Yuletide for European Unity
Whether you are made aware of the impending winter solstice by the encroaching cold, the darkening days, the obligatory festive music or the incessant stream of Christmas memes on social media, you will no doubt have an opinion on it. While neo-pagan acquaintances will be sure to insist on the pagan origin of the seasonal celebration, Christian friends will remind you of the birth of Jesus Christ and its importance to our culture. Atheists and…
A Future for Odinism in Britain?
By Edwin Harwood: It’s hard not to think of Harry Potter obsessives, mentally unstable hippies and other social misfits when talking about people who call themselves pagans. But not all people who identify themselves as such can be written off as victims of a hangover from the post-war counter culture; the sort of people who insist on rather dubious claims to an authentic pagan religion which conveniently conforms to the anti-Christian liberal ideals of sex without…
Do You Recognise This Man?
By Max Musson: Despite attempts by proponents of multiculturalism and multiracialism to convince us that we British are a mongrel nation of immigrants and that we should not object to the relatively recent influx into this country of non-White immigrants because we have already absorbed admixture from the Vikings, the Normans, the Belgae, the Angles and the Saxons, as well as the Celts, the evidence produced by archaeologists who strive after the truth demonstrates otherwise.…
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…
More Evidence Emerges for Viking Settlement of North America
Some 1,000 years ago, the Vikings set off on a voyage to Notre Dame Bay in modern-day Newfoundland, Canada, new evidence suggests. The journey would have taken the Vikings, also called the Norse, from L’Anse aux Meadows on the northern tip of the same island to a densely populated part of Newfoundland and may have led to early contact between Europeans and Indians in the New World. “This area of Notre Dame Bay was as…