One would have assumed at any other time in our nation’s history that the British public would have automatically been four-square behind our prime minister and the British security services in their condemnation of a foreign power apparently committing a terrorist attack on British soil. Yet the current controversy surrounding the apparent attempted murder of ex-Russian double-agent Sergei Skripal and his daughter, which is polarising international opinion as one would expect, is also polarising political…

The sixth nominee for the 2018 Jonathan Bowden Oratory Prize is a previous winner of this prize. A very well known and popular figure within British nationalism Alex Davies was a one time leading member of the highly controversial and now proscribed National Socialist youth group, National Action. This year Alex has been nominated for a speech made at the Yorkshire forum in the spring of 2017 and which has a hard hitting and controversial theme. [NB: We…

I am pleased to announce the fifth nominee for the 2018 Jonathan Bowden Oratory Prize, a vlogger who has made a name for himself across the Western World, Colin Robertson, aka Millennial Woes. Colin’s speaking style is intimate and delivered at a measured pace, consistent with reading rather than unprompted oration, and Colin apologises for this at the beginning of his speech. However this is the speaking style that has made him famous and which has given…

The fourth nominee for the 2018 Jonathan Bowden Oratory Prize is one of the leading members of the Creativity Movement in the UK, the Reverend James Costello, who is nominated for a speech he made, incorporating a dramatic performance from Shakespeare’s Henry 5th. James was speaking at a meeting organised by Boadicea Events at Blackpool 21st October 2017. We believe James has an amateur dramatic background and because of this has memorised the speech from Henry 5th as a…

I am pleased to announce the third nominee for the 2018 Jonathan Bowden Oratory Prize, Peter Rushton, the Assistant Editor of Heritage & Destiny magazine, who has been nominated for a speech he made at the John Tyndall Memorial Meeting that was held in Preston during October of last year. Peter is a very popular and well practiced public speaker who has very clear diction and has learned to speak in a voice that conveys authority. He makes…

I was a post-war baby-boomer raised in a family in which my mother played a more dominant role than in most other households at that time. This was not a reflection of anything innately lacking in my father, he was badly injured fighting during World War 2 and was left partly disabled as a result, and when we encountered issues that my father struggled to cope with, my mother naturally stepped up and handled things…

We are pleased to announce that the second nominee for the 2018 Jonathan Bowden Oratory Prize is another leading personality within British nationalism — at one time the youth leader and head of publicity for the British National Party — now an author and regular podcaster and speaker at high profile nationalist events, Mark Collett. Mark has been nominated for the excellent speech he made at last year’s John Tyndall Memorial Meeting and  what was probably…

I am pleased to announce the first of this year’s nominees for the Jonathan Bowden Oratory Prize, the ever popular and gregarious Jez Turner, the founder and Director of the London Forum. This is the fourth time that Jez has been nominated for the Jonathan Bowden Oratory Prize and our readers will be aware that he was last year’s winner. He is one of the most accomplished and best known speakers in British nationalism today. In…

A White with an upper case W means Aryan.  Aryan means a non-Jewish Caucasian and this  means a non-Jewish White person of European descent no matter where he or she was born or lives.  White with a lower case w means the color white. All Whites are white, but not all whites are White. An upper case “W” White also means  that one has typical White features. Of course, there are many variants of these…

Recently, I was prompted to recall a conversation I had as a child with my parents during the ‘Cold War’ period in which my parents explained to me and my siblings the differences between the oppression that once existed in Nazi Germany and which still existed in the Soviet Union and the freedoms that we enjoyed here, in pre-war and early post-war Britain. Key among those differences were freedom of belief, freedom of expression and…