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9 February 2012

Stunning 2012 Edition
of Madison Grant's The Passing of the Great Race
Now Available for Pre-Order

James Stevenson

Out in March via our non-fiction imprint, The Palingenesis Project, is the new 2012 edition of Madison Grant's classic text, The Passing of the Great Race. The Passing of the Great Race is one of the most prominent racially oriented books of all times, written by the most influencial American conservationist that ever lived. Historically, topically, and geographically, Grant's magnum opus covers a vast amount of ground, broadly tracing the racial history of Europeans from prehistoric times to the present, with an emphasis on the need to preserve the northern European type and generally improve the race—for Grant was, logically, a proponent of eugenics. Generally well received at the time in both the popular and scholarly press and going through four editions and multiple reprints . . .

 

7 February 2012

Physical Factors in Race Survival

C. G. Campbell

The first and ever-present problem of a race is whether it is increasing or diminishing in its ability to meet and overcome the obstacles to its survival. The future of a race is dependent upon the increase or decrease in this human quality. In considering the augmentation of survival value by improvement in racial quality, many have been inclined to stress the improvement in in tellectual quality as the prime desideratum. There can be no question of its great desirability and value, but it needs to be recognized that there are other factors that . . .

 

6 February 2012

The Development of Eugenics

Charles B. Davenport

It is a privilege and an honor to occupy the place on this platform occupied at the last Congress by my friend Professor Henry Fairfield Osborn. It is an honor to succeed more remotely that grand old man of Eugenics, whom distance and extreme age are keeping from us, — Leonard Darwin. He has a message for us which he sends through the voice of the biologico-statistician of his country, R. A. Fisher. We rejoice that so many from abroad have been able to come, even at great sacrifice, financially. They have come from England, the Scandinavian Countries, the Netherlands, Germany, Italy, Spain and Poland. From the Americas we welcome Canada, Cuba and representatives of ther countries of Pan America. From the United States the representation is good; some have come as far as those who crossed the ocean to articipate in the activities of this Congress.

 

4 February 2012

A Sociological Classic of North American Society

Northern Light

"For example, Stoddard cites findings that 1000 Harvard graduates would have 50 descendants in 200 years while 1000 Rumanians living in Boston would have 100 000 descendants over the same span" (page xix).Excellently introduced and put into context by professor Kevin MacDonald (well-known author of his widely prised magnum opus (The Culture of Critique: An Evolutionary Analysis of Jewish Involvement in Twentieth-Century Intellectual and Political Movements), this 1922 sociological treatise on the biological ("racial", in the discourse of the pre-DNA 1920's) decline of the European-descended nations is finally available in a luxurious edition updated with footnotes and a current-day citation-system. Lothrop Stoddard was once a man widely known in US discourse on society, culture and the foundations of this, being part of the founding wasp elites that once made up the elite of the US (and the United Kingdom, obviously). As can be read in both the aforementioned book by Dr. MacDonald he was once a popular lecturer . . .

 

3 February 2012

Liberal Utopia, A.D. 2022

Leslie H. Higgins

To say this book surpassed my expectations is not enough. When Mister came in the mail (you won't find this doozy in Barnes & Noble), I was immediately impressed by the sturdy, attractive binding. A tiny press, Iron Sky Publishing matches the big boys at Everyman's Library, right down to the satin bookmarker, and features cover art by Kurtagic himself. Given said grim cover, I was wholly surprised by Mister's demurely outrageous humor. From page one, including the Introduction by Tomislav Sunic (Kurtagic's European New Right partner-in-crime), who notes that this dystopian tome, while set eleven years in the future as I type, could have well been set in the 1990s, the novel constantly invites the reader to share a deep laugh over the pathetically familiar world its protagonist traverses. Mister is the funniest thing I've read since A Confederacy of Dunces (including Infinite Jest). The unboarding from Mister's British Airways flight to Madrid . . .

 

1 February 2012

The Right to be Well Born

Franklin B. Kirkbride

A group of public-spirited people were lately discussing feeble-mindedness and the causes of a certain prevailing reluctance to face the issue squarely. "The trouble with the problem of the feeble-minded," said Joseph H. Choate, "is that there are so many of us." Perhaps there may be even more of "us" than Mr. Choate suspects! For this is not a question of one generation, but of our children and our children's children. It took philanthropy a long time to emerge from the merely "relief" stage. Slowly we are taking the next step. Our "comprehensive plan" concerns itself with more than the individual life—we have begun to care for posterity, no matter how little posterity may have done for us. With this outlook even statistics of degeneracy become less depressing, for we recognize in them the basis of relief, prevention, and constructive effort.

