Out Now:
Torrisi on @dr_mcinerney & @ChavuraStephen re Anglo Identity; Baskerville on Conservative Failure; Chodakiewicz on BLM; Salter on Decolonisation.
Books: Robbery Under Law by Evelyn Waugh; "Cultured Grugs" by @promptborzai; "Counter History" by @drissghalibooks.
Burroughs has written one of the most comprehensive accounts of the radical era in the US. As for the book by du Barrier, it is worth printing out and binding. Both offer a great antidote to the progressive mythologisation of modern history. Both highly recommended.
The combined effect of these two books is to show that America's entire establishment was effectively pro-communist for much of the "Cold War"...and that the communists won as a result, both at home and abroad
I put down Days of Rage in a rage, as Burrough shows leftwing terrorists got away with wreaking bloody havoc in the name of communist revolution, and faced no real consequences for it
Dr. Luke Torrisi, who wrote the superbe essay in our last issue "Avoiding a Foaming Tiber Downunder: a Defence of Anglo-Australian Identity", has another excellent piece, in the Spectator this time, concerning the UK murder of Henry Nowak:
https://t.co/KVfjJjHUWJ
As have we.
The book is useful *only* as an example of subversive literature, and it's important to read the Enemy.
Don't be fooled, they *are* the Enemy because that is precisely how they see you.
So called "right wing extremism" is any opposition to pathological Europhobia.
Our first volume has arrived from the printers and will soon be available for sale. Watch this space, and our Tgram channel (same handle) for updates. This will be a history, textbook and justification for civil disobedience on philosophical, theological and legal grounds.
In anticipation of the future release of the Backrooms movie, we are pleased to note the publication of "Exit Reality", by @valentinatanni, published through @neroeditions and @aksiomaorg.
Latest book by @RenaudCamus, "Decolonisation: Remigration & the Law" published in English by Éditions du Château.
The latest development in the dissident sphere is to reclaim the legitimacy of citizenship. This volume is an important voice to this effect.
The second volume of @curtis_yarvin aka Mencius Moldbug's Unqualified Reservations published through @PassagePress.
This seminal text of Neoreaction includes the "Gentle Introduction", a extensive commentary on Thomas Carlyle, and "Patchwork".
Highly recommended.
@curtis_yarvin No. Switching the button requires everyone's mind to have already changed. This is not a minor quibble. You have the sequence reversed.
https://t.co/QEWRVlpH79
The near-impossibility of the button being switched is because it requires a virtual consensus. It cannot be pressed by any individual. It requires a sweeping change in social orientation; ie it's unlikely under normal conditions. The switch is a change in the norm.
The near-impossibility of the button being switched is because it requires a virtual consensus. It cannot be pressed by any individual. It requires a sweeping change in social orientation; ie it's unlikely under normal conditions. The switch is a change in the norm.
.@balajis is with us live talking about the fix everything button:
"It's a great meme, there's some truth to it... what is missed is the people that have those bad ideas, you have to uninstall those bad ideas via persuasion before the button is built.”
This will prove to be one of the most important books published by the dissident press in recent years.
You will not find more honest cross cultural & political analysis today than in the reactionary-sphere.
Thank you to @AntelopeHill for their efforts.
https://t.co/42fEpcRRe5
This week's podcast episode on "The Theory of Japan's National Polity and Pure Socialism" will be released tomorrow, as we are working on some supplemental content for it, which will likewise be exclusive for paywall subscribers. Sorry for the delay!
Our pages are open to academic level studies, analyses and discussion on this and related issues.
Contact us if you're looking for a print platform to have your work published in.
We *won't* "mess with your voice", and we *do* publish footnotes.
... that's what we're here for.
Possibly controversial take: If the humanities weren't totally taken over by women, there would be a body of research on men's issues, and a lot of it would look like an academic, serious version of various incel/manosphere theories.
The extreme left likes to portray itself as the underdog, and talk about "cultural hegemony" etc...
But here they are purporting to be able to declare who the "New Right's" "intellectual" authorities are.
And they do this without a shred of irony or self-reflection.
Hilarious.
Gad Saad is a staple of the anti-woke dark web. But his new book, “Suicidal Empathy,” is proof that the supposedly “intellectual” wing of the New Right is running on fumes. https://t.co/cY828A9GNU
@VaubanBooks We've had a book from @PassagePress delayed by Amazon (Australia) since early March. Only this week did the status change to "shipped". The whole time it was listed as "in stock". Amazon help is of course useless. It is a mystery why these delays occur.
Highly recommended to our readers and followers is Tadeusz Stephan Zeliński's "Our Debt to Antiquity", published by our friends at @BooksBonfire. This reprinted translation by Herbert Strong and Hugh Stewart brings back an old classic to the contemporary reader.
"Monsters from the Id" by @EMichaelJones1 offers one perspective on why people are finding mass entertainment overshadowed by a spiritually dark climate. Published through @fidelity_press, this volume is both a history and cultural critique of this trend in cinema and literature.
There is too much dark energy coming out in movies.
You can tell me these horror movies, often torture porn, are cheap to make. Which contributes. But it’s the market for this stuff that is disturbing.
Even if cheap, few would be made of not for demand.
It’s a problem.
We have commented on this in the past (and our first issue reviewed one of the books featured below).
This is a fundamental problem from which all others stem, including the "national question".
The bottom line is this: people should "read [the real] banned books" more often.
At some point you people will have to start looking elsewhere for reasons and solutions, instead of obsessing over purely economic factors for this phenomenon.
... but you won't, because that would require questioning the cultural fundamentals of modern sexual liberalism.