Nick Fuentes to his fans: “You’re a little piggy eating apple cores and banana peels in the trough and rolling around in the mud. Me, on the other hand, I’m sitting at the dinner table eating bacon.”
I don't know who is more disgusting: Fuentes for saying this or his fans for sticking around. Nothing good can come from these people.
https://counter-currents.com/2022/05/fallen-castes/
I don't know who is more disgusting: Fuentes for saying this or his fans for sticking around. Nothing good can come from these people.
https://counter-currents.com/2022/05/fallen-castes/
Counter-Currents Publishing
Fallen Castes | Counter-Currents
2,652 words Our circles thoroughly discuss racial issues, but something that is not discussed as much is caste. In the traditional worldview, caste is as real as race and is just as formative of the individual. As time passes and we become more estranged…
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The second half of last weekend’s broadcast of Counter-Currents Radio was a solo Ask Me Anything with Greg Johnson, and it is now available for download and online listening. https://counter-currents.com/2022/05/counter-currents-radio-podcast-no-444-ask-me-anything-with-greg-johnson/
Counter-Currents Publishing
Counter-Currents Radio Podcast No. 444 Ask Me Anything with Greg Johnson | Counter-Currents
165 words / 45:56 The second half of last weekend's broadcast of Counter-Currents Radio was a solo Ask Me Anything with Greg Johnson, and it is now available for download and online listening. Topics discussed include: 01:20 What is your Myers-Briggs personality…
Margot Metroland reviews the new academic publication Male Supremacism in the United States, which contends that the real threats facing America in 2022 are Gavin McInnes, the Alt Right, and the patriarchy. https://counter-currents.com/2022/05/male-supremacism-in-the-united-states/
Counter-Currents
Male Supremacism in the United States?
2,007 words Male Supremacism in the United States: From Patriarchal Traditionalism to Misogynist Incels and the Alt-Right Series: Routledge Studies in Fascism and the Far Right Emily K. Carian, Alex DiBranco, Chelsea Ebin (Editors) Abingdon (Oxon) & New York:…
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Mark Gullick reminisces about his time working for Britain's National Health Service, and what it taught him about how bureaucracies and large state-run institutions work. https://counter-currents.com/2022/05/the-national-health-service-my-part-in-its-downfall/
Counter-Currents
The National Health Service: My Part in Its Downfall
3,456 words The United Kingdom has two world-famous institutions traditionally close to its heart, like a pair of old and beloved relatives. The first is the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC), often referred to as “Auntie.” The second is the National…
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Stephen Paul Foster on the 1986 film Extremities, which anticipated today's woke agenda in Hollywood. https://counter-currents.com/2022/05/extremities-a-film-from-long-ago-that-anticipated-todays-woke-hollywood/
Counter-Currents Publishing
Extremities: A Film from Long Ago that Anticipated Today’s Woke Hollywood | Counter-Currents
2,392 words Extremity = “the furthest point or limit of something.” I watched the suspense-thriller movie, Extremities, for the first time in the late 1990s. It was one of those rare films that really grabbed me and remained stuck in my memory. Not being…
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It is a big world full of busy people. Which means that, with a little looking, any event can be interpreted as "convenient" for some purpose or another.
Spencer J. Quinn's review of the monumental and fantastic new book from The White People's Press, 50 Classic Tales, which presents folk tales from the European tradition in their original and uncensored forms and context, has been sprung from the paywall. https://counter-currents.com/2022/04/50-classic-tales-from-the-white-peoples-press/
Counter-Currents
50 Classic Tales from The White People’s Press
2,813 words 50 Classic Tales: The Western Folk and Fairy Tale Tradition is a collection of classic European folk stories published by The White People’s Press which offers not only the stories themselves, but the vital ethno-cultural context from which they…
The eclectic scholar Kathryn S. was host Nick Jeelvy‘s guest on the latest broadcast of The Writers’ Bloc, where they discussed Mircea Eliade’s The Sacred and the Profane and answered viewer questions, and it is now available for download and online listening. https://counter-currents.com/2022/05/counter-currents-radio-podcast-no-445-the-writers-bloc-with-kathryn-s-on-mircea-eliade/
Counter-Currents
Counter-Currents Radio Podcast No. 445 The Writers’ Bloc with Kathryn S. on Mircea Eliade
187 words / 2:00:22 The eclectic scholar Kathryn S. was host Nick Jeelvy‘s guest on the latest broadcast of The Writers’ Bloc, where they discussed Mircea Eliade’s The Sacred and the Profane and answered viewer questions, and it is now available for download…
The introduction to Greg Johnson's The White Nationalist Manifesto is now in Portuguese. This is the first part of a complete translation of the text. https://counter-currents.com/2022/05/o-manifesto-nacionalista-branco-parte-1/
Counter-Currents Publishing
O Manifesto Nacionalista Branco: Parte 1, Introdução | Counter-Currents
2,231 palavras Parte 1 de 16 (Parte 2) O que faria se amanhã de manhã descobrisse que tinha apenas uma semana para viver -- mais sete dias, e depois tudo acabava? O mundo continuaria, mas você não faria parte dele. Inicialmente, a maior parte das pessoas…
Forwarded from Keith Woods
Note that the Spencerites take issue with Tucker Carlson helping mainstream talk of the Great Replacement and Ann Coulter talking openly about Jewish racial activism, not because it isn't true, but because it is "stale" and "played out".