 

29 January 2012

Race Mixture in the Roman Empire - Part 2

Tenney Frank

Fortunately the columbaria of several Roman households provide a fairly reliable record regarding the prevalence of marriage among city slaves. In CIL, VI. 2, some 4500 brief inscriptions are given, mainly from the rude funeral urns of slaves and poor freedmen of the first century of the empire. About one-third of these are from the columbaria of the Livii, Drusi, Marcelli, Statilii, and Volusii, aristocratic households where, presumably, service would be as exacting as anywhere, discipline as strict, and concern for profits from the birth of uernae as inconsiderable as anywhere. Furthcrmore; these inscriptions date from a time when slaves were plentiful and the dearth of captives generally assumed for a later day cannot be posited. Nevertheless, I believe that anyone, who will studiously compare the record of offspring in this group of . . .

 

28 January 2012

Race Mixture in the Roman Empire - Part 1

Tenney Frank

There is one surprise that the historian usually experiences upon his first visit to Rome. It may be at the Galleria Lapidaria of the Vatican or at the Lateran Museum, but, if not elsewhere, it can hardly escape him upon his first walk up the Appian Way. As he stops to decipher the names upon the old tombs that line the road, hoping to chance upon one familiar to him from his Cicero or Livy, he finds praenomen and nomen promising enough, but the cognomina all seem awry. L. Lucretius Pamphilus, A. Aemilius Alexa, M. Clodius Philostorgus do not smack of freshman Latin. And he will not readily find in the Roman writers now extant an answer to the questions that these inscriptions invariably raise. Do these names imply that the Roman stock was completely changed after Cicero's day, and was the satirist recording a fact when he wailed that the Tiber had captured the waters of the Syrian Orontes? If so, are these foreigners ordinary immigrants, or did Rome become a nation of ex-slaves and their offspring?

 

27 January 2012

Eugenics, its Definition, Scope, and Aims

Sir Francis Galton

Eugenics is the science which deals with all influences that improve the inborn qualities of a race ; also with those that develop them to the utmost advantage. The improvement   of the inborn qualities, or stock, of some  one   human population, will alone be  discussed here. What is meant by improvement? What   by the syllable Eu in Eugenics, whose   English equivalent is good? There is  considerable difference between  goodness in the   several qualities and  in that of the character   as a whole.  The character depends largely on   the  proportion between qualities whose balance  may be much influenced by education. We   must therefore leave morals as far as possible out of the discussion, not entangling  ourselves   with the almost hopeless  difficulties they raise   as to whether  a character as a whole is good or bad.  Moreover, the goodness or badness of  character is not absolute, but relative to    the current form of civilisation. A fable will   best explain what is meant. Let the scene be   the Zoological Gardens in the quiet hours  of the night, and suppose that, as in old fables, the animals . . .

 

26 January 2012

Revolution from Above

Alex Kurtagic

The popular imagination conceives Marxism and capitalism as opposing forces, imagining that—obviously—Marxists want the capitalists’ money and capitalists do not want Marxists to take it from them. Kerry Bolton’s Revolution from Above disproves this notion. As it turns out, and as many readers probably already know, the Marxist revolutions in the East succeeded in many places thanks to the ample funds supplied to them—consciously and voluntarily—by finance-capitalists in the West. With access to all the money they could wish for and more, the finance-capitalists in Bolton’s narrative were, and are, primarily motivated by a desire for power, and their ultimate aim was not even more money per se, but the enduring ability to shape the world to their convenience, which translates into a collectivised planet of producers and consumers.

 

25 January 2012

How the British Constructed a New Woman's Movement

Amanda Bradley

“Feminine fascism” is a phrase that Julie V. Gottlieb uses to describe the forward-thinking, yet traditionally influenced, ideology embraced by Britain’s fascists. Their objective was not a return to the past, to a time when women were solely mothers and homemakers. Instead, the fascists in England combined traditional roles with the advances made in women’s suffrage and the workplace, and added a fascist bent of discipline and integrity.Feminine Fascism: Women in Britain’s Fascist Movement is a chronological account of fascism in Britain, starting in 1923 with the country’s first fascist group, the British Fascisti, founded by Rotha Lintorn-Orman, a woman. The BF remained the predominant fascist organization until Sir Oswald Mosley’s British Union of Fascists (BU) was established in 1932. Feminine Fascism discusses the role . . .

