By Max Musson: Waiting for Godot is an absurdist play written by Irish playwright and poet Samuel Beckett and described as a ‘tragicomedy’ it incorporates both tragic and comic elements as the two main characters, Vladimir and Estragon wait in vain for the arrival of a third character, Godot, who never comes. So, what has this got to do with us? It is a metaphor for a condition that I recognise in many nationalists at…

By Michael Woodbridge: The unanimity of our alien controlled mass-media in its enthusiasm to demonise the Russian President, Vladimir Putin, evokes parallels which can only be compared with the media’s treatment of Adolf Hitler and the Third Reich. Indeed, much of the reportage does just that by suggesting that Putin is some sort of gangster politician who if not stopped will lead the West into a Third World War. In this article we’ll take a…

By Markus Willinger: The Ukraine crisis has not only shown that the old conflict between America and Russia still exists. It has also made it clear that Europe is still the locus of this conflict, but without any independent power of its own to affect the outcome. The Russians and the Americans argue about redrawing borders within Europe, and they don’t care what we Europeans think about it. They don’t care because they don’t need…

By David Yorkshire: One of the things that has captured my attention recently has been the events in the Ukraine. The reasons why all this has happened are readily evident, of course: the European Union and the USA have joined forces (despite the public facade of mutual animosity) to destabilise the democratically elected Ukrainian government under President Viktor Yanukovych for two main reasons. The first is to install a puppet government so that the Ukraine’s…

By Max Musson: If we nationalists are to acquire sovereign political power, it will be necessary for us to engineer or participate in an event, series of events or process through which political power will pass to us from the existing regime, either suddenly or gradually. At such a critical juncture, it is highly probable that the political establishment will take extra-ordinarily desperate steps to prevent a nationalist government from taking office and such steps…

By Max Musson: With over 75 percent of the votes already counted, preliminary  result show that 95.7% of voters in the Crimean referendum have answered ‘yes’ to the reunion  of the autonomous republic with Russia as a constituent unit of the Russian Federation and less than 4% want the region to remain part of Ukraine. The overall voter turnout in the referendum on the status of  Crimea is 81.37%, according to the head of the…

By Max Musson: Those who continue to follow events in Ukraine will be interested  to watch the video below, which answers many of the questions that currently remain unanswered regarding the motivations of the parties involved. Ukraine is currently broken, falling apart and fragmenting into smaller entities, and some analysts are calling Ukraine the next Yugoslavia. So what exacly is so special about Ukraine? Why are the Europeans even in Ukraine? And what are Russia’s interests in…

By Max Musson: In recent days I have published two articles attempting to explain what is going on in Ukraine and the implications for White nationalists worldwide. Events have since appeared to be spiralling out of control and following the realisation that back in 1994, Britain and the USA had signed a treaty with Ukraine guaranteeing her territorial integrity, there was a period over last weekend during which we were possibly on the brink of…

By Max Musson: It is now five days since Viktor Yanukovych was deposed as president of Ukraine and the parliament called for new elections and there appears to be a distinct lack of activity on the part of Svoboda and Pravy Sektor to cement their once dominant position. The danger is that the longer this period of uncertainty continues the more the chances of a successful nationalist revolution diminish and the more circumstances play into…

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…