A Lesson from Nature

The threats to American songbirds dramatically illustrate the dire plight of European-Americans.

by Kevin Alfred Strom

ONE OF MY small pleasures in life is bird watching, which gives me some peace in this world of constant conflict.

Over the years, I have discovered that there is a great deal to be learned from our avian neighbors, lessons that illustrate the laws of Nature that apply to us as much as to them. (ILLUSTRATION: The lovely scarlet tanager — one of many songbirds threatened by invaders who induce the birds to care for alien offspring.)

Recently, a listener sent me this article from the Richmond, Virginia Times-Dispatch entitled “Songbirds in the Midwest are . . . → Read More: A Lesson from Nature

Civility and Survival

by John Nobull

JOHN MURRAY CUDDIHY’S STUDY of the ‘Ordeal of Civility‘ endured by Jews in a Gentile society highlights, by implication, a considerable weakness in ourselves. The fact is that our tendency to be civil has been systematically exploited to the point where it opens up a gap in our armour.

There is now an overwhelming body of evidence that hordes of aliens, many of them actively hostile, are rapidly replacing us in our own countries. Not even the blind can be ignorant of this, unless they have also lost their senses of hearing and smell. Since this is the most important problem of the century, or indeed of any . . . → Read More: Civility and Survival

Jews and Modern Art

by Josiah Nott

MODERN ART IS not really art at all, but Jewish self-promotion and degeneracy.

So, though Jews are not heavily represented in true art, they are in fact very much over-represented in so-called modern art — in fact, they were and are the dominant force in it.

(ILLUSTRATION: Top, Water Baby by Herbert Draper; bottom, Greyed Rainbow by Jackson Pollack)

Because painting, sculpture, and music are more difficult to counterfeit than philosophy, it was necessary to transform and support Jewish modern “art” with philosophy in order to make the naive goyim accept it as genuine.

True art is difficult to counterfeit . . . → Read More: Jews and Modern Art

Riding Around

by Ben Parker

HE WALKS out.

The dog is asleep on the porch, the cows are in the moo yard, and the horse is in the stable. The truck clears its throat, coughs, then starts. The moon comes from behind a cloud to tag along for another late night ride to nowhere.

He drives around late at night, trying to see things more clearly, hoping that his movement through the cool, soft, night air will create unseen eddies and currents that will swirl through him and bring a deeper vision.

He takes the least traveled back roads far out into the country until he . . . → Read More: Riding Around

The Future Belongs to Us

by Dr. William L. Pierce (pictured)
Dr. Pierce’s Banquet Address

AS THIS SECOND General Convention of the National Alliance comes to a close, we have before us a prospect which is a great deal brighter than the one we had at last year’s convention. That is because the Alliance has finally begun to move forward. After years of trying to do things quickly and getting almost nowhere, we decided to do things right, no matter how long it takes, and then we began making progress.

If I were superstitious, I might say that someone up there has been trying to tell us something by that. . . . → Read More: The Future Belongs to Us

Sutter Lang: Defeating the Hypnotists

by Cholly Bilderberger

SUTTER LANG’S life is not all Sturm und Drang. He also spends considerable time in solitary reflection, and, on occasion, shares his thoughts.

For instance, only last week he said to me, “I have been working on a solution to the entire racial problem.”

“Tell me,” I said.

“I have every intention of doing so,” he said. “Here is my argument: We whites have been brainwashed by the Jews into accepting them as our masters and leaders. They have us mesmerized; we are their slaves. For some reason, which I cannot as yet pinpoint, we are incapable of breaking their hold over us. You cynics say that we are . . . → Read More: Sutter Lang: Defeating the Hypnotists

Philo Farnsworth: Almost-Forgotten Genius

The inventor of television, Philo Farnsworth (pictured here with his beloved wife and collaborator Elma), is little known today, mainly because of his opposition to the machinations of Jewish mogul David Sarnoff.

by Melanie M. Carroll and Kevin Alfred Strom

AS WE MARK the end of analogue television broadcasting in the United States this year, and the beginning of the Internet video revolution, it’s good to remember the very beginning of the medium — and its inventor Philo Farnsworth. His wife Elma “Pem” Farnsworth, who worked closely with her husband, died just a few years ago, in 2006.

Pem Farnsworth — who helped her husband, Philo T. . . . → Read More: Philo Farnsworth: Almost-Forgotten Genius

Art Looting: The Other Side

One endlessly hears of the looting of art during wartime — but strangely, one almost never hears of the looting of German art that took place after World War 2.

WHEN THE EXHIBIT, “German Masters of the Nineteenth Century,” opened at the New York Metropolitan Museum, it was significant because contemporary art history texts treat 19th-century Germany as a cultural wasteland. Frenchmen like Cezanne, Monet, Manet and Gauguin are seen as art personified. For all the critics cared, the rest of the European art world could have chopped up their palettes for kindling wood. Now it is quite true that the French artists had a lot going . . . → Read More: Art Looting: The Other Side

The World in False Face

Maggie Thatcher (pictured), Britain’s 80s version of Sarah Palin, and the hidden agenda behind the warmongers

by Revilo P. Oliver

THE CURRENT issue of News of the New World (Honeydew, South Africa) contains an excerpt from the issue of Special Office Brief for 20 June 1985. It is a clear statement of an important element in the elaborate swindle that is called “democracy.”