 

24 January 2012

Francis Parker Yockey's
The Proclamation of London
is Now in Stock

James Stevenson

Our memorial hardcover edition of Francis Parker Yockey's The Proclamation of London is now in stock. Written in London in 1949, The Proclamation of London is the American philosopher's manifesto for his then newly formed group, the European Liberation Front. As such, it represents a distillation of his magisterial 600-page opus, Imperium. The Proclamation appeared initially as a pamphlet, but has never, until now, been available in a durable, library-grade format. The present memorial edition comes with a major introductory essay (51 pages) by Dr. Michael O'Meara, along with Dr. Kerry Bolton the world's foremost Yockeyist. It also comes fully annotated, with an index, section illustrations, and cover artwork by Alex Kurtagic. We would like to thank . . .

 

20 January 2012

The Tragic Life of a Spenglerian Visionary

Theodore O'Keefe

The American writer Francis Parker Yockey has long enjoyed cult status on the authoritarian fringe of the American far right.  That the first serious attempt at a study of his life and influence, Kevin Coogan’s Dreamer of the Day, is the work of a left-anarchist is less surprising considering that Yockey’s thought and activity often defied left-right conventions.  Coogan has researched this book extensively and intensively, ferreting out numerous elusive facts and long-forgotten rumors about his subject.  The merit of Dreamer of the Day, however, is weakened by a division of emphasis signaled in its subtitle, Francis Parker Yockey and the Postwar Fascist International.

 

19 January 2012

The Influence of H. P. Lovecraft on Occultism

Kerry Bolton

The adoption and adaptation of a theme from Lovecraft’s horror stories, that of the Cthulhu Mythos, is no less plausible than any other occult system or doctrine of magic. Magic is based on the irrational, on the intuitive, the unseen – literally that which is ‘occult’ or hidden, being summoned forth for individual or communal purposes by circumventing the causal relationships of the material universe. Rituals, charms, spells, and incantations are used to produce the willed result, based around two principles, according to Frazer: ‘first, that like produces like, or that an effect resembles its cause; and second, that things which have once been in contact with each other continue to act on each other at a distance after the physical contact has been severed’. Frazer calls these principles, the ‘Law of Similarity’ and the ‘Law of Contact or Contagion’ respectively.(1)

 

18 January 2012

The Effect of Race Intermingling

Charles B. Davenport

The problem of the effects of race intermingling may well interest us of America, when a single state, like New York, of 9,ooo,ooo inhabitants contains 840,ooo Russians and Finns, 720,000 Italians, 1,ooo,ooo Germans, 880,ooo Irish, 470,000 Austro-Hungarians, 310,000 of Great Britain, 125,000 Canadians (largely French), and 9o,ooo Scandinavians. All figures include those born abroad or born of two foreign-born parents. Nearly two thirds of the population of New York State is foreign-born or of foreign or mixed parentage. Even in a state like Connecticut it is doubtful if 2 per cent. of the population are of pure Anglo-Saxon stock for six generations of ancestors in all lines. Clearly a mixture of European races is going on in America on a colossal scale.

 

17 January 2012

The Man of Mystery Who Seeks the Secret of Life

The World Magazine

Editor's Note:The following article, originally published in The World Magazine in 1907, describes the work of American biologist Prof. Charles Davenport, a Harvard professor of zoology and one of the leaders of the American eugenics movement, who was director of the Cold Spring Laboratory, where he was at the time researching heredity. (Three years later he would go on to found the Eugenics Records Office, with funding from Mary Harriman, the Rockefeller family, and the Carnegie Institution.) This shows how eugenics was popularised in the United States during the early part of the 20th century. Seeing an article like this published in a mainstream magazine seems inconceivable today. However, back then the idea of improving the human race, enhancing its intellect and capacity for the good, was considered a moral obligation, while the idea of inflicting on the unborn a lifetime of deformity, disability, and disease cruel and inhumane. Scientists like Charles Davenport saw themselves as leading the next stage in human evolution—a massively important enterprise.

