Euro-Centric

STIHIE – The West Frozen in Carbonite

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Well, drop everything you are doing, because Mustlims are offended again. This time it's not the flag of the nation they are getting welfare from, or the top of a dessert from Burger King, or a Christmas tree. This time, it's a LEGO Set.

Rather than the simple building blocks of your childhood, LEGO's today revolve around the major pop culture franchises, especially Star Wars. There are complete Star Wars LEGO characters, Star Wars LEGO sets, even Star Wars LEGO video games. Alas, the “Jabba's Palace” LEGO set looks like one of Islam's “most sacred sites,” a holy mosque that has a special place in the heart of all of the indomitable warriors of Muhammed. After the “Turkish Community Council” filed a complaint, the Huffington Post, various gossip blogs, and all the rest of the aggregation devices that tell SWPL”s what to think churned up the machinery. The Huffington Post even made sure to chronicle LEGO's long history of racist bigotry. “LEGO's” and “Edward Said” were duly plugged into the templates they keep handy for these kinds of eventualities and once again, the world's children were saved.

Some conservatives grumbled that the LEGO set is, after all, just a toy and not meant to resemble a mosque. Lost in all the idiocy was that the Turks weren't complaining about a real mosque at all, but the desecrated Hagia Sophia.

Once the centerpiece of Orthodoxy, and the heir to the glory that was Rome, perhaps the greatest cathedral in the world was lost to the West after the fall of Byzantium, one of the most tragic episodes in the history of what used to be our civilization. The ominous lunar eclipse during the siege, the desperate prayers of the doomed faithful inside the Church, and the final charge of Constantine XI and the legends surrounding his disappearance would echo in Western memory, if the West still existed. Indeed, most of the commentators involved in this controversy seem unaware that the Hagia Sophia was ever a church, and that it was built by Orthodox Christians. Obviously, since the dispute is over copying a supposed architectural style, it would be the Orthodox that LEGO owes an apology, not the Muslims.

The metapolitics of the contemporary West center more on ethnic masochism even than egalitarianism. It's not just that people are unaware of the Ottoman conquest of Byzantium – it's that conceiving of any episode in history where traditional Christians or Europeans are the victims is beyond possibility. Thus, we have a situation where a children's toy company is forced on the defensive because Muslims are upset a product vaguely resembles a Christian church that they conquered, desecrated, and transformed into a triumphalist monumentfestooned with the crescent of Islam.

Of course the entire debate is absurd. Of course it's just a toy and doesn't even really look like the church.

However, the correct response is not just to our eyes at “anti-defamation” groups begging for a handout. It's to remember that the story of Byzantium is our story too, even as Americans. The struggle is not just about fighting a rearguard action for the freedom to indulge in childish amusements and “free speech.” It's about working for the day when the Marble King awakens once again.

Untimely Observations

The Terror of an Iranian Flying Monkey

It’s a sign of our times that Tehran is beginning to look like a better Starfleet headquarters than San Francisco.

On Monday, January 28th, 2012, Iranian scientists announced the successful launch and return of the capsule Pishgam (Pioneer), containing a live monkey who survived the trip; a significant step in the Asian Space Race.

State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland responded to the event in Washington, saying to reporters “We congratulate the ISA on this momentous achievement; I was overjoyed to see the pictures of the little guy making it safely back to the ground, and all our staff at NASA are honoured that you’ve continued on in the naming conventions of our early probes–”

Oops – my bad, I was channelling the Real Universe for a moment there. Here in the evil Mirror Universe she said "I saw the monkey - the pictures of the poor little monkey preparing to go to space… We don't have any way to confirm this one way or the other with regard to the primate."

Over a PETA, emoting like a School Marm, Jeff Mackey mimicked her outburst:

Like many of you, we were appalled by photos that have surfaced showing a visibly terrified monkey crudely strapped into a restraint device in which he was reportedly launched into space by the Iranian Space Agency. Back in 2011, our friends at PETA U.K. urged agency head Dr. Hamid Fazeli to ground the misguided mission, pointing out that nonhuman primates are no longer sent into space by the American or European space agencies

The reason I bring up PETA is because there are two stories going on here, neither of which says particularly nice things about our civilization.

First there’s the story about why this news has gone viral.

Every mainstream agency reporting on this starts off using words like ‘claimed,’ and ‘unconfirmed,’ suggesting that there’s reason to doubt the Iranians; nothing could be further from the truth. The Iranian Space Agency was formed in 2004, and their first successful launch came in 2008. They’ve been in space; they’ve already launched animals into space; the reason this suddenly became newsworthy in 2013 is because the latest animal, a monkey… is cute.

One half of the voluptuous American public will grow morally outraged when a single monkey goes through a traumatic, but harmless, experience in man’s quest for the stars, while turning a blind eye to the tens of thousands of animals experimented on for cosmetics, acne cream, and obesity medication – priorities. Meanwhile, the other half will be impotently morally outraged that the first half is morally outraged.

Expect to hear some celebrities denouncing this ‘barbaric’ practice.

The second story is that America is lagging behind, and those in power know it.

Still, Nuland noted general U.S. concern with "Iran's development of space launch vehicle technologies," and said the State Department would be working closely with partners and allies "to address our concerns about Iran's missile developments, including by promoting implementation of relevant Security Council resolutions."

If such a launch were to have taken place, according to Nuland, it would be illegal under the 1929 U.N. Security Council resolution, adopted in 2010, that prohibits Iran from undertaking any activity related to ballistic missiles capable of delivering nuclear weapons, including launches using ballistic missile technology.

Iran, contrary to popular belief (and unlike North Korea), is not run by a mad cultist; Ahmadinejad is kept on a tight leash by the Mullahs, and they know just how dangerous the game they’re playing is. To the west is Israel with its un-admitted nuclear arsenal, while in the Persian Gulf American battleships and aircraft carriers saber rattle, in search for a causus belli.

Developing ICBMs and nuclear devices are the last things on their mind.

The enriched uranium and space flight are not threats, they’re symbols of Iran’s peaceful intentions, delivered in the Muslim’s typical histrionic manner. Certainly, if they could, the Iranians would storm the West and put the Infidels to the sword – but they can’t, and they won’t, and things are going well enough at home that they’d rather not rock the boat.

The State Department knows this.

The reason this launch got people within the American government so upset is because – whether they admit it to themselves or not – they know deep down that America is turning into a second-rate has-been.

Technical ability is declining in the good ol’ US of A; the population is uneducated and unenlightened, dreaming of nothing but the next new gizmo, while suing and regulating actual innovation into obscurity. Miniaturization is not progress; using that miniaturization for something other than increasingly unstable operating systems would be, but that’s just not happening. Occasionally you hear of some lone innovators creating something wondrous, but you only need consider the mediocrity of the market, and the incompetence of the workforce, to understand why the best we can hope for is a bigger, better iPod.

The American people are not interested in achievement.

Just look at NASA: despite its brilliant people, and the amazing feat of delivering a Chevy Silverado to the surface of Mars – intact on the first try, no less (have you ever had a rebuilt engine work on the first go?) they’re forced to operate on a budget which is on par with what most States spend on Education.

Hawai’i: 2,042,145,776 (Pop. 1,392,313)

Alabama: 5,546,070,765 (Pop. 4,822,023)

Texas: $67,150,000,000 (Pop. 26,059,203)

Depending upon where you live, that works out to be between $5,000 – $10,000 per student, at a cost-per-taxpayer of between $1,500 - $3,000 per year. And what does NASA’s budget look like? A paltry $17,770,000,000; less than a third of what Texas spends on educating its populace, or three times Alabama. For the average taxpayer that works out to…

$57 a year to support man’s exploration of space. Meanwhile you pay thousands to support a bloated and ineffective education system, run by-and-for the unions.

On the plus side, now that the Space Shuttle’s been retired without a replacement, NASA can focus more of its funds on the International Space Station; they’ll just have to hitch a ride with the Russians or Europeans.