But what exactly has changed since the heyday of the alt-right to make either of these issues less relevant? Is Ann late to the party because everyone woke up to the talking points of the 2003 Occidental Quartlery years ago? If you think more popular figures promoting your talking points is a sign of defeat, you're probably more invested in the process of endlessly generating novelty takes than you are in actually winning.
But what exactly has changed since the heyday of the alt-right to make either of these issues less relevant? Is Ann late to the party because everyone woke up to the talking points of the 2003 Occidental Quartlery years ago? If you think more popular figures promoting your talking points is a sign of defeat, you're probably more invested in the process of endlessly generating novelty takes than you are in actually winning.
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Jim Goad on what the evidence shows about whether human adults feel more compassion for children, other adults, or animals. https://counter-currents.com/2022/05/animals-children-first/
Counter-Currents Publishing
Animals & Children First | Counter-Currents
1,537 words My dog Junior is a 35-pound Boston Terrier/Boxer mix with the most consistently sweet disposition of any animal I’ve ever owned. He’s a great little guy, and except for his occasional bouts of gassiness, I can’t think of a bad thing to say about…
Today is the 124th birthday of the great Italian philosopher of Tradition and man of the Right, Julius Evola. Find out more about his life and work at Counter-Currents. https://counter-currents.com/2022/05/remembering-julius-evola-10/
Counter-Currents Publishing
Remembering Julius Evola (May 19, 1898–June 11, 1974) | Counter-Currents
1,164 words In honor of Evola's birthday, for the next ten days, Counter-Currents' edition of Evola's East and West is on sale for 25% off. Click here to order. Baron Giulio Cesare Andrea Evola was born on May 19, 1898 in Rome. Along with René Guénon, Evola…
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In honor of Julius Evola’s birthday, for the next ten days, Counter-Currents’ edition of Evola’s East and West is on sale for 25% off.
https://counter-currents.com/east-and-west-order/
https://counter-currents.com/east-and-west-order/
Counter-Currents Publishing
East & West: Comparative Studies in Pursuit of Tradition | Counter-Currents
Julius Evola East and West: Comparative Studies in Pursuit of Tradition San Francisco: Counter-Currents, 2018 198 pages In honor of Evola’s birthday, between May 19th and May 29th, Counter-Currents’ edition of Evola’s East and West is on sale for 25% off.…
It seems I made quite an impression on the editor of an anti-racist classics website:
https://pharos.vassarspaces.net/2021/12/17/the-fourth-year-of-pharos-emotional-toll-research-white-supremacy/
https://pharos.vassarspaces.net/2021/12/17/the-fourth-year-of-pharos-emotional-toll-research-white-supremacy/
pharos.vassarspaces.net
The Fourth Year of Pharos: What is the Emotional Toll?
Curtis Dozier, Director of Pharos The end of November marked the four-year anniversary of the launch of Pharos: Doing Justice to the Classics. Each year around this time I’ve published a retrospective about how the site has grown and evolved during the past…
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Forwarded from Building a Third Force (G Maximus)
Wow. Quite the admissions from this guy.