The ambiguously named Special Office Brief is the confidential and extremely expensive report of a private intelligence service that is the successor of Kenneth de Courcy’s ill-fated Intelligence Digest. It is now published in Dublin for security from harassment by the gang of aliens and traitors who presided . . . → Read More: The World in False Face

Multiracialists Are Crazy, part 1

by Kevin Alfred Strom

CRAZY PEOPLE say some really funny things, if you like absurd humor. A crazy person may believe that locomotives are actually made out of marshmallows. Or he may think that the only reason we can’t drink bleach without harmful effects is because we haven’t prayed to the right deity in precisely the right manner. And some lunatics are quite intelligent in their way, and may be able to produce creative and internally consistent arguments at some length to justify their positions, even if their premises are quite nutty. And all that’s good for a laugh.

For example, one Flat Earth believer insisted that the Earth . . . → Read More: Multiracialists Are Crazy, part 1

Network Television: How Far Can They Go?

Here’s a classic satirical look at the network TV schedule a quarter century ago. Except for the names, things haven’t changed much, have they? Let’s petition for reruns of these “classics.”

by Cholly Bilderberger

HERE’S A VERY INSIDE peek at coming attractions on television. Titles and story lines are firm; casting is tentative.

NBC: This troubled network, under the direction of Grant Tinker, is going all out to avoid being third — and a distant third — in the ratings. A few of the pleasant surprises coming your way:

Anne Frank Might Have Been Alive and Well in New York. This little what-if tugger-at-the-heartstrings shows us Anne Frank (Linda Gray) today, as she might . . . → Read More: Network Television: How Far Can They Go?

We Are Disobeying Our Inner Commands

When we’ve lost the ability to obey our inner commands, someone else will command us. Such is the natural scheme of things.

by Harry Stottle

THERE EXISTS in the genetic subconscious of the civilized White an unfathomably pure ethic, which is most openly revealed in the permanent and unchanging ideas found in his art. This ethic is both unattainable by and unimaginable to other races. The lack of a specific line of demarcation between reason and emotion, which is the key to the separate destinies of the non-White and White populations of the world, precludes harmonious cooperation.

We must remember . . . → Read More: We Are Disobeying Our Inner Commands

Race and History Distortion

by Revilo P. Oliver (pictured)

IN THE DECADE before us, the methods of historiography will undergo a very considerable modification.

History depends primarily on written documents, from the clay tablets of ancient Sumeria and the earliest Egyptian hieroglyphs to the archives of modern states. In the absence of documents, the historian can only elicit tentative conclusions from artifacts disinterred by archaeologists or surmise what actual events gave rise to folk-tales and legends, such as the myths about Hercules or the story of Heimdall in the Rigsthula.

It is the function of the historian to submit all documents, whether purported originals or copies of lost originals, to the most rigorous critical analysis to . . . → Read More: Race and History Distortion

The Trouble With Conservatism

Dr. Pierce predicted today’s shift to the right by Jews — and the fatal flaw in conservative groups like the Tea Party movement.

by Dr. William L. Pierce

LAST YEAR a group of sick, guilt-ridden Dutch liberals in the Netherlands formed an anti-racist group, the Person-to-Person Committee, for the purpose of fighting apartheid among the Dutch-descended Afrikaners of South Africa. They distributed packets of postcards to Dutch schoolchildren, each card bearing a printed message attacking apartheid and a photograph of an alleged “atrocity” by South Africa’s police and defense forces against Black “freedom fighters.” Each schoolchild was asked to add his return address . . . → Read More: The Trouble With Conservatism

Liberty and Responsibility

Tyrants fell when patriots — from Jefferson to eastern Europe’s anti-Communists — raised the consciousness of their nations’ best men and women: We can do the same.

by Kevin Alfred Strom

OVER 400 YEARS ago, the French philosopher Étienne de la Boétie (pictured) told us “Resolve to serve no more, and you are at once freed. I do not ask that you place hands upon the tyrant to topple him over, but simply that you support him no longer; then you will behold him, like a great Colossus whose pedestal has been pulled away, fall of his own weight and break into pieces.” There . . . → Read More: Liberty and Responsibility

The Thermodynamics of High Culture

by Instaurator

“Man’s purpose on earth …is to create order.” — Maxim Gorky

THERMODYNAMICS, as the name implies, originated as a systematic study of the processes used to convert heat into a more useful form of energy. An empirical science that has now been thoroughly developed, thermodynamics can be useful in analyzing not only heat engines but also the socioeconomic-genetic systems known as High Cultures.

A common property of an ordered system is that the aggregate, due to the interactions of its constituents, has very different properties than its parts. Consider a deck of cards. The deck, which is a gaming system, has very different properties than any single card. A new deck . . . → Read More: The Thermodynamics of High Culture

Orage and “New Age Consciousness”

A review of Consciousness by A.R. Orage

by Revilo P. Oliver (pictured)

A. R. ORAGE, THE MAN who popularized the phrase “New Age” in the early 20th century, and who honestly concluded on his deathbed that he had learned nothing of significance about the nature of life, here tries to lead the unwary reader to what is essentially the old notion of a “higher consciousness” (blissfully above thought and mental effort) or “cosmic consciousness,” which, when it actually occurs, is an hallucination produced by auto-hypnosis.

When I was a youngster, there was for a time a vogue for a book by P. . . . → Read More: Orage and “New Age Consciousness”

Dostoevsky on the Jews

by Dr. William L. Pierce

FEODOR M. Dostoevsky (pictured, 1821-1881) was one of Russia’s greatest writers. The son of a physician of modest means, he had the opportunity for an education, and was trained as an engineer. He remained close to the common people of Russia, however, in the experiences of his life and in his writing.

Dostoevsky was a fervent patriot, but his association with a circle of radical writers led to his arrest at the age of 27. He was subsequently sentenced to death, reprieved at the last minute, and transported to Siberia, where he spent four years in a prison labor camp. This was followed by several years as . . . → Read More: Dostoevsky on the Jews