Here we stand on the cusp of the future – a country which once landed on the moon with pocket calculators – and Iranian goat-herders with technology that’s 30 years out-of-date are dreaming bigger dreams than us.

But this is more than just technological progress grinding to a crawl; it’s also technology going offline.

The LGM-118A Peacekeepers were the replacement for the old Minuteman ICBMs, a critical component of America’s policy of Nuclear Deterrence. The Minuteman suffered deficiencies of both payload and accuracy. Start a war? Bomb a city? No problem. Take out an enemy silo defensively? Even if it hits it’s not going to penetrate the concrete.

The Peacekeepers provided a precise and time-sensitive retaliatory capability; a guarantee that if anybody lobbed one first, the US would be able to punch them back with a quick one-two. Good neighbours and fences and all that. I say “provided” because by 2005 the force of 114 on-alert missiles had been reduced to 10 on standby. Officially this was done out of a misguided philosophy of disarmament; unofficially George Bush II needed to fund his adventure in Iraq. The US can no longer defend itself in a nuclear conflict.

This is why the State Department is so upset by the Iranian Space Monkey: the United States is turning into a second-rate country, not just technologically, but strategically as well. An Iranian rocket on a peaceful mission manages to sum up all of this, to strike cold terror into the souls of the people who thought they could treat the world like a game of puppetry, pulling and yanking on strings, never worrying that they might be breaking the marionettes.

That pungent aroma you smell is a racial memory of Rome burning. Perhaps, when the last set of rafters comes crashing down, the Great Republic will rise again like a Phoenix, now that those who set it aflame are brought low…

No promises, though.

 

Zeitgeist

Fall of a Tragic Hero

It has been one week since Lance Armstrong finally released his unbearable burden: yes, he took EPO. Yes, he resorted to blood transfusions. Yes, he took testosterone. Yes, he took human growth hormone. And yes, he sued people for telling the truth. The symbolic aspect of Armstrong confessing all that to the "wise, healing" figure of Oprah Winfrey must have struck any AltRight reader. Lance Armstrong is maybe not a white nationalist, but last week, it was “one of us” who threw in the towel before “one of them.” Even if none of the two were conscious of that.

Fight back and win

Lance Armstrong is not only a good-looking, powerful and intelligent champion (there are very few athletes who cumulate all these assets; I can only think of Roger Federer). He is not only a perfect Nordic type who would have left Madison Grant in admiration. He is also, and more importantly, the incarnation of something I think is peculiar to Europeans: the will to fight even when everything seems lost.

One could instantly think of the three hundred Spartans who sacrificed themselves for Hellas at Thermopylae. In the realm of sports, I think, more simply, of Manchester United’s victory in the 1999 European Soccer Champions League. With Bayern Munich ahead by one goal in  extra-time, “Man U” managed to score two goals in one minute, allowing a certain David Beckham to win his first major trophy. Two months later, a former world champion, who had been forced into retirement because of serious testicular cancer, won, quite easily, the first of his seven Tours de France.

The teenager I was at that time could not fail to detect the same pattern between those two victories. Moreover, I strongly identified with Lance Armstrong that July in 1999, since my team-mates and I won a much more modest title, the French Rowing Championships, in a wooden boat (all the other teams had faster, synthetic boats). It was one year after we failed to even qualify for the same national championships, so the “fight back and win” aspect of Man U and Lance Armstrong’s exploits had a very strong appeal to me. Of course, the fact that it was in my country that Lance Armstrong wrote the seven pages of his legend also played an important role.

A perfect Hollywood scenario

Overcoming cancer and then triumphing in one of the most difficult tournaments: this seemed to be a perfect scenario for Hollywood. Even poor Mariah Carey mentioned Lance Armstrong in the video-clip of her embarrassing revival of Phil Collins’s Against All Odds, in 2000.

Though Lance Armstrong won in a White Man’s game — his main challenger was the 1997 Tour de France’s winner Jan Ullrich, from Germany — I couldn’t help thinking, even in those racially unconscious days, that the Texan was somehow fighting against the “rising tide of color” in sports. When journalists blamed Lance Armstrong for being “arrogant,” it was not his “Yankee” pushiness that made them insecure. If it were so, they would have loathed Maurice Greene the same way. No, what disturbed them with Lance was the fact that he was well-spoken, successful in all kinds of ways, and with fair hair and light blue eyes at that.

I noticed the same irritation when the Greek sprinter Konstantinos Kenteris won the 200 meters final in the 2000 Sydney Olympics. This time, it was not in a White Man’s game, not at all… and when the Black finalists reacted by saying that “he was unknown before the Olympics,” I think everyone in front of his TV knew perfectly what really annoyed them.

From Western hubris to European self-mastery

Now Lance Armstrong is broken: he will have to pay back $10 million to his former sponsors, insurance companies, opponents in court, sports authorities, cycling teams. etc. The amount could even rise to $100 million, which is about what his personal fortune is estimated to be.

In all his hubris, Lance cheated; it cost him one testicle, and he cheated again, in the process becoming a legend… and now, everything’s gone. In the manner of Stalinist Russia, his name is being erased from the Tour de France’s prize list, even if everybody knows who actually won from 1999 to 2005.

It’s all the more unfair since his predecessor, Italy’s Marco Pantani, winner of the 1998 event, died under very dubious circumstances in 2004. Jan Ullrich won an inhuman stage victory in Andorra (Pyreneans) in 1997. Later, he was convicted of doping. Denmark’s Bjarne Riis, the 1996 winner, is still on the prize list, though he has admitted to doping. And the list goes on and on.

What does Lance Armstrong’s initial come-back, and eventual downfall, tell us? In a civilization that is in its Autumn, if not already entering Winter, it’s a certain type of Western man that is dying, waiting better times to rise again. Lance could have been a navigator in the 15th century, an explorer in the 16th, a settler in the 17th. He might have fought for American independence, or become an industrial capitalist in the 19th century. Born in the earlier part of the 20th century he might have risen to become a great astronaut like his even more famous namesake. But he was born in the post-WWII West, where men of value have only vicarious ways to prove their worth.

So he cheated, he deceptively won, and eventually he lost everything. In a metaphoric way, it can only lead us to think of our fellow Westerners: money-obsessed sluts who get banged in sordid highway motels by “Kings of real estate” instead of taking care of their children, or immature fathers who fantasize about their daughter’s friends instead of protecting their families.

The Industrial Revolution, the Summer of our civilization, proved to be a mere straw fire. It left our people exhausted, both physically and morally, forced to exist on drugs, whether EPO or cocaine, casual sex, video games, or fake “careers” in order to pretend they were still “winning.” But they weren’t. We shall never renounce our “Faustian” way of being, because that’s what makes us unique. But we should find better ways of making it meaningful in a world where our civilization is on the decline. That means being true to ourselves and doing the best we can. Not pretending that we win when we don't and striving for the prize of pity at the feet of Oprah Winfrey.

Zeitgeist

Dredding Homosexuality

When last I read the sci-fi comic strip Judge Dredd, back in its 1980s heyday, the character seemed to work just fine without a psychological, emotional, and sexual back story.

There was enough fascination in unraveling the details of a 22nd-century world where America had been reduced to a couple of crime-ridden megacities separated by a radioactive wasteland full of mutants (Red States and Blue States, anyone?).

The only home life the relentless lawman had was a lisping drink-dispensing robot called Walter and a landlady who still had the thick Italian accent and culinary attitudes of early-20th-century Italian immigrants.

Now, according to The Independent, it’s being leaked that Dredd is about to come out of the closet as homosexual:

“The writers of the legendary lawman Judge Dredd have caused a stir among fans by suggesting he might be gay. The latest edition of the comic 2000 AD is titled Closet and deals with the issue of a teenager coming out. The first page has been released on the internet and apparently shows Dredd - a judge/policeman form the future - kissing the youth in a gay club.”