 

16 January 2012

The Culture of Critique
& the Pathogenesis of Modern Society

Michael O'Meara

Koselleck’s Critique and Crisis (1959) is one of the great dissertations of the 20th-century German university system. It cast new light not just on the past it re-presented, but on the present, whose own light informed its re-presentation. This was especially the case with the potentially cataclysmic standoff between American liberalism and Russian Communism and the perspective it gave to Koselleck’s study of the Enlightenment origins of the Modern World. How was it, he asked, that these two Cold War super-powers seemed bent on turning Europe, especially Germany, into a nuclear wasteland? The answer, he suspected, had something to do with the moralizing Utopianism of 18th-century rationalism, whose heritage ideologically animated each hegemon.

 

15 January 2012

Lothrop Stoddard: Christian Europe
May Have to Fight the Moslem World

Providence News

Editor's Note: The following article was published by Providence News (Rhode Island) on 31 March 1922. The piece quotes Lothrop Stoddard as he provides his analysis of Europe's relationship with the Islamic world and its future prospects in the contest for power. Stoddard's timing was wrong, but his basic prophecy has proven correct. His suggestion of how to deal with Islam is nuanced. He was right in that Western influence would exacerbate fanaticism—this has proven correct in as much as we understand Western influence in the Muslim world as mediated and determined by Zionism, which is how the Muslims see it in terms of power politics. His policy recommendations were perhaps a bit naive. On the other hand, there is no question that Zionism has hardened Muslim attitudes, and that in 1922 there was no Israel to contend with, though things were already moving in that direction.

 

13 January 2012

Miguel Serrano, 1994 Interview by K. R. Bolton

K. R. Bolton
(Revised and corrected by Alex Kurtagic)

The following interview was conducted by K. R. Bolton with Miguel Serrano in 1994. This is available on the internet for the first time, having only ever been published at that time in a small, privately circulated newsletter. A writer of literature, Serrano communicated his ideas via symbols and metaphors, which he had woven idiosyncratically into a sprawling mytho-history, or metanarrative, that drew from new and old concepts and various mythological and esoteric traditions. Strict rationalists and those unfamiliar with Serrano's work will find his worldview perplexing, to say the least. And certainly, writers like Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke have had a hard time getting their heads around it, focusing on superficial appearance rather than deeper meaning. The fact is that behind the rich symbology and figures of speech, there is a profound philosophical outlook and spiritual quest, an alternative—ultimately pagan—way of conceptualising our world and our day-to-day reality. In this interview he discusses ideas from the later part of his work, as gives his opinion on the modern situation, as he saw it in the mid 1990s.

 

10 January 2012

Interview with Dr. Kerry Bolton - Part 2

Alex Kurtagic

My first contact with Kerry Bolton occurred on the back of my first article for The Occidental Observer, 'Memoirs of a Dissident Student in Post-Modern Academia', where I recounted my experiences in postgraduate school. At the time, and as we will see in the interview, Dr. Bolton was having a few unpleasant experiences of his own, so it is easy to see now why my piece resonated with him. A fellow at the Academy of Social and Political Research and of the Centre of Independent Studies, an extraordinarily prolific essayist and writer, publisher of the journal Ab Aeterno, and a contributor to publications such as Alternative Right, The Occidental Quarterly, Counter-Currents, and the Journal of Social, Political, and Economic Studies among others, Dr. Bolton is the author of Thinkers of the Right and, more recently, Revolution from Above, which was published by Arktos last year. He holds two doctorates: one in Theology and another in Historical Theology, while his writing deals with geopolitics, history, revolutions, conspiracy, religion, the occult, and Freemasonry. In this interview we explore Dr. Bolton's career, learn about his experiences in academia and the media, and get a sense of the man behind the legend. Continued from yesterday.

