Articles

Gaelicism: The Spirit of Nobility

I would like to take this opportunity to talk about Gaelicism, something which we have neglected to touch upon on this site so far (and have even lost sight of it seems). I (and others hopefully, although some of my opinions differ considerably from my fellow posters) will attempt to go some way to defining what Gaelicism is and of its purpose. While it is true that Gaelic values are not currently upheld by any streams of political thought, and arguably never has been (except perhaps in the d...

Non-folk and Nationality

Online Etymology Dictionary: Nation c.1300, from O.Fr. nacion, from L. nationem (nom. natio) "nation, stock, race," lit. "that which has been born," from natus, pp. of nasci "be born" (Old L. gnasci; see genus). Political sense has gradually taken over from racial meaning "large group of people with common ancestry." Older sense preserved in application to N.Amer. Indian peoples (1640s). Nation-building first attested 1907 (implied in nation-builder). Source: http://www.etymonline....

Can Life Prevail?

Little known outside of Scandinavia, Pentti Linkola is a voice that deserves a wide audience. Revered amongst radical environmentalists for his uncompromising stance on a variety of issues and for his works that show the breadth of his vision. Linkola shows that "progressive" and humanistic dogma in collaboration with aggressive capitalism is leading the whole planet toward inevitable destruction. Greed and consumerism, the opiates that (for many) mask the sheer ba...

A Dialogue on the Ideal Leader

The actors involved herein are an aged and sagacious Professor who teaches philosophy, physics and naturalism at an old and prestigious university. The second actor is the Little One who is a young and beautiful girl of 12 who often visits the professor for conversations, through which she tries to satiate her insatiable curiosity for life and the Universe; she is a clever one, with a bright future ahead of her. The Professor and Little One are sitting in the Professor's garden. The seaso...

A Nationalist Principle

FUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS Personal Rights Article 40 1. All citizens shall, as human persons, be held equal before the law. This shall not be held to mean that the State shall not in its enactments have due regard to differences of capacity, physical and moral, and of social function. This principle codified in our Constitution is a Nationalist principle, a common sense and just principle, and it is one which runs somewhat contrary to liberalism which, while seeking to espouse the noble goal...

Unreasonable Demonisation of Hitler?

We are inundated with anti-Hitler propaganda in the Western media; Hitler, Nazism, it is suggested, is the most evil frenzy that ever griped humans. However, there has been worse if we are measuring evil by death toll. For example, from 1945 - 1991 the U.S.S.R killed 22,400,000 people; those people were "class enemies", repatriated Soviet nationals, dissidents, and national minorities [1]. Let's compare the death toll of the Communist Soviet Union to that which was totted up during Hitler's pe...

Oswald Spengler’s Doctrine of History

"Thus is born Nihilism, the abysmal hatred of the proletarian of higher form of every sort, of culture as its essence, of society as its upholder and historical product. That anyone should have "form," master it, feel comfortable with it, whereas the common person feels fettered by it and unable to move freely under it; that tact, taste, a sense for tradition, should be things that belong to highly cultivated beings by inheritance; that there are circles in which a sense of duty and renunciati...

On the Nature of Countries

The nature of a country is defined, foremost, by the biology – by the blood – of its people. A phenotype is the “blood and tissue” of an organism and it is specified by genes (the genotype) of an organism (we will ignore some academic details such as phenotypic plasticity and focus on the general principle). So, for example, some organisms have wings, wings are a phenotype. Some organisms have tails, tails are phenotypes. Or we can view all components of an organism together as a phenotype....

The Crisis of the Modern World – René Guénon’s Invaluable Insights

A MATERIAL CIVILIZATION * René Guénon http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KtqlSY6LeMk From all that has been said so far it already seems to follow clearly that those Orientals who reproach modern Western civilization with being a purely material one are fully justified; it is certainly in this direction exclusively that its development has taken place, and from whatever point of view one may look at it, one is always faced with the more or less direct consequences of this materialization. Neverth...

Posterity will hold we racists to be virtuous

It is common place in the present day for "cultural leaders" i.e. journalists and politicians (whom I believe rank among vermin) to denounce racial separatists as immoral. By looking at common place literature one would be led to believe that their view is representative of the citizenry of not only Ireland but all citizens of the West. This inference, I think, would be mistaken. The view of "cultural leaders" or if you prefer, ruling vermin, seems to be a minority view. That is, the majority ...