This clearly reads like either a desperate quest for new storylines, after exhausting the vast number of possibilities that the original concept opened up, or an attempt to expand the audience by getting wider media attention. The fact that the Judge’s decloseting would piss off traditional fans of the comic means that it is very probably the second.

In a previous article for AltRight I mentioned the phenomenon of Subracism and how it has been used to sell product and make the careers of the modestly talented, Madonna and Kim Kardashian among then.

Race is one of the things that nobody can ignore. Anything which has a racial, especially a bi-racial, component immediately engages our attention. When Madonna kissed the feet of a Black Jesus in one of her pop vids, there was an outcry, but, interestingly, it was voiced as complaints against sacrilege, when what was really pissing people off was the image of a White women – even if she was a piece of trash – kissing a Black man’s feet.

Also there was the recent example of promoting the latest Bond film Skyfall by floating the ridiculous idea of the next Bond being Black.

The racial awareness in cases of “Subracism” of course is not subconscious in a true psychological or Freudian sense. Most of the people appalled by Madonna, Kim Kardashian, and Idris Elba dressed in a tux saying “shaken not stirred” know full well why they are appalled. They just can’t admit it, so they'll talk about sacrilege, skankiness, or being “true to the period” instead. The 'subconscious' element exists at the social level of what a society can openly tell itself.

Subracism is thus the stimulation of our racial sense in a social or cultural context in which we cannot admit or express it. This stimulates passions and controversies, and of course media coverage (free advertising) for product that would otherwise have to get by on its own merits. The displaced emotional energy caused by Subracism has always led to big bucks for someone.

But as the recent case of Judge Dredd’s hinted-at homosexuality suggests, this phenomenon need not be limited only to race. Just as threatening human identity by playing games with race creates a media buzz made up of stifled visceral urges, so too with questions of gender identity, in particular homosexuality. This is an instant button pusher, and again the pattern is the same: mass individual repulsion, anger, distaste, shock, or horror that can’t express itself at the social level, quickly followed by dispacement into associated quibbling points, attempts at ironic detachment, and also moral jockeying.

But just as the owners of Bond know that their bread will remain buttered by retaining the umbilical chord with the character’s retro-Britishness, so the publishers of Dredd probably realize that making Dredd an obvious fag would not only lose them much of their audience, but might even piss off their gay readers, who probably like to keep their homoerotic fantasies of the character in an extremely nebulous state.

Raising the spectre of Dredd’s homosexuality definitely seems to be a good way to get a bit of free advertising, but it also raises the question of the non-homosexual sexuality of other cartoon and comic characters. Should sexuality only be an issue when a character is gay, and does the fact that being gay is an issue therefore serve as a justification for a sexual treatment of a cartoon character?

If yes, that is inherently homophobic.

The logic of “political correctness” assuming it has one is that either every character or no character’s sexuality should be on the table. If we are forced to deal with homosexuality in a character, should we not also be exposed to the heterosexuality of heterosexual characters? If the signal is being sent out that Dredd likes it up the ass, should not the signal also be given and I may be speculating here that Popeye regularly gets a blowjob from Olive Oyl or that Goofy wanks off to cow porn?

The Magazine

The Andy Warhol of the Alternative Right

When the infamous Moscow investigative journal and sleazerag The Exile closed its doors nearly five years ago, their farewell issue proudly bore this line on the front page: "In a nation terrorized by its own government, one newspaper dared to fart in its face."

That line reverberated in my mind as I made my way through my copy of Three Years of Hate: The Very Best of In Mala Fide. Under the aegis of its founder and head ringmaster, "Ferdinand Bardamu," In Mala Fide was lurid, inflammatory, borderline pornographic; and yet it was also insightful, compelling, and inspiring, "the closest thing the alternative blogosphere [had] to a center." Through a mix of rancor, wisdom and regular link roundups (under the title "Linkage is Good for You"), Bardamu was not only one of the founders of the "manosphere," the online collective of men seeking to overthrow feminist dominion and reclaim their masculinity, he brought the alternative right together like no writer before or since.

And now, six months after he rode into the sunset, the best of Bardamu's writings have been collected in book form.

As the name implies, Three Years of Hate is a collection of Bardamu's best articles, edited and organized into a quality product. While none of the book's content is original---unless you count its cryptic dedication---all of its essays have been touched up and polished, and a few have been noticeably expanded beyond their original incarnations. One of those is "The Eternal Solipsism of the Female Mind," easily Bardamu's most influential and important article ("solipsism" is one of the manosphere's most prevalent memes/concepts) and the very first one in the book:

Granted, not all women are equally solipsistic. It’s like breasts. Some women have dainty, delicate A-cups; some very fortunate girls have heaving, delicious double-Ds; still more unlucky gals have barely noticeable bee stings. So it is with self-absorption: some women are more self-centered and clueless than others. A woman’s inherent solipsism is also affected by her surrounding environment. On a scale of 1 to 10, where 1 represents almost no solipsistic tendencies and 10 represents near-fatal levels of solipsism, American women would clock in at 9. For comparison’s sake, Canadian women would be 8, Brits would be 10, Chinese women would be 5, and Russians would be 3. These are completely unscientific estimates based on a combination of personal experience and crude stereotypes, but I stick by them.

Three Years of Hate is loosely divided into four sections, focusing on sex, politics, life philosophy/practical advice, and humor respectively. In this, the book retains one of the site's greatest strengths: its remarkable breadth of topics. In no other book can you go from a discussion of the economics of Internet porn to a explanation of how monoracial, white societies inevitably gravitate towards socialism to an satirical essay on discrimination against redheads.

Racialists, anti-feminists, and traditionalists will each find something to love about Three Years of Hate.

From a literary standpoint, Three Years of Hate is also worth reading because it allows you to see the evolution of Bardamu's writing style. Like his namesake, Ferdinand's prose lurches and crackles like lightning, grabbing you by the back of your neck and shoving you face-first into the action. No mere poser though, Bardamu is also capable of putting on his thinking cap, as articles like "America's Four Hundred Year War Against the Catholic Church" assume a clinical, almost scientific tone:

One of the Great Lies of our time is that Puritanism and Calvinism were right-wing or conservative in any way, shape or form. It betrays a basic ignorance of American history. The Puritans were the free-love, hippie-dippie pinko commies of their day. The whole reason they settled in America was not because of “religious persecution,” as the revisionists would argue, but because they felt that the Protestant Reformation had not gone far enough in England. The Puritans recognized that Anglicanism was (and is) nothing more than ersatz Catholicism, with the Queen replacing the Pope, and they sought to extirpate all Catholic influences from their lives. Even after formal Puritanism faded away, the attitudes and beliefs it inculcated stayed behind, and define America as we know it. The American Revolution was birthed in Calvinist New England; virtually every progressive social movement in American history, from abolitionism to the temperance movement to the civil rights movement, either began in New England or had significant support there. Which state was the first to legalize gay marriage again? Oh, that’s right, Massachusetts.

The thin red thread connecting all these disparate parts is Ferdinand's iconoclastic philosophy. Never one to be pigeonholed, Bardamu is equal parts Roissy, Mencius Moldbug, Mark Ames and St. Augustine, tearing into the lies of the left and of his ideological allies with equal aplomb. Ferdinand rips into modern women for their slutty behavior and massive entitlement complexes, but also chastises traditionalists like Lawrence Auster and Laura Wood for their inability to comprehend the plight of modern men. He disparages white nationalists as "racial Marxists," but defends Insane Clown Posse as "a voice for America's most ignored and scapegoated social group: the white underclass."

Agree or disagree with him, Ferdinand will always make you think and question your cherished beliefs, a feat that few if any writers can pull off.

My biggest criticism with Three Years of Hate is the way it's organized. With the exception of the first section (which places "Eternal Solipsism" ahead of an article that was published a couple of weeks earlier), the book's essays are organized chronologically. It mostly works, but I can't help but feel that it could have been benefited from a more rigorous layout. This is a pretty minor issue, though.

