An Audio Interview with Max Musson
From Radio Aryan: “Max Musson joins Sven Longshanks for another Aryan Insights interview, this time to talk about Left Wing Terrorism and why the extreme Left should be banned in the UK under the Terrorism Act of 2000. Max starts by giving us some background information on the killing of Jo Cox and explains why it was a politically motivated killing and not terrorism. After that he describes what primary and secondary terrorism are and…
Further Reflections on Brexit
Well, we did it. A first, indispensable, step has been taken towards the healing of our nation. The generations of the First and Second World Wars gave everything to save Britain from foreign domination and invasion, but the fear that the present generation might throw away their sacrifice has proved unfounded. We should thank God, rejoice and enjoy it for a day or two – and then get down to the arduous, long term business of completing the healing…
The Refutation of Libertarianism
There follows the transcript, slightly modified, of a very enlightening and incisive speech, made by Greg Johnson of Counter Currents at a meeting of the London Forum in October 2015. This speech is well worth listening to, and can be found on the internet, and the words and arguments used well worth studying and inwardly digesting for use when encountering debate with ‘right-wing’ individuals in particular, who have not yet progressed to nationalism: The Refutation of Libertarianism…
Moral Particularism and the Imbalance of Nature
By Max Musson: In this modern age of concern for environmental issues, many people and even some naturalists who should know better, often talk of the ‘balance of nature’, and in reference to the impact of mankind’s growth and expansion across the globe, are highly critical, citing current trends as evidence that ‘we’ are “destroying the planet”. Worse than this however, is the tendency to view the lifestyles of the indigenous peoples of the ‘developing…
Francois Duprat – Co-founder of the Front National
By Jez Turner: Recently I made a trip, at the invitation of French Nationalists, to a cemetery in the Montmatre area of Paris to pay my respects at the grave and to the memory of a seminal figure on the European Identitarian scene. On this simple but elegant black marble tomb, there is no eulogy, no epitaph, but alongside a Celtic Cross and above the dates (26.10.1941 – 18.03.1978) – there is a name, ‘Francois Duprat’. He…
In Memory of the Victims of Communism
By Jez Turner: Communism has executed, slaughtered, massacred and starved hundreds of millions to death worldwide. From the time of the Russian Revolution onwards: through Bela Kuhn; Rosa Luxembourg; the American-backed Stalinist invasion of Europe; the anti-communist resistance movements that fought a savage guerrilla war against the Soviet hordes; the Cold War; the Hungarian Uprising; the Prague Spring; through to the thawing of the Cold War and its final collapse, Communism – whether in Europe…
Ukraine – The ‘Orange Revolution’ Turning White?
By Max Musson: Many people in Britain will have viewed events in Kiev over the last three months with a certain amount of confusion: we are after all a long way from Ukraine; government and politics operate rather differently there; and lines of communication between our two countries are such that most of us must rely on the mass media for news of what is actually taking place. The confusion stems from the fact that…
The End of the Theoretical
By Nick Grifford: Introduction Recently I attended a speech given by Alexander Dugin who was providing an explanation of, and generally promoting, his latest book, The Fourth Political Theory. I think that I would not be too far from the mark if I ventured that, following the hour long monologue, most members of the audience were only vaguely aware of the Forth Political Theory actually was and the questions that followed attested to this observation. Of…
The Root Of All Evil
By Heordreedenn: There is a thought experiment – at least I hope it’s a thought experiment – concerning the best way to boil a frog. Apparently if you just chuck the hapless amphibian into a pan of boiling water it realises immediately that all is not well and jumps out at once. But if you put it in a pan of cold water, and heat it slowly, it never notices what is happening, or at least if…
A Brief History of Democracy
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…