archive

Where white supremacism was embraced

From Alternative Right, where Calvin meets Mao: A look at the origins and nature of political correctness; Alex Kurtagic on women as a measure of credibility; and Andy Nowicki on '80s Synthpop and white culture. Steven Sailer on Republican sports fans and the affirmative action they cheer for. A review of White Identity: Racial Consciousness in the 21st Century by Jared Taylor (and more and more and more and more and more and more). The Nietzschean Prophecies, 200 years of nihilism: An excerpt from The Radical Tradition: Philosophy, Metapolitics and the Conservative Revolution. An interview with Louis Andrews, originator of the Stalking the Wild Taboo project. Mel Ayton on how hate groups influenced racist killer Joseph Paul Franklin. Jeff Hall’s young children were raised in a home where white supremacism was embraced; now one of them has been charged with his murder (and more). The only hope for freedom’s survival is stalwart, independent, courageous people defending liberty one State at a time — and Chuck Baldwin believes that the mountain states are the last best hope for freedom in North America. The Geography of Hate: America's racist groups concentrate in certain regions — and their presence correlates with religion, McCain votes, and poverty. Stetson Kennedy is perhaps the most tenacious and neglected champion of human rights currently roaming this godforsaken planet, and the first man to infiltrate and expose the Ku Klux Klan. Hanging up the white sheets: The Ku Klux Klan says it's giving up cross burnings in favor of the ballot box.