Bardamu's bombastic approach to blogging won him countless friends and fans---when he closed the site in June of last year, In Mala Fide had around 50,000 visitors a month, making it one of the most trafficked sites in the alt-right blogosphere---but it also made him a large swath of enemies. Beyond the intellectual pygmies he emasculated and skewered on a regular basis, Bardamu became a target of the Powers That Be for his anti-feminist activism. In December 2010, In Mala Fide rocketed to the front page of Reddit after Ferdinand published the home addresses and phone numbers of the women who falsely accused Wikileaks founder Julian Assange of rape, exposing the manosphere to a much wider audience. A year ago, IMF was targeted by the Southern Poverty Law Center as a "hate site" alongside Roosh and The Spearhead, a position the SPLC was later forced to backpedal on due to widespread ridicule.

In Mala Fide was also hurt by Bardamu's decision to make it into a multi-author magazine in early 2011. While the site fostered a number of great writers, including Maximus, Frost and Bronan the Barbarian, Bardamu let too many cranks and oddballs take the reigns, muddling the site's mission and driving away many long-time readers. Ferdinand himself seemed to stop caring in the last year; while he did write a number of great articles during this time (a number of which, including "Advice for Young Men" and the aforementioned piece on Puritanism and the left, made it into the book), it was clear that his heart wasn't in it anymore.

It's a testament to Bardamu's tenacity and courage that in the face of all this, he managed to not only stay relevant but expand his influence. Countless writers and thinkers owe their careers to the patronage of this soi-disant "Andy Warhol of the alt-right/manosphere," either through his linkage posts or by publishing their articles on his site. I was one of those "Bardamu Superstars"; I got my first fifteen minutes of fame when an article of mine was linked on IMF's sister site In Bona Fide, and I got the opportunity to publish several guest articles for the site during its waning months. One of those posts, "Planet of the Bitches," was read by AltRight editor Colin Liddell and republished here.

For that initial boost, I am eternally grateful.

While the manosphere and the alternative right have continued to flourish, there's no arguing that the loss of In Mala Fide was a hard blow to both. Beyond the loss of one of the best writers of modern times (and no, that is not hyperbole), we also lost a convenient place to discover up-and-coming writers and incisive articles on everything from politics to sex. While several sites have sprung up attempting to replicate Ferdinand's linkage posts (The Second Estate and Society of Amateur Gentlemen among them), none have managed to capture the audience that In Mala Fide had. The week of tearful eulogies that followed Bardamu's goodbye post is a testament to the sheer amount of influence he wielded.

An influence far greater---and far more of a force for good in the world---than the frauds who attacked him.

Three Years of Hate is an invaluable, priceless book not merely because it's well-written, entertaining and thought-provoking. It's worth reading because it's a piece of history. It's a record of one of the most influential and important thinkers of our times. Decades from now, when the current dystopia is naught but a bad memory, Ferdinand Bardamu will be remembered as one of the architects of its fall.

An act of defiance against evil, no matter how puerile, is still a righteous act.

Buy Three Years of Hate: The Very Best of In Mala Fide by clicking here.

 

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Zeitgeist

STIHIE: "What Would Django Do?"

As all good conservatives are aware, the Founding Fathers wisely instituted the Second Amendment . . . so as to Kill Whitey. 

A controversial group's new effort dubbed "What Would Django Do?" looks to bring minorities to its side in the debate over gun control.

Quentin Tarantino is on record blaming firearms for recent mass killings in Newtown, Conn., and elsewhere. So it might come as a surprise to him that a pro-gun group is invoking the director’s current film, Django Unchained, in an effort to woo African-Americans to their side in the debate over gun control.

The group is called Political Media, and it's the same entity that was behind Saturday’s controversial Gun Appreciation Day, which encouraged Americans to show up at various places with a copy of the U.S. Constitution and signs reading, “Hands off my guns.” Larry Ward, president of Political Media, a company that designs websites and organizes ad campaigns for right-of-center organizations, said hundreds of thousands of people participated in Gun Appreciation Day, crowding gun stores and gun shows and demonstrating at various state capitals nationwide.

He’s hoping for similar success with his follow-up effort, dubbed “What Would Django Do?” Ward plans not only a campaign but a nonprofit organization that would bear the name, though he acknowledges he hasn’t sought permission from Tarantino or from The Weinstein Co., the studio behind Django Unchained.

“We’ll cross that bridge when we come to it,” Ward said. “We’ll make sure we aren’t violating copyrights, and if we are, we’ll have to change the name. But Django is perfect for what we’re trying to do, which is to promote gun rights to minorities. We’ll tackle the issue on the Democrats’ own turf.”

The Weinstein Co. did not respond to a request for comment.

Source: Hollywood Reporter

Untimely Observations

Cyberpunk Meets Alt Right

In the first segment of our new "Author to Author" series, Andy Nowicki interviews Rachel Haywire (www.rachelhaywire.com) -- founder of the annual Extreme Futurist Festival and a seminal figure in the Transhumanist movement -- about her book Acidexia, a sort of "On the Road for the digital age." Then Rachel Haywire interviews Andy Nowicki about his 2011 novel The Columbine Pilgrim.

Acidexia talk: www.swarmstrategies.com/uploads/author-to-author-01.mp3

The Columbine Pilgrim convo: www.swarmstrategies.com/uploads/author-to-author-02.mp3

Purchase Acidexia at www.amazon.com/Acidexia-Rachel-Haywire/dp/0615739334

Purchase The Columbine Pilgrim at www.amazon.com/The-Columbine-Pilgrim-AndyNowicki/dp/1935965115

 

 

Untimely Observations

Mistrust

As a child, I remember being fascinated by products advertised in magazines. I remember one or more of the actual objects arriving, and noticing how paltry it was in comparison to the advertisement. The colors weren’t as bright; the product showed seams and gaps from manufacture; and it never performed quite up to the promised level.

It has baffled me since then as to why this society tolerates lies, deception and manipulation. People would tell me, “Oh, everyone knows that’s not true.” That then made me wonder: why is it profitable to continue doing it then? Clearly everyone does not know. And even more, why tolerate such an ugly, hope-crushing practice?

There are many forms of this pathology, but the summary is that our society tolerates deception and as a result has made mistrust a rule. It’s not illegal to lie, or to cheat. As a result, that’s what people expect when they encounter one another, and so they are correspondingly selfish.

Imagine deals between criminals. One offers something and the other thinks this is surely a sham, so what he offers is equally blighted. The result is a trade that leaves everyone feeling short-changed, resentful and angry at the world. It’s not surprising that people behave like angry nobodies when this happens.

Our society has for centuries been wracked by this internal mistrust. All of it has started to resemble Dickensian England, where the streets are lined with pickpockets and the stores all cheat, with the only escape being to become so rich that your staff can insulate you from the mess.

By teaching new generations that this is normal, we’ve created the kind of mentality in our citizens we saw in the Soviet union. Of course the government tractor won’t start; they never do. Of course the latest policy has failed; they always do. Ignore it and keep on trucking.

It’s not the big things that bring down empires, but the little things. Mistrust means that every certification is a sham, every statement is a lie, every specification is wrong, etc. and that the only way to succeed is to work around your fellow citizens. It makes us selfish, paranoid and cruel.

It shouldn’t surprise anyone at this point that our society has become a sort of giant filter in which only the wealthy have any chance at a normal life. Everyone else is caught down there, in the churning of mistrust and squabbling for pennies, trying to get to the top.

In the name of equality, which forbade us merely selecting people for being the best and putting them at the top, we have created a vortex of “competition.” This competition isn’t for moral character, ability or intelligence, but the hours put into fighting over irrelevant details. It’s “fair” in the view of the egalitarians.

However, it has made our society a mean place, and thus made us mean, and we don’t apply that only to others, but even to ourselves, becoming so cynical that we loathe even ourselves and long for the suicide of our civilization. The cost of mistrust is higher than was advertised.

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God-Sized

Is America a "Christian nation"?  Will traditional Christianity die in the West and flourish in the Third World? What's the significance of the self-esteem religion of Joel Osteen?  These and other questions are explored as Andy, Colin, and Richard discuss Christ in the modern world.

