Enoch – What if?
On the 20th April 1968 the Conservative statesman Enoch Powell spoke in Birmingham on the subject of non-White immigration from the Commonwealth, and although the current transformation of our country had at that time barely begun, this was already the subject of great public concern. He spoke of the rapid increase in the numbers of immigrants, of the soaring immigrant birth rate, of the harassment of White people in the inner cities, of the conspiracy…
System Restore – Maggie Thatcher and Michael Foot Return to the Stage!
They say that fashions change in cycles and that if we wait long enough, those bell-bottomed jeans we loved in the 1970s will come back into fashion again, and it seems this is just as true in the ‘bread and circuses’ world of electoral politics as anywhere else. For some years now the public have become progressively less and less interested in politics, finding the three main establishment parties virtually indistinguishable in terms of the…
Max Musson Speaks – On John Tyndall, Electioneering, Money, and Unity!
By Max Musson: There is a debate taking place within British nationalism regarding whether or not electioneering is a worthwhile endeavour for nationalists; whether or not it is an effective means of pursuing our political aims; whether or not we are wasting our time, money and effort in what is increasingly viewed as a futile practice. This is not a debate about the rights and wrongs of the principle of democracy, because virtually everyone involved…
The Effeminization of Politics
By Frederick Dixon: Well, we’ve all seen the photo of that poor little lad washed up on the beach in Turkey, but would we have guessed that it would blow open the gates of Europe? Even if we didn’t, it wouldn’t have taken long for the truth to sink in as the BBC’s crocodile tears department went to work. So cynically has this tragedy been exploited to further the open borders agenda of the Left, that those who…
Mind Control and the Election
By Dafydd Ellis: They have used the same template for all elections where their chosen party and leader are promoted as strong and united, while the opposition party and leadership were being exposed as weak and indecisive. Labour in the seventies (weak and indecisive), made way for Thatcher and ‘strong’ leadership in the eighties. With growing public exasperation with the Conservatives, in the nineties it was “time for change” with Tony Blair and New Labour being promoted…
News in Brief
By David Yorkshire: Events in the Middle East have taken a turn for the worse recently with the news that two of the letters have been stolen from the terrorist group ISIS. Expert linguist Glibert Smugden called it “a disaster for convenient acronyms.” He added, “The loss of its coincidental nomenclature as having formerly been aligned with that of an Egyptian déesse is a blow for news reporters, governments and feminists everywhere.” British premier Cameron…
Farage ‘Spanks’ Clegg
By Max Musson: Yesterday saw the second of the much vaunted debates between our lack lustre deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg and the new, ‘naughty boy’ of British politics, Nigel Farage, and as was widely expected, Farage gave Clegg another good ‘spanking’. Whereas post debate opinion polls after the first of their televised debates placed Farage ahead of Clegg with the approval of 57% of viewers as opposed to just 36% for Clegg, post debate…
Tory Toffs, Cosmopolitanism and Greed
By Max Musson: Boris Johnson delivered a speech yesterday revealing much about the spirit motivating the Conservative Party and the upper echelons of our society currently. Johnson, who is of course the Mayor of London and who comes from a privileged background with lineages extending back to British royalty as well as to continental aristocrats, likes to project the rather eccentric image of an affable, well-meaning, and oftentimes inspired buffoon and ‘man of the people’,…
How Small Genetic Differences Give Racial Diversity
By John Bean: NB.: This article is based on John Bean’s original work published in the October 2005 issue of Identity. It has been developed further by input from Roger Pearson, a Professor of Anthropology, particularly in the section on the origins of European man. When the Human Genome Project was completed in 2000, it was widely touted that its result showed no genetic basis for race. In fact some scientists of the liberal-left consensus…
The Tarnishing of an Iron Lady
Yesterday brought us news of the death of Margaret Thatcher, one of the most significant and controversial politicians in recent British history. Firstly her life is significant, if only because she became Britain’s first and so far only female Prime Minister. That in itself is sufficient to secure her a place in our history books, but the most crucial question and the most hotly debated is whether or not her political career and tenure at…