The following is an interview conducted by Julian Langness of the website Europeancivilwar.com with Richard James, who is an important member of Western Spring: Richard is a very knowledgeable and capable European patriot, and his contributions to our discussions have been very fruitful over the last year. When I found out about his involvement in Western Spring, I asked to interview him as a semi-official representative of the group. It is an excellent interview, and some…

By Michael Woodbridge: “Take up the White Man’s burden And reap his old reward, the blame of those ye better The hate of those ye guard…” When the United States relieved Spain of the responsibility for administering the Philippines, Kipling wrote these words to his friend Theodore Roosevelt, as a warning about the consequences of taking on an imperial role. Likewise, Mark Twain declared that the colours of the American flag should be changed from…

This is the transcript of a speech made to a working class audience in 1884 by Karl Pearson, F.R.S., Professor of Applied Mathematics at University College, London. Karl Pearson was a polymath, born in Islington in 1857, he studied Mathematics at Cambridge University, later Physics at the University of Heidelberg, and at various other seats of learning; he studied metaphysics, physiology, Roman Law, 16th Century German Literature, English Law and Socialism and became a protégé of Sir Francis Galton. Although influenced by…

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…

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,…

By Jane Everdene Nationalism is all about blood.  And soil. We care about the soil because of the blood. The remains of generations of our ancestors lived their lives and died here and it is this fact that makes our country – our land – our soil – sacred to us. “Blood” refers to the closeness of our relatedness to others. We all know the saying “Blood is thicker than water”, and that it means…