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District of Corruption

MLK, Conservative Icon

That’s what $arah Palin, Glenn Beck, William Bennett and a whole bunch of other conservatives would have you believe. They tell us that King stood for freedom, liberty and limited government.

Conservatives love to proclaim “Bull Connor was a Democrat! And Martin Luther King was a Republican!”

Here’s just a few examples:

Martin Luther King Jr Was a Conservative Republican

Martin Luther King’s Conservative Legacy from the conservative Heritage Foundation

The Conservative Virtues of Dr. Martin Luther King from the Heritage Foundation and William J. Bennett, the Book of Virtues author

Houston group says Martin Luther King Jr. was a Republican

And don’t miss this, from a black conservative:

King recognized the tyrannical nature of the government, and he would be standing shoulder to shoulder with Sarah Palin, Glenn Beck, Rush Limbaugh, Herman Cain, Allen West, and many others in an attempt to free not only blacks this time, but the entire nation from the very same government that was oppressing blacks during King’s lifetime.

Well, if there’s been any presidential candidate on a major party ticket who believed in those things since World War II, it was Barry Goldwater. And he was the nominee of the Republicans, allegedly King’s own party. So surely Martin Luther King must have voted for Barry Goldwater, right?

Uh, no.

In fact, this “conservative Republican” denounced Goldwater in the strongest possible terms in a speech he gave after he won the Nobel Prize. He not only condemned Goldwater, he explicitly condemned Goldwater’s message of liberty, freedom and limited government:

Another indication that progress is being made was found in the recent presidential election in the United States. The American people revealed great maturity by overwhelmingly rejecting a presidential candidate who had become identified with extremism, racism, and retrogression. The voters of our nation rendered a telling blow to the radical right. They defeated those elements in our society which seek to pit white against Negro and lead the nation down a dangerous Fascist path.

Pretty odd talk coming from a conservative Republican, don’t you think? Goldwater never sought to pit whites against “Negroes”; he simply believed it was unconstitutional for the federal government to force anyone, black or white, to do business with people they didn’t want to do business with.

If you want to see something hilarious, read the whole article at that last link. After quoting King’s words about Goldwater, the conservative author then goes on to say that an older, wiser King would likely have been ashamed of himself for saying those things.

As I said the other day, conservatives prefer fairy tales to reality.

Right before he got shot, when he was older and presumably wiser, King was focusing on “a more just distribution of income”, etc. In other words, radical left wing, big government socialism. On August 31st, 1967 he declared in a speech that:

We have deluded ourselves into believing the myth that capitalism grew and prospered out of the Protestant ethic of hard work and sacrifices. The fact is that capitalism was built on the exploitation of black slaves and continues to thrive on the exploitation of the poor, both black and white, both here and abroad…the way to end poverty is to end the exploitation of the poor. Insure them a fair share of the government’s services and the nation’s resources. We must recognize that the problems of neither racial nor economic justice can be solved without a radical redistribution of political and economic power.

Yeah, I can just see a guy who talked about poor people having a right to their “fair share” of the nation’s resources calling Obama a socialist.

That was around the same time that King began demanding that the federal government provide everyone in the country with a minimum guaranteed income.

That’s right; forget about the minimum wage, which many conservatives oppose. King wanteda government guaranteed minimum income for everyone.

WASHINGTON — Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. had another dream: the guaranteed income.

Those careful about his legacy say the $120 million monument to him that’s finally nearing construction on the National Mall is all well and good. But as the nation commemorates King’s 81st birthday today, they say he should best be remembered for his career-long focus on the poor.

A year before his 1968 death in Memphis, in his “Where Do We Go From Here: Chaos or Community,” King wrote: “I am now convinced that the simplest solution to poverty is to abolish it directly by a now widely discussed measure: the guaranteed income.”

There’s your “conservative” Martin Luther King who stood for “liberty” and “freedom” and opposed “big government” and would be rallying against Obamacare with Glenn Beck and $arah Palin.

And there’s a whole lot more where this stuff came from.

How do conservatives say and write this stuff with a straight face? How do they look themselves in the mirror at night?

God help us.

 

HBD: Human Biodiversity

Jared Diamond's "Just So" Stories

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As a neo-barbarian of sorts, I’ll admit that I’m somewhat interested in Jared Diamond’s new book, The World Until Yesterday: What Can We Learn from Traditional Societies? I may yet flip through it, as there might be some useful information buried somewhere in there.

Paleo Retiree over at Uncouth Reflections went to see Diamond speak recently, and wondered if Diamond actually means what he says. He makes an important point about Diamond, who has become a tremendously influential writer. It seems like every “progressive” guy my age who reads has read Guns, Germs and Steel. This always seemed odd to me, because human history and human nature are generally unfriendly to progressive ideas about how humans “should” be — because humans have always been sexist, violent and tribal — unless stories about human nature and human history are framed in the context of some transformational, up-with-people, “arc of history” progressive narrative.

Apparently, Diamond said during his talk that he started writing popular books when his children were born, because he became concerned about the future. Paleo Retiree wrote:

As far as I could tell, Diamond was admitting flat-out that, right from the outset, he intended his big books to be do-gooding “message” books.

So much for my other explanations for his apparent disingenuousness. He turns out to be a much simpler puzzle than I’d thought. He’d simply come down with what afflicts so many people when they have kids: a bad case of the Worthies. Where his big books go, his main concern hasn’t been to share his knowledge and his thinking. It’s “What shall we tell the children?” My conclusion: maybe Diamond’s books are best taken as morality fables for overgrown kids.

I’ve been talking about this phenomenon a lot lately, not simply with regard to writers, but also everyday people. Max and I had a conversation about it yesterday. He told me about a police officer he met at a bar, who said something to the effect of, “I know everything is fucked, and I feel like hanging it up and doing whatever, but my kids have to live in this world.” A lot of men bring kids into this dark world and decide to, as an interior designer in Beverly Hills I worked for used to say, “put a light on it.” They start talking about the world as they wish it were or hope it could be. They start weaving hopeful threads into their narratives. And to complement these hopeful threads, they surround them with facts and ideas that seem to make the hopeful seem plausible.

Of course, you don’t have to have kids to do this. Not too long ago, I went to see Steven Pinker speak about his newest book, The Better Angels of Our Nature, and I came away wondering if he was running for President. I’d still recommend Pinker’s The Blank Slate, which was game changing in its criticisms of this exact same tendency of progressives to “put a light on” the past to complement their vision for the future. So far as I can tell, Pinker only has stepchildren, but as he gets older it seems like he wants to commit to the idea that humans are making great “progress” that could only be enhanced by the globalist ideology of his reliably Democratic northeastern academic peers.

Maybe my tendency is to work in the dark threads, and surround them with facts that make the future seem bleaker. When it comes to writing about humans and human nature, none of us are truly objective. All of us have a monkey in the game. All of us have an emotional commitment to a vision of the future –of how things “should” be –that we prefer. It is important, however, to recognize the fact that Jared Diamond, Steven Pinker, and a ton of other “scientists” and “experts” are just as biased as the rest of us, and just as happy to tell us the stories they themselves would like to hear about how things “really are.”

Untimely Observations

Liberal Hegemony

When an ideology gains control of the institutions that shape opinion it is said to have gained hegemony. At this point, something happens to public discourse. As the tenets of the ideology are considered objective and not subjective, all contenders must embrace them to keep their corner of the ring. Its ends cannot be contested, only their means. One cannot propose an altogether different value system, but only critique ways of realizing it.

Rather than clashing ideologies, we have clashing methods. The result is the assimilation of all competition into the dominant ideology and their reduction to a shadow of it. There are thus no options beyond minor variations in the same type of thought. In Western democracies, this is the current condition in regards to Liberalism.

