year in the trenches' on Sat, 03 Jun 2023 05:26. (View)

Al Ross commented in entry 'A year in the trenches' on Sat, 03 Jun 2023 05:00. (View)

Thorn commented in entry 'A year in the trenches' on Fri, 02 Jun 2023 17:30. (View)

Thorn commented in entry 'A year in the trenches' on Fri, 02 Jun 2023 14:25. (View)

Thorn commented in entry 'A year in the trenches' on Fri, 02 Jun 2023 14:05. (View)

Thorn commented in entry 'A year in the trenches' on Fri, 02 Jun 2023 11:34. (View)

Al Ross commented in entry 'A year in the trenches' on Fri, 02 Jun 2023 06:50. (View)

Thorn commented in entry 'A year in the trenches' on Thu, 01 Jun 2023 22:34. (View)

Al Ross commented in entry 'A year in the trenches' on Thu, 01 Jun 2023 04:07. (View)

Thorn commented in entry 'A year in the trenches' on Wed, 31 May 2023 10:58. (View)

Al Ross commented in entry 'A year in the trenches' on Wed, 31 May 2023 08:39. (View)

Elena Haskins commented in entry 'EU Funded Anti-majority Artificial Intelligence Watchdogs' on Wed, 31 May 2023 02:36. (View)

Thorn commented in entry 'A year in the trenches' on Wed, 31 May 2023 02:05. (View)

Al Ross commented in entry 'A year in the trenches' on Wed, 31 May 2023 00:39. (View)

Thorn commented in entry 'A year in the trenches' on Wed, 31 May 2023 00:16. (View)

Majorityrights shield

Sovereignty badge