Tolkien: Master of Middle Earth
By European: Despite the universal derison of the literary establishment, which could never comprehend its inherently noble spirit, Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings was recently[1] voted the greatest work of fiction of the 20th Century by thousands of Waterstones’ customers. The accolade is well-deserved, for Tolkien’s masterpiece is a classic of heroic romance. Drawing inspiration from traditional European mythology and from his love for the English countryside, Tolkien created an imaginary world and invented…
A Forgotten Hero?
By Frederick Dixon: Some of you will remember the late Michael Wharton who wrote in the Daily Telegraph for many years under the pseudonym of ‘Peter Simple’. One of our greatest twentieth century political satirists he was entirely a man of the racial nationalist Right, an astonishing exception to the processed group-think which usually passes for journalism in these times. He had what he called “the columnar reverse effect” – it was certain that whenever…
Elysium
By Heordredenn: Film Review: Elysium, written, directed and co-produced by Neill Blomkamp, released August 2013. It is 2154. The Earth is an overpopulated, impoverished, environmentally degraded ruin, with civilization falling apart. But high above a vast, silver-white wheel structure hangs in the sky, the last island of peace, order and civilization, the great orbital habitat Elysium, now home to the global elite of the cosmopolitan super-rich. That is the premise of South African director Neill…
Sean Gabb – 2014 Jonathan Bowden Oratory Prize Nominee
By Max Musson: The seventh nominee for the 2014 Jonathan Bowden Oratory Prize is director of the Libertarian Alliance, Sean Gabb, nominated for an excellent thought provoking speech he delivered at the 48th New Right Meeting in the autumn of 2013. The libertarian Alliance is a well-known civil liberties think-tank based in the British Isles. Opposed to multi-culturalism and immigration, Sean Gabb famously called for the so-called Commission for Racial Equality to be shut down. Mr. Gabb is the author…
Why I am not a Racist
By Nick Grifford: I am not a racist. I am not just saying that to appear clever or coy, given the following definition of the ubiquitous word I simply am not: racist: noun; a person who believes that a particular race is superior to another. Superiority is, much like beautify and, in many respects, wisdom, subjective. What through the lens of one man or tribe could be viewed as “superior”, may well be considered as…
Homosexual Activists: Further Thoughts
The Mail on Sunday’s disclosure of yet another judge who supported the Paedophile Information Exchange (PIE) in the seventies, ensures that this story will rumble on for a while yet so I thought it worthwhile to return to this issue and hopefully clear up some confusion from my earlier article here. The first article on this subject was not an attack on gays and it would be wrong to see it in that vein. But…
Happy St. Patrick’s Day
Happy St. Patrick’s day! For the music lovers among our readership I offer below some of my own personal favorite pieces of Irish music – if you have some to recommend don’t forget to leave a comment. Celtic Woman – A New Journey – Dulaman The Auld Triangle – Luke Kelly Song for Ireland: Dick Gaughan The Chieftains & Alison Krauss – Molly Ban Rocky Road to Dublin – Julie Fowlis…
The Homosexual Question
By Max Musson: The issue of homosexuality and the attitude that nationalists should adopt towards homosexuals is a recurring one and one that is in my experience repeatedly dealt with inadequately. I have therefore in this article embellished upon comments that I have made regarding an earlier article that touched upon this subject. Clearly, homosexuality is abnormal in the sense that the reproduction of our species depends upon the existence of two sexes and the mutual attraction that…
Film Review – 300: Rise of an Empire
Brace yourself because THIS IS SPARTA! Again. The first 300 movie ranks among my favourite films of all time, less due to its cartoonish stylised gore offering as its wonderfully unapologetic masculine heroism. When I walked into the cinema this week to watch this follow-up I really didn’t know what to expect as I’d read nothing at all about it before hand. My assumption was that it would be a sequel but the story began…
Charles Dickens: Fagin and His Detractors
On Friday 7th February, 2014 (his 202nd birthday) a long-overdue and much-anticipated statue of Charles Dickens was unveiled to the left of the town hall in Portsmouth’s Guildhall Square. Portsmouth, as most will be aware, is the birthplace of Charles Dickens and is now the only place in the U.K. where his statue is erected. However, it is disappointing that his statue is positioned at ground level and not placed upon a plinth – as…