By Kasredin: In order to understand how banks work, it helps if we go back in time and explain how banks first came into existence.  The topic of inflation is linked to the development of banks. As a teenager I studied the Elizabethan era in history lessons at school, and I remember reading that prices rose sharply during this period of English history.   I wondered why this happened, but my history textbook did not explain.…

By Kasredin: During the nineteenth century there was a struggle in this country and elsewhere to achieve real democracy – or, as it was then termed, universal suffrage. There was a groundswell of opinion that every man should have the vote, and some people even felt that women should not be excluded. Parliamentary democracy took a long time to gain popularity. The first parliaments were held in the thirteenth century, and were basically a way…

By James Eden: The Transatlantic Slave Trade is one of the most discussed topics in British history. It is also a political issue as many blacks believe that whites should pay them financial compensation to make up for the injustice of their ancestors being enslaved by whites. Although, so far anyway, our government has declined to pay this money, called reparations, there is no doubt that the official line is that we should be deeply…

By John Bean: NB.: This article is based on John Bean’s original work published in the October 2005 issue of Identity. It has been developed further by input from Roger Pearson, a Professor of Anthropology, particularly in the section on the origins of European man. When the Human Genome Project was completed in 2000, it was widely touted that its result showed no genetic basis for race. In fact some scientists of the liberal-left consensus…

By Frederick Dixon: As the traveller in southern Greece descends from the uplands of Arcadia into the country of Laconia – the far south-eastern corner of the Greek mainland – he encounters a scene of extraordinary beauty. There, before him in the sun, lies a broad and smiling valley whose pastures and fields lie among vineyards and olive groves, citrus and almond orchards. This is the valley of the slow, green, River Eurotas, a valley…

By Frederick Dixon: As racial nationalists we can all agree that the State’s definition of “Britishness” i.e. possession of a British passport (or even just being an “established resident of the UK”) is not for us. Such a definition is nothing more than the casting into legal form of the elite doctrines of multi-racialism and multi-culturalism, and leads to such absurdities as “British” men shooting at British soldiers in Afghanistan. For us, the nation is…

The first official slave owner in colonial America was a black man, not white; the Arab Slave trade in Negroes was far greater and much longer lasting than the transatlantic slave trade; the founder of the southern state of Georgia banned both slavery and Africans from the state; large numbers of “free blacks” owned black slaves; and less than 5 percent of pre-Civil War American families actually had slaves. These are some of the facts…

Some 1,000 years ago, the Vikings set off on a voyage to Notre Dame Bay in modern-day Newfoundland, Canada, new evidence suggests. The journey would have taken the Vikings, also called the Norse, from L’Anse aux Meadows on the northern tip of the same island to a densely populated part of Newfoundland and may have led to early contact between Europeans and Indians in the New World. “This area of Notre Dame Bay was as…

Muhammad Ali is more famous for being a heavyweight boxer than a racially conscious black man—but thanks to the wonders of the (white-invented) internet, his remarkable 1971 discussion on race on the BBC has now resurfaced for the world to see. In the video, Ali put down the blubbering liberal Michael Parkinson with a series of well-put, articulate and devastating accurate comebacks against all the usual leftist platitudes about race.

The exhumation of a Stalinist-era mass grave in the heart of the Polish capital Warsaw believed to contain the remains of around 200 victims of a post-war campaign of communist terror resumed this week following a winter break. “During the first phase of work last summer we managed to exhume the remains of more than 100 victims,” Krzysztof Szwagrzk, an official with Poland’s Institute of National Remembrance (IPN), who is overseeing the project, told Agence…