 

9 January 2012

Interview with Dr. Kerry Bolton - Part 1

Alex Kurtagic

My first contact with Kerry Bolton occurred on the back of my first article for The Occidental Observer, 'Memoirs of a Dissident Student in Post-Modern Academia', where I recounted my experiences in postgraduate school. At the time, and as we will see in the interview, Dr. Bolton was having a few unpleasant experiences of his own, so it is easy to see now why my piece resonated with him. A fellow at the Academy of Social and Political Research and of the Centre of Independent Studies, an extraordinarily prolific essayist and writer, publisher of the journal Ab Aeterno, and a contributor to publications such as Alternative Right, The Occidental Quarterly, Counter-Currents, and the Journal of Social, Political, and Economic Studies among others, Dr. Bolton is the author of Thinkers of the Right and, more recently, Revolution from Above, which was published by Arktos last year. He holds two doctorates: one in Theology and another in Historical Theology, while his writing deals with geopolitics, history, revolutions, conspiracy, religion, the occult, and Freemasonry. In this interview we explore Dr. Bolton's career, learn about his experiences in academia and the media, and get a sense of the man behind the legend. Because of the length of this interview, we are posting it in two parts.

 

7 January 2012

A Forgotten Thinker on Nation States vs. Empire

Paul Gottfried

There is a subject that generally seems to be “no go” among academe: a critical attitude towards Trotsky and a less than slanderous attitude towards his nemesis, Stalin. Submission of papers on the subject is more likely to elicit responses of the type one would expect from outraged Trotskyite diehards than those of a scholarly critique. However, the battle between Trotsky and Stalin is not just one of theoretical interest, as it laid the foundations for outlooks on Russia and strategies in regard to the Cold War. The legacy continues to shape the present era, even after the implosion of the USSR. The following paper is intended to consider the Stalinist allegations against Trotsky et al in the context of history, and how that history continues to unfold.

 

6 January 2012

The Moscow Trials in Historical Context

Kerry Bolton

There is a subject that generally seems to be “no go” among academe: a critical attitude towards Trotsky and a less than slanderous attitude towards his nemesis, Stalin. Submission of papers on the subject is more likely to elicit responses of the type one would expect from outraged Trotskyite diehards than those of a scholarly critique. However, the battle between Trotsky and Stalin is not just one of theoretical interest, as it laid the foundations for outlooks on Russia and strategies in regard to the Cold War. The legacy continues to shape the present era, even after the implosion of the USSR. The following paper is intended to consider the Stalinist allegations against Trotsky et al in the context of history, and how that history continues to unfold.

 

5 January 2012

Klansmen, Irishmen, and Nativists: The Origins of Racial Nationalism in America

Michael O'Meara

The heterogeneity of America’s European population has always posed a challenge to its national identity. Only late in the 19th century was this identity extended to European immigrants assimilated in its Anglo-Protestant values and, in the 20th century, to Catholics, whose Church (the “Whore of Babylon”) had learned to accommodate the Protestant contours of American life (or what John Murray Cuddihy called its
“civil religion”). From this ethnogenesis, the original Anglo-Protestant identity of the American people gradually evolved into a more inclusively European Christian identity, though one closely tied to its Anglo-Protestant antecedents. Based on this heritage, racial nationalists today define America as a European nation and designate its anti-White elites as their principal enemy.

 

4 January 2012

The Soul's Compass Points South: Interview with Miguel Serrano - Part 2

Francisco Vejar
(Translated by Alex Kurtagic)

In 1938 you published an anthology titled, El Verdadero Cuento en Chile [The True Short Story in Chile], where Juan Emar was published for the first time and where, in addition, you developed in the preface a very curious theme—I am referring to the impact the Andean mountain range has on Chileans.

It was because by then we were already getting together to dream about the mountain giants that were inside the mountain, because this had been a country inhabited by giants. The mountain is sacred. Back then the mountain could be seen at all hours. It was a marvel. The view of the Andean Mountain Range that Santiago enjoys is not enjoyed in any other part of Chile. Only in Austria have I seen something similar. It was . . .

 

3 January 2012

The Soul's Compass Points South: Interview with Miguel Serrano - Part 1

Francisco Vejar
(Translated by Alex Kurtagic)

We are not the first ones to observe that Miguel Serrano’s country scrimps him deserved awards—he, an author published by prestigious British and American publishing houses, and published even in Farsi and Japanese translation. It’s not long since another of his works, C.G. Jung and Herman Hesse: A Record of Two Friendships, has come out in French (Geneva: Georg Editeur, 1991) and it is in the Belgian magazine Vouloir that essayist Bruno Dietsch reserves the following comment for the Chilean writer: Nemo propheta a acceptus est in patria (Ciudad de los Césares, No. 39, Year 1991). To this we must add that . . .

 

2 January 2012

Pessimism?