“Johnson’s essay about white people rising up against a more equitable society looks pretty prophetic. That realization — that Johnson might be right, and that his movement, which so many people continue to describe as “far right” or “extremist,” might actually have widespread support — takes a toll. But even more, as I look back over that same period from 2014 until today, I know I lived my life and I made choices, some of which subverted white supremacist ideology, but others of which fit the pattern that white nationalists like Johnson are depending on “normal” people making to fuel their movement’s continuing rise. Where to live. Where to go to school. Which park to play at. Where to eat. Where to go to church. How different, really, is the life I’ve made than that which people like Johnson expect me to make?”
https://t.me/countercurrents/2407
“Johnson’s essay about white people rising up against a more equitable society looks pretty prophetic. That realization — that Johnson might be right, and that his movement, which so many people continue to describe as “far right” or “extremist,” might actually have widespread support — takes a toll. But even more, as I look back over that same period from 2014 until today, I know I lived my life and I made choices, some of which subverted white supremacist ideology, but others of which fit the pattern that white nationalists like Johnson are depending on “normal” people making to fuel their movement’s continuing rise. Where to live. Where to go to school. Which park to play at. Where to eat. Where to go to church. How different, really, is the life I’ve made than that which people like Johnson expect me to make?”
https://t.me/countercurrents/2407
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Counter-Currents
It seems I made quite an impression on the editor of an anti-racist classics website:
https://pharos.vassarspaces.net/2021/12/17/the-fourth-year-of-pharos-emotional-toll-research-white-supremacy/
https://pharos.vassarspaces.net/2021/12/17/the-fourth-year-of-pharos-emotional-toll-research-white-supremacy/
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Forwarded from GTK Radio (Guide to Kulchur)
📣 Available Now!
Greg Johnson — Lawrence of Arabia (1962)
🎙 Audio
📺 Video (Odysee)
📺 Video (BitChute)
Decameron Film Festival 2022 | Recorded April 17, 2022 |
Support my work here. | @guidetokulchur
Greg Johnson — Lawrence of Arabia (1962)
🎙 Audio
📺 Video (Odysee)
📺 Video (BitChute)
Decameron Film Festival 2022 | Recorded April 17, 2022 |
Support my work here. | @guidetokulchur
🤔1
Forwarded from Imperium Press (Imperium Press)
This was a real whitepill.
https://pharos.vassarspaces.net/2021/12/17/the-fourth-year-of-pharos-emotional-toll-research-white-supremacy/
I wanted to hate Dozier's article but the fact is that there isn't much to hate here—it's just an anti-white activist being very publicly demoralized. Throughout he just states what right-wingers believe about antiquity and leaves the reader to conclude that this is wrong or bad without presenting any reasons why—his weary moral tone is supposed to be enough.
The problem he has is twofold: a) classics isn't really taught anymore so normal people's opinions on it have not been tainted by wokeness, and b) these normal people are, when not buried under an avalanche of propaganda, pretty much in agreement with the radical right on most things, as were the most brilliant minds of the ancient world. Ours is the null hypothesis. This is what's taking an emotional toll on him. I know you're tired, comrade.
Dozier may be hysterical (he calls Trump "a white nationalist president"), but he's a cut above most woke liberals in terms of self-awareness. He summarizes Greg Johnson's essay Truth, Justice, and a Nice White Country where Greg says that white nationalists just want to live around other white people. What unnerves Dozier is that he sees such people all around him—neighbours, friends, churchgoers:
That realization — that Johnson might be right, and that his movement, which so many people continue to describe as “far right” or “extremist,” might actually have widespread support — takes a toll.
What's worse—he's starting to realize he's no different. He quotes Joseph Sobran saying that "in their mating and migratory habits, liberals are indistinguishable from members of the Ku Klux Klan", and he has enough self-awareness to see this in himself:
Where to live. Where to go to school. Which park to play at. Where to eat. Where to go to church. How different, really, is the life I’ve made than that which people like Johnson expect me to make?
How is he supposed to change people's minds about "white supremacy" when he can't even change his own mind about it?
No, working on Pharos affects me because it is painful to see myself reflected in Greg Johnson’s confidence that most white people like me — especially white liberals like me — lack the courage and conviction [...] to create a more just world.
Dozier is tired and demoralized because he sees himself in Johnson's assessment of normal white people. But there's a deeper reason, one that occasionally peeks through amid his hand-wringing.