One cannot reject the goals of Liberalism, only the methods used to achieve them. The shift in the debate surrounding “affirmative action” exemplifies this perfectly. It was only 15-20 years ago that Conservatives rejected the policy on conservative grounds: namely that it undermined both the interests of White Americans (the country’s historic majority) and the principle of meritocracy, compromising the function of institutions required to hire and promote unqualified individuals.

This argument, however, no longer functions with a Left for which neither White interests nor individual merits are a concern. They are, however, committed to the advancement of Blacks, causing Conservatives to modify their opposition. “Affirmative action” is now to be opposed, not because it is detrimental to Whites, but because it is a form of hidden “racism” toward blacks, assuming them incapable of succeeding on their own without government assistance. In doing so, it taints their genuine accomplishments and serves only to exacerbate White resentments. This also entails that it is in truth the Democrats who are the real racists. In doing this, so called “Conservatives” are abdicating their own values and becoming merely an adjunct of the Left, undoing the conditions necessary for their own success and instead furthering Liberal hegemony.

What are the dynamics underlying this situation? Possible explanations include either Jewish cultural subversion or the classical liberal roots of American Conservatism.

I find both explanations unsatisfying. In their quest to uncover the origin of our problems in metaphysics, rightists have lost sight of the phenomena’s psychological dimension and the essence of society which has an essence of inclusiveness.

Liberalism appeals to what are basic social values: the avoidance of exclusion and insult, and the providing of fair treatment to the individual. On the surface it is impossible to argue against these, and it would appear that in criticizing Liberalism one is doing just that. This is the key to its power, to why it can appear as reality and not an ideology. The logic underlying liberal positions and arguments realizes this in a very linear way.

It is unkind, prima facie, to exclude people from society, because the essence of society is inclusion. This gives Liberalism an inbuilt advantage. If a case for borders cannot be immediately and clearly made, then the idea or abolishing them or simply ignoring them becomes privileged: Conservatives find that they have to make a case for defending something that already exists in law, while Liberals assume a position of status quo dominance for something that is actually outside the law, effectively reversing the legal-illegal polarity. Liberalism's hegemony over the social narrative also allows it to impose the idea that it is unkind to allow immigrants, once in the country, to subsist without healthcare and housing, so the state has to provide these. A list of similar examples could proceed into eternity.

Conservatism has never enjoyed this natural advantage. It is based on the principle of the particular above the universal and the concrete above the abstract; it emphasizes differences rather than similarities. Its worth is that it critiques society, but by critiquing society it also places itself in a position where society critiques it. This puts it in a position where it is one remove or more from the level of meaningless, feelgood rhetoric that people feel comfortable agreeing on. Conservatism is always in need of a case being made for it. In this sense Liberalism always has a head start on it.

Conservatism is innately discriminatory, which is its virtue and functionality, but because of this, on the surface, it appears unjust. It is unkind to exclude people from our society, yes; but if we don’t, we risk bastardizing it and fostering yet more social conflicts than we already have. This type of thinking is more difficult for the average person to access or agree to, which in a world of tweets, texting, and online pizza orders marginalizes those who think like this.

Mass democracy is by nature driven by individual self-interest; it transforms society into a marketplace in which nearly everything can be understood in commercial jargon. This explains the emergence, exacerbated by the mass media, of the split between image and reality, one that echoes the world of advertising.

This of course is something that has always existed, but is magnified when everyone is advertising and marketing themselves – as an employee, as a friend, as a romantic partner – to others who are doing the same. Mutual satisfaction through cooperation requires that an image be presented in a fashion that is as easily understood by as many as possible. Applied to politics you have Liberalism in its current and hopefully final incarnation. It should come as no surprise that those carrying the “Conservative” tag, like everyone else, are just following trends, and falling in with the dominant hegemony

The Magazine

Alternative Vertical

At first you put up with it because it’s there, but after a while it starts to get on your tits and become more and more irritating: Left-this, Right-that, New Left-this, Alternative Right-that, blah blah blah, etc. etc., ad infinitum – yawn!

It all goes back to the French National Convention (or something) back in the days of the Revolution – Google it; I can’t be bothered – when, I guess, all the troublemakers sat on the left side of the hall (But who’s left? Their left or the usherette’s left?) and all the mild-mannered twats with a soft spot for the king sat on the right.

I’ve seen something like this before when I was teaching at a dysfunctional Japanese co-ed public school. All the lads sat on the side of the class near the door and all the lassies sat by the windows. To the boys the door represented “freedom” and a valuable extra few seconds out of the classroom when the bell rang. To the girls the windows were an important source of illumination to be used in complex make-up operations sometimes carried on during actual lessons on desks that were way too small for their cosmetic paraphernalia and their textbooks.

It only strikes me now that, from my point of view, the right side was nearer the light and the left side closer to the toilets!

I suspect the French National Convention (or whatever) that gave us these hallowed terms – Left and Right – was rather like this. Maybe the aristos with their paradoxical mixture of syphilitic, pock-marked skin and powdered vanity shunned the windows, while the bookish bourgeois types that drove the revolution preferred to sit in the light so they could swot up on Voltaire and Rousseau in between debates on the price of cake.

Whatever the exact facts, I’m pretty sure that the genesis of these terms was not exactly edifying or meaningful.

Why did they catch on and why have they subsisted now for over two centuries? This is probably due to a combination of the enormous “soft power” of La France and the mainly traditional rightist force of blind, dumb habit, but I also think each side has actually developed a liking for its sidist denomination.

The Rightists are happy to be “in the Right” (sigh, groan) and to have the idea of cack-handed sinisterism appended to their opponents; while the Leftists like the sense of danger, wildness, unpredictability, and mild disability that their sidist denomination connotes and evokes. Also a lot of them probably are Left-handers, who were radicalized at an early age by door handles (such is the triviality of most people’s political orientation!).

Anyway, the terms Left and Right have served the world of politics and ideology extremely badly, and led to endless political confusion. Examine the history of the National Socialists, the Soviet Union, the Neo-Cons, Communist-stroke-Fascist China, and the British Conservative (sic) Party to see how easy it is to confuse the terms Left and the Right. Such confusion is inevitable because there is nothing intrinsically different or qualitative about what are simply relative terms (who’s left, who’s right?).

I think a solution for this ancient problem can be found by switching to a less relativistic vector and one that has its basis in the eternal verities of mathematics, namely the concepts of VERTICAL and HORIZONTAL. By replacing ‘The Right’ with ‘The Vertical’ and ‘The Left” with the ‘The Horizonatal,’ an enormous gain in clarity is achieved. If the Right Wing has an essence that most can agree on, it is hierarchy, natural inequality, meritocracy, and aspiration to the sacred, in other words a sense of the vertical. Likewise the essence of the LEFT, when it isn’t forming itself into elitist revolutionary cliques preparing for heroic military conquest, has been an all-embracing egalitarianism and anti-hierarchical tendency, essentially a horizontal value.

So, let us consign LEFT and RIGHT to the dustbin of history, where they belong, and instead start thinking VERTICALLY and HORIZONTALLY. You know it makes sense!

Zeitgeist

Tarantino Unchained

Many in the Alt-Right have grown quite angry with Quentin Tarantino of late, due to the subject matter of his latest two movies: Inglourious Basterds, which depicts a fictional Jewish squadron wreaking unholy (and ahistorical) havoc against the German high command during World War II, and now Django Unchained, which features a righteous black runaway slave exacting bloody revenge against a bunch of mean, depraved, and rapacious white slaveowners in the antebellum South.

We live in a time in which people have been trained to snap reflexively at the latest bit of pop culture red-meat fodder like hungry fish making a run at juicy bait. To say that we are easily manipulated by our masters would be an understatement: we are forever drooling, wagging our tails, and snarling menacingly on cue—Pavlov never had such influence over his dogs as current-day opinion shapers have over their mongrel minions in the general population. It seems that here is always some new enemy de jour, upon whom to heap hatred and about whom to post snarky Facebook memes. We think we’re fighting the power when we indulge in such petty campaigns, but all we’re doing is missing the substance of the matter and chasing after ephemera that no one will remember six months from now, much less acknowledge as relevant to the broad sweep of history.