Oswald Spengler

My book [The Decline of the West, Vol. I.] has met with widespread misunderstandings. In a sense, that is almost an inevitable concomitant of any novel approach which arrives at new conclusions. Such a reaction is all the more to be expected when the conclusions reached, or even the perspectives and methodology that led to them, present a serious challenge to the prevailing mood of an age. When such a book chances to become fashionable, the misunderstandings will multiply. For then people are confronted suddenly by a complex of ideas which they should actually not have attempted to digest until after years of preparatory reading. With my own book there is the added difficulty that only the negative side of the picture has hitherto reached the public. Most critics have neglected to observe that this first volume represents only a fragment from which, as I was soon to realize, it is not easy to form conclusions about what is to follow. The forthcoming second volume will round out the "Morphology of World History," thus bringing to a close my examination of at least one aspect of the problem. Attentive readers will have noticed that I touched briefly on a second aspect, the ethical question, in my essay Prussianism and Socialism.

 

1 January 2012

Happy New Year 2012

Alex Kurtagic

Happy New Year 2012! We would like to thank all of those who supported Wermod and Wermod in 2011, and give a very special thank you to those who contributed to the Miguel Serrano translation project, be it economically or through book donations. There exciting new titles lined up for publication in the coming twelve months, including The Golden Thread by the aforementioned author. We are doing well financially and are looking forward to seeing our plans and projects for the year realised and raising the bar even higher with our forthcoming editions.

 

29 Dec ember 2011

Herder's Theory of the Volksgeist

Andrew Hamilton

German philosopher and critic Johann Gottfried von Herder (1744–1803) developed the concept of romantic or organic nationalism, a form of ethnic nationalism in which the state derives its political legitimacy from historic cultural or hereditary groups. The underlying assumption is that every ethnicity should be politically distinct. Herder’s ideas on the subject were expressed in his theory of the Volksgeist. A medical student at the University of Königsberg in East Prussia in the 1760s, Herder quickly abandoned medicine for theology and philosophy, which brought him into contact with philosopher Immanuel Kant, one of his professors. To encourage Herder, his favorite pupil, Kant waived the fees customarily paid for attendance at his lectures, allowed the student to read some of his unpublished manuscripts, and introduced him to the writings of Montesquieu, Hume, and Rousseau.

 

28 Dec ember 2011

A Brief Introduction to the Nordic Imperium School

Vibeke Østergaard

I hesitated writing this principally as a result of time constrains but to a lesser extent because only two other lansmen seem to be on this list and the material will likely seem remote to the Americans and Englishmen on the list. I have received a great number requests to compose such an introduction from members and others that follow this list and I do feel that the school deserves some attention from Eurocentric advocates in general which in the end caused me give the matter cursory attention. I have purposely avoided raising the matter of the esoteric/mystic writings many of the authors because I do not wish to offend the non Heathen majority on this list and I feel that ideological issues can be dealt with adequately without raising the matter. I also chose not to deal with the matter of proponents of the school being active in the Legionary Movement as others have covered the matter far better then I can.

 

27 Dec ember 2011

Václav Havel: The Enemy Within

K. R. Bolton

An inner enemy is more dangerous than an outer one, because while he seems to belong, he is actually a kind of alien. An inner enemy is dangerous in two respects: first because of his own activity, and second, because of his usefulness to the outer enemy. . . . After the War, the American occupation of Europe and the despoliation of Europe were made possible only by the Michel-stratum,[1] which hired itself out to the enemy to establish vassal-governments, churchill-regimes, in every province of Europe. During this period between the Second and Third World Wars,[2] the Michel as an American agent is more dangerous than he would otherwise be himself. The reason for this is the advance of History since the 19th century has rendered his whole world-outlook completely useless to him, even for purposes of sabotage, while to the Americans it is still useful as a means of control over Europe. Thus the Culture-diseases of Culture-retardation remains in the body of Europe only because of the American occupation. — Francis Parker Yockey[3]

 

23 Dec ember 2011

Quest for the Opulent West

Tomislav Sunic

Catching up with the West is the big dream of all post-communist countries in Eastern Europe. This dream transpires through imported liberal slogans such as "transition," "integration" and "market democracy" aired daily on all local TV and radio wavelengths. This rhetorical switch from former socialist command economy to capitalist market economy appears to East European leaders far more palatable than the necessity of removing their own ossified past. In fact, proponents of globalism and their institutional transmission belts, such as the IMF and WTO had never given the green light for the Eastern European masses to forcefully remove communist officials from power. With the choice between local nationalists and local ex-communists, the global plutocrats have opted for the latter. In reality though . . .