If reading Cicero is enough to redpill you on race, sex, and hierarchy—and he was basically the Mitt Romney of his day—imagine what reading Draco, Cato Maior, and Herodotus is. The fact is that Dozier immerses himself in clannish ethnocentrism all day, whether he writes about Johnson or not. Every time he cracks open an ancient tome, whether an epic poem or an obscure medical treatise, he's up to his ears in it. Dozier is tired for the same reason Donna Zuckerberg (who had to fold her glorified blog Eidolon because it was like totally stressing her) is tired—they've both devoted their lives to studying not things they love, but things they hate and want to change.
Maybe he should take a sabbatical from policing right-wing thought—we'll take over for him in educating people about antiquity. This is close to the heart of what Imperium Press is all about, and later this year we'll teach what so many classical departments no longer do, with our Latin course. The history of ideas belongs to us, because we believe what was considered wisdom and common sense for all of history up until the day before yesterday.
Don't worry Curt, we got this one.
https://pharos.vassarspaces.net/2021/12/17/the-fourth-year-of-pharos-emotional-toll-research-white-supremacy/
I wanted to hate Dozier's article but the fact is that there isn't much to hate here—it's just an anti-white activist being very publicly demoralized. Throughout he just states what right-wingers believe about antiquity and leaves the reader to conclude that this is wrong or bad without presenting any reasons why—his weary moral tone is supposed to be enough.
The problem he has is twofold: a) classics isn't really taught anymore so normal people's opinions on it have not been tainted by wokeness, and b) these normal people are, when not buried under an avalanche of propaganda, pretty much in agreement with the radical right on most things, as were the most brilliant minds of the ancient world. Ours is the null hypothesis. This is what's taking an emotional toll on him. I know you're tired, comrade.
Dozier may be hysterical (he calls Trump "a white nationalist president"), but he's a cut above most woke liberals in terms of self-awareness. He summarizes Greg Johnson's essay Truth, Justice, and a Nice White Country where Greg says that white nationalists just want to live around other white people. What unnerves Dozier is that he sees such people all around him—neighbours, friends, churchgoers:
That realization — that Johnson might be right, and that his movement, which so many people continue to describe as “far right” or “extremist,” might actually have widespread support — takes a toll.
What's worse—he's starting to realize he's no different. He quotes Joseph Sobran saying that "in their mating and migratory habits, liberals are indistinguishable from members of the Ku Klux Klan", and he has enough self-awareness to see this in himself:
Where to live. Where to go to school. Which park to play at. Where to eat. Where to go to church. How different, really, is the life I’ve made than that which people like Johnson expect me to make?
How is he supposed to change people's minds about "white supremacy" when he can't even change his own mind about it?
No, working on Pharos affects me because it is painful to see myself reflected in Greg Johnson’s confidence that most white people like me — especially white liberals like me — lack the courage and conviction [...] to create a more just world.
Dozier is tired and demoralized because he sees himself in Johnson's assessment of normal white people. But there's a deeper reason, one that occasionally peeks through amid his hand-wringing.
If reading Cicero is enough to redpill you on race, sex, and hierarchy—and he was basically the Mitt Romney of his day—imagine what reading Draco, Cato Maior, and Herodotus is. The fact is that Dozier immerses himself in clannish ethnocentrism all day, whether he writes about Johnson or not. Every time he cracks open an ancient tome, whether an epic poem or an obscure medical treatise, he's up to his ears in it. Dozier is tired for the same reason Donna Zuckerberg (who had to fold her glorified blog Eidolon because it was like totally stressing her) is tired—they've both devoted their lives to studying not things they love, but things they hate and want to change.
Maybe he should take a sabbatical from policing right-wing thought—we'll take over for him in educating people about antiquity. This is close to the heart of what Imperium Press is all about, and later this year we'll teach what so many classical departments no longer do, with our Latin course. The history of ideas belongs to us, because we believe what was considered wisdom and common sense for all of history up until the day before yesterday.
Don't worry Curt, we got this one.
pharos.vassarspaces.net
The Fourth Year of Pharos: What is the Emotional Toll?
Curtis Dozier, Director of Pharos The end of November marked the four-year anniversary of the launch of Pharos: Doing Justice to the Classics. Each year around this time I’ve published a retrospective about how the site has grown and evolved during the past…
🤔9
Forwarded from Thuletide
Most useful term(s) to describe immigration into White countries?
Anonymous Poll
32%
Replacement Migration
35%
The Great Replacement
39%
White Genocide
19%
White Ethnic Displacement
9%
Colonization
5%
None of the above / Other