By Frederick Dixon: “One of this country’s great unappreciated achievements is that through everything – industrial revolutions, millions of people living here – still today, you can go fifteen minutes outside any British town or city and be in glorious landscape. Britain still has the most reliably beautiful countryside of anywhere in the world. This is an intensely beautiful country that has been extremely well looked after for centuries.” Perhaps it takes someone who isn’t…

This year marks the bicentenary of the birth of one of the greatest composers and poets in the history of Caucasian man: Richard Wagner. I do not throw the words ‘genius’ around like confetti, like many people do these days, but I would certainly use that epithet to describe this man. His genius is such that, in spite of being constantly castigated and deconstructed, his music has survived and been enjoyed by millions around the…

Homosexuality is a subject most people, including myself, would probably wish to avoid. If one so much as critiques homosexuals or homosexuality, one faces a barrage of deconstruction in which the critic is simultaneously accused of homophobia (a phobia, we remember, being an irrational fear or hatred) and ‘projection’ – in which the critic projects his own self-hatred as an alleged homosexual onto other homosexuals at large.

Why are catastrophes wishful thinking? by Benjamin Noyles Criticized for his “extremism” by Alain de Benoist, Guillaume Faye was a founding intellectual of the New Right whose ideas and methods are so fashionable today. Now that Convergence of Catastrophes has been translated from the original La Convergence des catastrophes (2004) courtesy of Arktos, we can actually make a proper analysis of this thinking, now that a decade has nearly passed – but from the results it…

Billed as “an epic drama series for BBC One …, charting the life and turbulent times of one English village across the whole of the 20th century”, the first of six episodes of ‘The Village’ were screened last night, marking the beginning of what will be one of the state broadcaster’s major propaganda exercises for 2013. Furthermore, on the Daily Mail website yesterday was a promotional pre-publicity article announcing ‘The Village’ and informing us that the…

By Frederick Dixon: “Raise the Shire” said Merry “Now! Wake all our people! They hate all this, you can see: all of them except perhaps one or two rascals and a few fools that want to be important but don’t at all understand what is really going on. But Shire-folk have been so comfortable so long they don’t know what to do. They just want a match though, and they’ll go up in fire. The…

By Rudyard Kipling: Now, this is the cup the White Men drink When they go to right a wrong, And that is the cup of the old world’s hate – Cruel and strained and strong. We have drunk that cup – and a bitter, bitter cup And tossed the dregs away. But well for the world when the White Men drink To the dawn of the White Man’s day!   Now, this is the road that…

It is often heard that the works of Friedrich Nietzsche (1844—1900) are obligatory reading for all racially-conscious individuals  and that his works were particularly popular during the National Socialist era in Germany—but one question which has always puzzled some observers is why? It is therefore worthwhile—even from an academic standpoint—to briefly overview his works even though it is not easy to present in narrow compass any clear indication of the thoughts of this extraordinary, one…

Many people will have seen the movie trailers for Quentin Tarantino’s latest film ‘Django Unchained’ and will quite naturally feel somewhat uneasy that Hollywood again appears to have launched yet another violent film with a dangerously anti-White theme. ‘Django Unchained’ follows hot on the heals of ‘Machete’ (2010) and Tarantino’s previous film, ‘Inglourious Basterds’ (2009), depicting non-White ethnic minority ‘heroes’ taking their revenge and inflicting gratuitous violence upon villains who all just happen to be…