 

22 Dec ember 2011

Tito Perdue's The Node

Alex Kurtagic

Tito Perdue is best known for Lee, a 1991 novel about a misanthropic septuagenarian at war with the modern world. The novel introduced Lee Pefley, Perdue’s presumed alter ego, who has since appeared in other novels, at different ages and even after death (as in Fields of Asphodel). The Node, his most recently published novel, now out on Nine-Banded Books, is a blend of literary and dystopian science fiction, and features what might be Lee’s grandson. The action unfolds in a ridiculous mid-twenty-first-century America that is the outcome of generations of caucophobia, political correctness, degeneration, and dysgenics. It is an America where Caucasians (‘Cauks’) have been reduced to a dispossessed and legally disenfranchised minority, where pederasty is considered normal, where New York . . .

 

21 Dec ember 2011

European Unity: The Spiritual Prerequisite

Julius Evola

The first political step in forging a united Europe would be the withdrawal of all European governments from the United Nations, a hypocritical organisation if there ever was. The ground for a European initiative must be carefully prepared; but the problems of concrete political tactics fall outside the scope of this essay. Here we can only point to what we believe must be the form and the spiritual and doctrinal basis of united Europe. 'Federalist' and 'associative' . . .

 

20 Dec ember 2011

The Homogenization of Global Consciousness:
Media, Telecommunications, and Culture

Jerry Mander

One of the main goals of economic globalization is that every place on earth should be more or less like every other place. Whether it's the US, Europe, or once-distant places like Asia, Africa, or South America, all countries are meant to develop the same way. The same franchise fast food, the same films and music, the same jeans, shoes, and cars, the same urban landscapes, the same personal, cultural, and spiritual values. Monoculture. If you've traveled a lot, you've seen that this is rampantly happening already. Such a model serves the marketing and efficiency needs of the huge global corporations that the system is designed to benefit. Whether cultural, political, or biological, diversity is a direct threat to the efficiency goals of global corporations, which operate on a scale that requires, as far as possible, similar appeals in every market in the world.

 

18 Dec ember 2011

Whites as Kulaks

Stephen Webster

The 1993 murder of black British teenager Stephen Lawrence, allegedly by a gang of young white men, became a cause celebre for the British left. At various times over the years, police have brought charges against five men, only to see them dismissed because of insufficient evidence. Three white men actually brought to trial were acquitted in April 1996, after a judge ruled that eyewitness testimony against them was unreliable. British anti-racists refused to let the matter drop, and the election of Tony Blair’s leftist Labour Party in 1997 helped them keep it in the public eye. Shortly after coming to power, the new Home Secretary, Jack Straw, launched a public inquiry into the Lawrence murder and the police investigation. After 69 days of hearings, the chairman of the inquiry, former British High Court judge Sir William Macpherson . . .

 

17 Dec ember 2011

Carrying Capacity and Quality of Life

Garrett Hardin

A competent physicist has placed the human carrying capacity of the globe at 50 billion—about [7] times the present world population. Before you are tempted to urge women to have more babies, consider what Robert Malthus said nearly 200 years ago: There should be no more people in a country than could enjoy daily a glass of wine and piece of beef for dinner. A diet of grain or bread is symbolic of minimum living standards; wine and beef are symbolic of all forms of higher living standards that make greater demands on the environment. When land used for the direct production of plants for human consumption is converted to growing crops for wine or corn for cattle, fewer calories get to the human population. Since carrying capacity is defined as the maximum number of animals (humans) an area can support, using part of the area to support such cultural luxuries as wine and beef reduces the carrying capacity. This reduced carrying capacity is called the cultural carrying capacity. Cultural carrying capacity is always less than simple carrying capacity.