In the case of Tarantino’s overall body of work, I think that such reactive condemnations badly miss the mark. Q.T. is a highly talented film director with a lot of annoying auteurial tics, to be sure; the value of his films are a matter of taste, but the notion of him as some kind of high priest of anti-white political correctness does not stand up to scrutiny.

I will introduce two exhibits to help make my case.

Exhibit A: Check out this fascinating commentary the Q-man makes on Martin Scorsese’s Taxi Driver in the video tab. While denying that this gritty and controversial movie is itself “racist,” Tarantino does own that it is a sympathetic portrayal of a “racist” character. But he doesn’t condemn Travis Bickle’s attitude towards blacks; instead, he declares it to be perfectly understandable, given the circumstances of being a white man living in the middle of a crime-and vice-ravaged “ghetto.” Even more interestingly, Tarantino mildly criticizes Scorsese for copping out in making Iris’s pimp Sport white, rather than black, in effect leveling the charge that in so doing Scorsese was being unduly sensitive to namby-pamby liberal racial sensitivities (see audio/video).

Exhibit B: I have not yet viewed Django, but maintain that Inglourious Basterds is not at all the rah-rah Jew-loving, German-hating movie its Alt-right critics say it is, once you’ve scratched below the surface and explored the not-so subtle subtext. I delve into the matter in my review and analysis of the movie written in 2009, posted at The Last Ditch.

The Magazine

The Tail Shall Wag the Dog

“Give me a place to stand and I shall move the world” - Archimedes

 

John Bean’s recent article about his support for the British Democratic Party produced predictable criticisms about the pointlessness of party politics and fighting elections. This reflects the sense that many people feel about not living in real or fair democracies. This kind of cynicism has now become a popular default position for those on the Alternative or Nationalist Right. It seems that with the media on their side and billionaires funding them, the mainstream parties have nothing to fear. Because of this, many have come to the conclusion that supporting any nationalist party is an exercise in futility. The past record of failure only adds to this sense of futility.

But such a position represents a superficial analysis. Also, opting out of party politics also raises the question of an alternative strategy. Some believe that by ignoring the electoral process, both in the sense of campaigning and voting, they will somehow undermine the legitimacy of whatever globalist puppet government is elected. Others, perhaps inspired by the rightist bugbears of the Frankfurt School and Cultural Marxism, believe that the political battlefield should be replaced with the cultural battlefield and that changing the culture is the precondition to electoral success.

The big flaw in this approach is an obvious one. The cultural institutions – the universities and the media – are for a number of reasons inherently and deeply left-wing. This means that when the cultural commandos of the New Right turn up and ask to be appointed leader writers and tenured academics, they had better not hold their breath.

The electorate is a different story. Although ordinary voters can be deceived and manipulated in various ways by the establishment parties, the fact is that on many key issues they are instinctively and irrevocably right wing and nationalist. The failure of British nationalism has occurred against a backdrop of the majority of voters actually believing in most of its core ideals. This failure has been tragic, but it also continues to represent enormous potential and hope.

Furthermore, it is also unfair to talk of the failure of British Nationalism in absolute terms, for even this cloud has a silver lining. Small parties may not be able to win elections, but they are capable of making big parties sweat buckets, and, in cases where there is a close election between the two main parties, they can make a decisive difference. In American politics, would Clinton have been elected in 1992 if Ross Perot had stayed out of the race; and how did Ralph’s Nader’s vote impact on Al Gore’s presidential ambitions in 2002?

In its history, which we must now consider effectively concluded, the BNP never really stood much of a chance a chance of sweeping into power and putting Nick Griffin in 10 Downing Street, but when the party was doing well, from 2002 to 2010, it certainly started to change the political climate, with the governing Labour Party constantly looking over its shoulder and behaving differently than it otherwise would have. Back in November 2007, I wrote about this for the BNP’s magazine Identity, then edited by John Bean.

 

How Labour Changes its Colours Due to the BNP’s Popularity

To BNP supporters putting in the hard work in council, by-, Euro, and general elections, it may sometimes seem a thankless task. With the entire media ranged against us, and the old parties involved in dirty tricks, like postal ballot fraud, intimidation, and secret tactical voting, it is certainly a hard, tiring, uphill struggle.

When I consider this situation, I am sometimes reminded of the scene in the movie Braveheart where a group of ordinary Scots, including William Wallace’s father Malcolm, decide to fight against the Normans who have subjugated England and are now trying to conquer Scotland. One of the faint-hearts protests, “We can't beat an army, not with the fifty farmers we can raise!” to which Malcolm Wallace delivers what I consider the best line in the movie: “We don't have to beat them, just fight them.”

The great truth in this is that only those who fight without the guarantee of winning are in, a strange way, destined to win. I see something of this spirit in the BNP. Fighting without the guarantee of winning and with the certainty of suffering and sacrificing, is the truest and greatest kind of fighting there is, and only an army, a people, or a party that fight on this principle is likely to ever triumph.

But does the BNP have to wait until it achieves electoral success for its members to reap the collective rewards of their individual sacrifices? A survey of the behaviour of the main parties, especially the governing Labour Party, has convinced me that this is not the case. It has become apparent that even without the long-hoped-for breakthrough into elected power, a healthy and growing BNP is still capable of exerting a beneficial influence on British politics and society far beyond its elected size.

This is because, with the Conservative and Liberal Democratic Parties in disarray, it is the only real threat to New Labour’s hold on power. Also, it is the only party capable of storming Labour’s fortresses and heartlands. The result of this is that the Labour Party, whether it cares to admit it or not, pays extremely close attention to the BNP’s political agenda, and, as the evidence suggests, even acts on it. This means that a party, which they dismiss as a bunch of extremists relying on protest votes, already has its hands indirectly on the levers of power. In other words, the BNP dog is already wagging the British tail.

Here in chronological order is the evidence:

2002

In April, having heard that the BNP is building up support in Northern cities for the May council elections, the Home Secretary David Blunkett publishes a package of measures to crack down on illegal immigrants to the UK and on UK employers who hire workers illegally. This includes giving immigration officers new powers to enter businesses to search for illegal immigrants, demand information, and remove the children of parents who have entered the country unlawfully. The measures also increase the maximum jail term for those convicted of harbouring or trafficking illegal immigrants from six months to 14 years, as well as requiring airlines to check the details of passengers travelling to the UK against a database to confirm they pose no known immigration or security risk.

The measures are announced only weeks before the council elections to have maximum negative impact on the BNP vote. Although clearly intended as a cynical and insincere ploy to address growing support for the BNP, the measures, which will later be watered down, evaded, and legally challenged by ‘human rights’ lawyers, nevertheless represent a small degree of progress that otherwise would not have happened.

Despite attempting to steal the BNP’s thunder by pandering to soft anti-immigration sentiment in this way, the BNP nevertheless makes an electoral breakthrough in Burnley. This and the continuing electoral successes by the BNP, including the 2003 council elections, forces the government’s hand and sees a general tightening of the major immigration loophole of false asylum seekers. After 2002, the influx of Third World economic migrants claiming to be asylum seekers falls drastically. From over 100,000 asylum applications in 2002 the number falls to around 60,000 the next year, and 40,000 the year after, and 30,500 in 2005, with the UK falling from being the top destination for asylum applicants to number three [UNCHR figures]. Without a healthy and growing BNP, hitting Labour where it hurts – in its traditional heartlands – these gains would never have happened.

2004

With the BNP punishing New Labour’s turn-a-blind-eye immigration policy, the establishment finds itself short of cheap labour. This forces the Labour Party to commit the crime it has often accused the BNP of – racism. Instead of flooding our nation’s labour market with racially different, Third World ‘asylum seekers’ from impoverished African and Asian countries, they next decide to flood the labour market with cheap White labour from Eastern Europe. The method adopted is to sign up to the enlargement of the EU, without making any attempt, like our fellow EU members, to limit the flood of immigrants from Eastern Europe attracted by higher wages.

