Quote of the Week: Paul M. Weyrich and William S. Lind, “The Next Conservatism”
“Through Retroculture, the next conservatism should seek to rebuild our old culture from the bottom up, one individual or family at a time. That is slow. But there is no other way to win the Culture...
View ArticleQuote of the Week: Peter Viereck, “Unadjusted Man in the Age of Overadjustment”
Peter Viereck (5 August 1916, 13 May 2006) American conservative philosopher and cultural critic. “Conversely, the trade-union movement in the English Speaking world (see pages 84-87) often represents...
View ArticleQuote of the Week: Irving Babbitt, “Character & Culture”
“The ultra-utilitarians are not only as completely lost for art and literature as the Puritans, but their point of view is far more catching. We see the waves of utilitarianism rising higher and higher...
View ArticleQuote of the Week: Francis Fukuyama, “After the Neocons”
“I did not like the original version of Leninism and was skeptical when the Bush administration turned Leninist. Democracy in my view is likely to expand universally in the long run. But whether the...
View ArticleQuote of the Week: Yukio Mishima “Sword”
“He would just have to put up with it; if you couldn’t bear even one single thing through to the end, then you might as well give up entirely.” ▪ Yukio Mishima, “Sword” John Bester (trans.) Acts of...
View ArticleQuote of the Week: Russell Kirk, “The Conservative Mind”
“Constitutions cannot be made, says Brownson, agreeing with de Miastre: they are the product of slow growth, the expression of a nations historical experience, or they are mere paper. ‘The generative...
View ArticleQuote of the Week: Julius Evola, “Heathen Imperium”
“Besides, as we have already stated, although we assert uncompromisingly the necessity of hierarchy, we maintain that this hierarchy should be built dynamically and freely, through natural relations of...
View ArticleQuote of the Week: Carl Schmitt, “The Concept of the Political”
Carl Schmitt (1885-1985) “A religious community, a church, can exhort a member to die for his belief and become a martyr, but only for the salvation of his own sou;, not for the religious community in...
View ArticleQuote of the Week: Guillaume Faye, “Sex and Deviance”
“Indeed, feminism is above all a form of masculinism. To imitate men, to become a man, not only socially but also sexually: such is the unthinkable idea¹²¹ of feminism, which is stronger still than...
View ArticleQuote of the Week: Vox Day, “SJWs Always Lie”
Theodore Beale (aka Vox Day) lead editor at Castalia House and author of “SJWs Always Lie” (2016) “This tendency to project their own thoughts, feelings and tendencies on others can be one of the...
View ArticleQuote of the Week: Paul Gottfried and Thomas Fleming, “The Conservative...
“Whatever the differences that characterize their various schools of thought, conservatives, as much as Leftists, are united by a distinctive approach to reality – particularly nature. For the Left,...
View ArticleQuote of the Week: Daniel Friberg, “The Real Right Returns”
“Always strive to improve yourself within the framework of your naturally given gender role, and thus your natural role in society and the community. You may live in a depraved, undignified age, and a...
View ArticleQuote of the Week: Carle C. Zimmerman, “Family and Civilization”
“This is the basic theme of family and civilisation. Civilization grows out of familism; as it grows it loses its original connection with the basic spring which furnished the essence of civilization....
View ArticleQuote of the Week: Evan Sayet, “The Kindergarten of Eden”
“The Modern Liberal was born into a life as close to paradise as any human being since God first created man. Having come of age in or after the 1960s, virtually everything that virtually every other...
View ArticleQuote of the Week: Jonathan Bowden, “Western Civilization Bites Back”
“If you look at mass popular culture, the heroic is still alive. It’s still alive in junk films, in comic books, in forms that culturally elitist society and intellectuals disprivilege. “Why the heroic...
View ArticleQuote of the Week: Thomas Molnar, “Authority and Its Enemies”
“If we admit that the State possesses the ultimate authority without which other institutions would lack theirs, we understand that this authority may be threatened or at least challenged by the...
View ArticleQuote of the Week: Plato, “Republic”
“For when your guardians are ignorant of the law of births, and unite bride and bridegroom out of season, the children will not be goodly or fortunate. And tough only the best of them will be appointed...
View ArticleQuote of the Week: John Red Eagle and Vox Day, “Cuckservative”
“Are all cultures the same? Even today’s establishment cultural relativists won’t deny difference in fashion, color schemes, music and the many other superficial trappings of culture. Bring up values,...
View ArticleQuote of the Week: Ernst Jünger, “The Forest Passage”
Ernst Jünger (b. 1895 d. 1998) “Fundamentally, freedom and tyranny cannot be considered in isolation, although we observe them succeeding each other in time. It can clearly be said that tyranny...
View ArticleQuote of the Week: Gerhart Niemeyer, “Modern Age”
“It is an experience that later befell Mustapha Kemal, the father of ‘modern’ Turkey, and Nehru, the leader of India’s ‘modernization.’ Moved by this experience strong groups within a number of...
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