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The Enemy of Europe

The Enemy of Our Enemies, part 6
Devastated Berlin, 1945 A Critique of Francis Parker Yockey’s The Enemy of Europe (section 6) by Revilo P. Oliver Read the earlier parts of this book. The Dying and the Dead IF YOCKEY had not been hounded to death by the Jews and were alive today, would he take again, without variation, the oath he took in…

The Enemy of Our Enemies, part 5
A Critique of Francis Parker Yockey’s The Enemy of Europe (section 5) by Revilo P. Oliver
The Third Side of the Coin
WE HAVE, I think, followed Yockey and Robertson in drawing logical conclusions from the evidence before us. But all of our evidence – what we are told and what we are not told – comes from either…

The Enemy of Our Enemies: A Critique of Francis Parker Yockey’s The Enemy of Europe (Section 4)
by Revilo P. Oliver
SECTION 4
The Heartland
FOR YOCKEY, both kinds of colonies have only a secondary importance. The attitudes and cultural vitality of Europeans who have established themselves in other continents are determined by the power and vitality of their mother country. European dominion…

The Enemy of Our Enemies: A Critique of Francis Parker Yockey’s The Enemy of Europe (Section 3)
by Revilo P. Oliver PART IIOne Europe THERE IS A modicum of truth in the frowsty verbiage about “One World” that used to excite women’s clubs. It has always been obvious that there is only one earth, (1) but although an educated Roman in the first century B.C. could dream of a day when…

The Enemy of Our Enemies: A Critique of Francis Parker Yockey’s The Enemy of Europe (Section 2)
by Revilo P. Oliver The Great Pseudo-Morphosis
IT IS ODD that Spengler, and even odder that Yockey, has so little to say about the prime example of what they call “pseudo-morphosis,” the acceptance of an alien element by a young culture, which accordingly strives to make its Weltanschauung…

The Enemy of Our Enemies: A Critique of Francis Parker Yockey’s The Enemy of Europe, part 1
by Revilo P. Oliver WHEN Francis Parker Yockey completed and published Imperium in 1948, he wrote a comparatively short sequel or pendant to his major work. This sequel, which he later entitled The Enemy of Europe, is now lost, but he had his manuscript with him when he was in Germany in 1953, and, after…