This policy, facilitating a vast influx of White foreigners under the guise of European economic integration rather than Black or Asian foreigners under the guise of ‘human rights,’ is essentially racist, regardless of the fact that Poles and Czechs, with their Christian values and work ethic, are more compatible with British society than Somali drug gangs and Islamic terrorists. In adopting this policy, Labour is in its own cack-handed way trying to compete with what it falsely sees as the BNP’s racism, while trying to serve the cheap labour requirements of its Globalist masters.

The immediate results of this policy, however, see the biggest vote ever for the BNP when it gains 808,200 votes in the EU Parliamentary elections of June. This number would undoubtedly have been much higher if the now discredited UKIP had not also been standing on an anti-EU and anti-immigrant platform.

2005

The Conservative Party, under the leadership of Michael Howard, is quick to take advantage of the anti-EU, anti-immigration, and pro-law-enforcement mood of the country that the BNP’s campaigns have helped mobilize. In particular, Howard broke the old parties’ long-standing ‘gentleman’s agreement’ not to raise the issue of immigration. Although savaged for this by a biased liberal media, Howard’s BNP-influenced platform nevertheless enables the Conservatives to make their best showing in years in terms of votes, although the inherent Labour-bias of the first-past-the-post system, combined with Labour’s growing immigrant vote and instances of postal ballot fraud secure another Labour majority. [Note: Even if the Conservatives had drawn level with Labour in this election, with each party polling 33.8% of the vote, Labour would have secured 336 seats to the Tories’ 220. For the Conservatives to win the 324 needed to get a majority, they would need a national lead of 11.7%.]

With a close two-horse race between Tories and Labour and a chorus of cries from the media that a vote for any other party is a wasted one, the BNP’s 119 candidates poll extremely well, with a creditable average of 1620 votes per candidate, doing especially well in Labour heartlands. The announcement a few weeks after the election that the UK is to switch to a more stringent points-based skilled immigration system, like the one in Australia, shows that Labour is worried by the BNP’s continuing power to threaten their political bedrock.

2006

This was year when the BNP tail really started wagging the dog. In the May council elections the BNP more than doubles its number of councillors, increasing from 20 to 52. Even before the election, the Labour MP for Barking, Margaret Hodge starts to echo BNP statements about unemployment, high house prices, and the housing of asylum seekers in the area. She famously – and quite accurately – says that eight out of ten White working class voters in her constituency are considering voting for the BNP.

This is no revelation to anyone familiar with the changing mood of British society, but what it does reveal is the degree to which New Labour has been closely monitoring the situation on the ground. Not surprisingly, Labour, a party famed for using focus groups and tailoring policies to achieve power, responds to the BNP’s electoral success by turning itself into an insincere clone of the BNP for the rest of 2006.

In August, the Community and Local Government Secretary Ruth Kelly makes a speech, which signals the government’s loss of faith in the idea of multiculturalism:

“We have moved from a period of uniform consensus on the value of multiculturalism, to one where we can encourage that debate by questioning whether it is encouraging separateness,” Kelly tells her audience, before emphasizing the need for integration, cohesion, and shared values. She forgets to mention that there was never a consensus on multiculturalism and neglects to point out that cohesion and shared values are only possible in a society that is not a multiracial hodgepodge.

In October, Kelly’s call for cohesion and shared values, which was noticeably short on details, is followed by Foreign Secretary, Jack Straw’s criticisms of Muslim women wearing the full veil. Straw makes points the BNP has made repeatedly, about the veil inhibiting communication, acting as a social barrier, and being offensive to indigenous Britons.

In November, Prime Minister Tony Blair follows up his ministers, rejecting multiculturalism’s multi-value universe by talking about essential British values.

“When it comes to our essential values – belief in democracy, the rule of law, tolerance, equal treatment for all, respect for this country and its shared heritage – then that is where we come together, it is what we hold in common,” he tells his audience.

The old clichés about diversity being ‘a strength’ have been shelved in favour of an abject admission of multiculturalism’s failure. Although Kelly and Blair’s speeches do not quite say everything the BNP would have wished, who can deny the unseen hand the BNP had in writing them? Without the BNP’s lucid opposition to multiculturalism, and its ability to mobilize popular opinion and hurt Labour at the ballot box, this left-wing Globalist party would never made such an admission in a million years. This is a tremendous example of dog wagging by the BNP tail.

Unfortunately much of the respect the BNP gained for its critique of Britain’s problems came from the tragic events of July 7th when Muslim terrorists, born and raised in the UK, showed their complete disregard for their fellow British citizens by exploding bombs on public transport in a manner that BNP leader Nick Griffin had clearly warned about years before.

2007

The BNP has long campaigned against political correctness in the police force and the one-sided application of racism and other ‘thought crime’ legislation. The extent to which this has been taken up by the media and the other political parties is seen in July, when four Islamic fanatics are finally jailed for their part in the demonstration outside the Danish embassy in London last year. During the incident, around 300 Muslim demonstrators brandished placards calling for genocide against non-Muslims, while the police stood by and did nothing. It was only thanks to photographs taken by reporters that they could be brought to justice.

More recently, the party’s early focus on the issue of peak oil has started to resonate with the mainstream media, with the government looking to shadow the BNP’s post-oil energy policy. This is yet another instance of a party with intellectual integrity and real principles having the foresight to out-think and out-plan the old parties with their cobbled-together interest groups and shallow, short-term focus.

In the Prime Minister’s recent proposals to cancel the ‘Super Casino,’ review the 24-hour drinking laws, and reclassify cannabis as a class B drug, some political commentators have seen an attempt by Gordon Brown to march onto Conservative territory. But, in light of the fact that Cameron’s Conservative Party is now committed to representing rich, cosmopolitan, liberal-minded hedonists like himself, it is more likely that this attempt to inject a little moral fibre into the Labour Party is yet another example of the Labour Party paying silent homage to the BNP.

The BNP may still be a long way from full power, but even as a small party, stigmatized by the mass media and forced to wander in the political wilderness, it still does more good and can sometimes exert more power and influence on British society than either the Conservative or Labour Parties. This serves as an important reminder of just what a small but dedicated group of people can do if they really put their minds to it, and how a small and much maligned party can garner enough public support to actually sway the Establishment into espousing commonsense policies that they once labelled as abhorrent.

 

As this article shows, the BNP was able to exert a degree of leverage and change the tone of the political debate, forcing the Labour Party into positions it would not otherwise have adopted. Right now something similar is going on with the UK Independence Party. The rise of this anti-EU party and the threat it presents to the Conservative Party is now pushing Prime Minister David Cameron deep into Euro-skeptic territory and threatening the cohesion of the coalition.

Both the Labour and Conservative parties have long been working against the best interests of the British people. At some level they know this and this makes them fear the rise of parties like the BNP in the past and UKIP today that are aligned with these interests. No matter how small these parties may be, their power to generate fear in the major parties is proportional to their potential to appeal to the masses. Even without votes, even without electoral victories, this is a kind of power. As the British Democratic Party grows, it will start to threaten the old guard parties, and when it does it will start exerting influence out of all proportion to its size or vote. All that is required is that the party is well organized, dedicated, and aligned with the true interests of the British people. Give such a party a place to stand and it will move the world.

Zeitgeist

Retro Racism

Historians of social mores should delve into the fascinating Facebook gallery "Retro Racism."  The collection, as you might guess, affords its users an opportunity to express self-righteous liberal outrage.  But if you look at these images on their own terms, you are offered a glimpse into the complex and ambivalent nature of 20th-century American "racism."

From the admin:  

Darkie Toothpaste. Or is it? The company changed it's name to 'Darlie' and the image to that of a 'white man' in English speaking countries in 1985. However in China the brand, "黑人牙膏" (in English, "Black People Toothpaste"), has not changed; in fact advertising reassured customers that "Black Man Toothpaste is still Black Man Toothpaste". Still a popular brand throughout Asia.