Christian conservative online magazine. Anglofuturism, neo-traditionalism. Advocating Christian nations to be built in artificial and desert islands, seasteads
The traditional country station - run of the mill 19th c. architecture with some nice detail in the ironwork like the one pictured - would be really easy to make into a standard design and rinse repeat for all new stations.
But yet we build aesthetic disasters like Winslow.
Good article in the Sunday Times that sums up the problem with the quarter zip and gilet brigade. Dress codes still exist: only now everyone looks like they're on their way to a mediocre 6th form college on the tube every morning. Cringe identikit slop. Grow up and put on a tie.
To add to the discourse on parliamentary ceremony, here's the state opening of the Parliament of Scotland, 1685 (left); vs the ceremonial opening of the Scottish Parliament, 2021 (right).
Each parliament in the country should compete for the most grand and traditional ceremony.
Hy-Breasail, hyperstitional island principality — a NAMIB site, equated with islands off Ireland and with the Flemish Cap and Porcupine Bank: an overview of its history and Anglofuturist significance
-On 7 July 1878, the enchanted island of Hy-Breasail reportedly appeared off the west coast of Ireland for the last time. The anniversary offers an opportunity to delve deeper into it:
https://t.co/1qLhLuXF7I
The Four Horsemen of the 21st century British neo-imperialism - Renovatio Imperii Britannici I
From Commonwealthists to Restorationists, Anglofuturists to Christian Imperialists, the foundations for renovatio imperii are busily being laid in the new era of 2020s widening horizons:
https://t.co/2XkTV23wN1
The Parliamentary dress code needs to be more formal & more strictly enforced. In the House of Commons- you should be dressed like you’re attending the funeral of a minor royal in the 1940s. Enough of the slutty office temp & quirky bright colours lanyard lady looks.
@Englishremnant Absolutely in this day and age, but I was wondering what triggered his sermon in 1832, that this Oxford Movement co-founder this post is about, gave.
We are the bearers of the greatest civilisation this world has ever known.
Look at what this small island did, we built systems, laws, language and order that shaped the modern world.
We got on boats we made, with guns we forged and we projected power across the globe.
We did it with a fraction of the population that other empires needed.
That is calibre.
They aren't former imperial possessions, but current imperial possessions.
France, Great Britain, the Netherlands, Portugal and Spain still rule colonial empires, however diminished and could build back better if they turn back to God.
NEW VIDEO: The past is a foreign language
With their obscure vocabulary and complex sentence structure, the great old literary works, which often contain many answers to our present-day problems, have been almost completely forgotten.
As literacy declines and social media rises, it is more important than ever that we not only read those old and difficult books to fight the decay of our language and intellect and be able to understand the past for ourselves, but also to prevent the cord of tradition from being severed completely. We cannot let the past become a foreign language.
"I never thought that being a political figure would involve violence" is something that no political figure in any period of human history prior to women's suffrage would ever have uttered
Episode 4 of our podcast is now out on our YouTube channel.
Fraser and Sam discuss the great Hilaire Belloc and his work the Servile State, which champions Distributism over that of socialism and capitalism.
Listen to it here 👉 https://t.co/EhHm1d0N9V
When you apply this "Silly Sausage Britain" idea to other countries, it really highlights just how stupid it is. Imagine if Russian columnists claimed Comedy Club re-runs on TNT4 or that Tele2 white beard guy were core to their national identity. It's absurd.