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…

By Jez Turner: A long bow and a strong bow, and let the sky grow dark! The cord to the nock, the shaft to the ear, and the King of Koth for a mark! [Song of the Bossonian Archers] Robert E Howard, is very much in vogue at the moment among Identitarians. For instance see the highly recommended Jonathan Bowden ‘Pulp Fascism’, edited by Greg Johnson, (Counter Currents Publishing, San Francisco 2013). This book contains…

By Kasredin: The Conservative MP Nadhim Zahawi has recommended that the government should restrict child tax credits and child benefits to only the first two children in each household.  This is not yet government policy, and the Liberal Democrats are unlikely to give it their wholehearted support, but the public reaction in the comments section of at least one national newspaper is very strongly in favour. The coalition government is in trouble.  As I have…

By David Yorkshire: The following is a transcript of a speech I gave at a nationalist meeting in the summer of last year. I’m here tonight not to talk about politics, but about something broader and more far-reaching. I’m going to talk about culture, because culture is that which shapes politics and ideas in general, and we are going to look at how this is achieved. Now even the word culture itself has been politicised…

Today’s newspapers are full of stories about a momentus new speech that Prime Minister David Cameron intends to make tomorrow in the hope of winning nationalistically minded ex-Tory voters back to the Conservative Party. The speech is expected to propose restrictions on the rights of immigrants to access social housing, but no Bill introducing such changes has been put before Parliament and the forthcoming speech is not expected to provide a timetable for the immediate…

Following David Cameron’s cabinet reshuffle yesterday, many observers, heartened by the replacement of outgoing Muslim peer Baroness Warsi as co-chairman of the Conservative Party, will be unaware that the cabinet changes may have served to strengthen the influence over government of another minority group. When Sayeeda Warsi was appointed co-Chairman of the Conservative Party in 2010, this controversial decision by David Cameron distracted attention away from the other co-Chairman, the rather less obvious ‘minority group…