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…
The Path to Power – Be Under No Illusion
By Max Musson: For more than a century, British nationalists have believed themselves to be the vanguard of a resurgent national spirit that had somehow become dulled and dormant through comfort and complacency, but which remained latent, still potent, and ready to be revived once the clarion call was sounded, heralding a new ‘golden age’. During the early part of the last century there was cause to believe that this self-image was correct and it…
The Bugle Call …
By Max Musson: It should be evident to all thinking nationalists by now, that the traditional electoral route to salvation for our people has now been made utterly redundant by the dire conditions that have been created in this country. That route has been made redundant because our enemies have made such advances over the last 100 years or more that in every sphere and at every level of our society there is now entrenched opposition,…
Racial Boundaries of the British Nation
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 Roots Of British Nationalism
In 1902 the English writer Robert Blatchford coined the term ‘Britain For The British’ as the title of a book he published that year. An earlier work entitled ‘Merrie England’ had been first published in 1894 and these two books established Blatchford’s credentials both as one of the foremost socialist writers of his time and a founding father of the British Labour movement, but also as one of the founding fathers of British nationalism. Blatchford,…