This coming year has many dangers in store for our race and nation but opportunities as well, and both arise from the multiple possible outcomes of the Brexit process. For me and probably for most racial nationalists the outcome, whatever it may be, will be judged not on its consequences for trade or the economy nor even for sovereignty (that slightly academic obsession of most Tory Brexiteers), but on its consequences for immigration. So we…

A wave of relief swept the nation earlier this week when Prime Minister Theresa May announced that in future, celebration of the life of murdered Black teenager Stephen Lawrence and the mourning of his death would be centred around just one day a year — the 22nd April each year. As the 25th anniversary of his death passed, it had been feared that government ministers, Royalty and other establishment toadies, already knelt in fawning genuflection were planning to atone…

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…

On the 22nd April I wrote an article questioning the Prime Minister’s motives for holding a snap general election at this time. I pointed out that in the 2015 general election the Conservatives had a manifesto pledge to hold a referendum on EU membership; that they introduced legislation through Parliament in June 2015 to hold such a referendum, which was passed by an overwhelming majority in both the House of Commons and the Lords; and…

Is that heading too dramatic for the recent atrocity in Manchester? I don’t think so. What else is it when a member of an intrusive population targets our girls and young women for mass slaughter? He has wiped out a section of those who would otherwise bear the next generation of our people. It is already the case that with a White British birthrate of 1.6 children per woman the dial is set to slow extinction. Now the…

Following the murder of Labour MP Jo Cox earlier this year there is to be a by-election in her constituency of Batley and Spen and in tribute to her dedication to the displacement and race replacement of the British people, the other two main establishment political parties, the Tories and the LibDems, have chosen not to contest the seat. In light of this co-operation on the part of the establishment parties aimed at ensuring the replacement of…

You will all have seen that piece in the papers about the nursery group in Lincolnshire downgraded by Ofsted because it didn’t have any ethnic minorities among the children. This follows a similar downgrading last year for a primary school in the same town. I suppose most of us will have had the same reaction; a weary shake of the head at yet more daft political correctness coupled with the wish that everywhere in England…

By Frederick Dixon: Remember those dim and distant days of yore (well, last May actually, following UKIP’s victory in the Euro elections) when we were told that the Westminster elite “got it”, that they had seen the “elephant in the room”? The elephant that they now said that they had got was, of course, the public concern about immigration which had so greatly contributed to UKIP’s victory. Doubts about the sincerity of our rulers’ conversion to immigration realism soon…

 By Kasredin: Five years ago, the British National Party was the great hope of the nationalist movement in this country. Nowadays it is largely an irrelevance. We need to be realistic however. Even if the British National Party still had around fourteen thousand members and over one hundred councillors then it would still only be one notch above an irrelevance. The plain fact is that the British National Party has always faced too many obstacles…

By Max Musson: I am reminded of a fictional character, US Senator Pat Geary, who is portrayed by G. D. Spradlin in the film ‘The Godfather Part II’. In this film Senator Geary is initially seen attending the communion celebration for Anthony Corleone, the son of Michael Corleone the head of the Corleone crime family around whom the film is centred. Geary publicly accepts a substantial contribution in Anthony’s name as a donation for a local university, but while speaking before the…