 

15 Dec ember 2011

Oswald Spengler

Alfred Rosenberg
(Translated by Hadding Scott)

The personality of Oswald Spengler has stood for years, since the appearance of his chief work The Decline of the West [in 1918], at the center of public interest. Without question this famous work is riddled with many flaws. There is no question that next to fascinating ideas, often platitudes are found. Without a doubt there is something embarrassing about receiving many views of other people served up ostensibly as Spengler’s intellectual property. In spite of everything however, the attack on our school wisdom has had a refreshing effect and set in motion many agreeing and opposing forces, thus begetting life. And in the spiritual quagmire of the present, that is in any case to be welcomed.

 

13 Dec ember 2011

Consuming the '60s Revolutions

Mark Wegierski

In some areas of society, politics, and culture, the various revolutions that became evident in the 1960s have succeeded spectacularly. In others, however, they have failed miserably. One of the defining ideas of the ’60s, for instance, was the opposition to big corporations. Yet today transnational corporations are bigger and stronger than ever before. The ’60s generation also expressed a desire for a return to nature, a wish for a more natural existence. Nonetheless, the world has become more mechanized, more commercialized, more paved-over, and more technologized in the years since.

 

11 Dec ember 2011

Pierre Drieu La Rochelle

Radbod

Pierre Drieu La Rochelle (1893-1945) was born into a middle class, politically conservative, Catholic family. Drieus childhood seems to have been particularly unpleasant, for he feared and hated his father, an unsuccessful lawyer, who constantly ridiculed him for any displays of weakness or cowardice. Drieu loved his mother dearly, but she often neglected him in the pursuit of her active social life. Consequently, Drieu spent much of his childhood immersed in books and daydreams about Napoleonic grandeur, military heroism, and colonial adventure, which he readily contrasted with his own family's decadent and pusillanimous bourgeois lifestyle. Drieu was very conscious of his familys social status, especially after his fathers shady financial dealings had resulted in a sharp decline in the familys economic status while Drieu was an adolescent. Drieu confessed that "family life offered me nothing but repugnant trials, I lived between a father and a mother who were torn apart by adultery, jealousy and financial troubles."

 

9 Dec ember 2011

Zinoviev's "Homo Sovieticus":
Communism as Social Entropy

Tomislav Sunic

Students and observers of communism consistently encounter the same paradox: On the one hand they attempt to predict the future of communism, yet on the other they must regularly face up to a system that appears unusually static. At Academic gatherings and seminars, and in scholarly treatises, one often hears and reads that communist systems are marred by economic troubles, power sclerosis, ethnic upheavals, and that it is only a matter of time before communism disintegrates. Numerous authors and observers assert that communist systems are maintained in power by the highly secretive nomenklatura, which consists of party potentates who . . .

 

8 Dec ember 2011

Why Greens Should be Politically Incorrect

Aidan Rankin

A disturbing new trend is beginning to emerge in 'First World' cities and indigenous communities alike. It is a trend that challenges education's true meaning. For, around the world, books are disappearing from school shelves. This is not due to financial cutbacks, but outbreaks of 'political correctness'. Teachers remove from library shelves books about military heroes, explorers, hunters and conquerors, on grounds of 'imperialist', 'racist' or 'sexist' attitudes, thus contributing to the alienation and delinquency of their male pupils, and a wider alienation of their school from the community it serves. By imposing this form of censorship . . .

 

7 Dec ember 2011

The Black Book of Communism

Dwight D. Murphey

If someone were to ask "What are the ten most important books to have on your bookshelf?," a strong argument could be made that this book must be included on the list - high praise, indeed. It merits so preeminent a position for a number of reasons. One, of course, is that the twentieth century can hardly be understood without a detailed realization of the brutalities of Communism in all its manifestations, worldwide. Those enormities rank among the central facts of the century and yet are little known. Such a background is needed, too, if world opinion is ever to move away from the double standard that has long considered Nazism an nmitigated evil but that has granted considerable leniency, often even indulgence or preference, to Marxism-Leninism. Many of the events of the past century, large and small, are understood only in the most warped fashion because of that moral, ideological skewing.

 

5 Dec ember 2011

From Nihilism to Tradition

Michael O'Meara

In the United States, we nationalists take our stand on the question of race, arguing that it denotes meaningful differences between subspecies, that these differences have significant behavioral and social ramification, and that the present threat to white racial survival constitutes the single, most vital issue facing our people. In Europe, by contrast, our counterparts pursue a somewhat different strategy.   Against the anti–white forces of multiculturalism, Third World immigration, feminism, and globalization, European nationalists tend to privilege not race per se, but the defense of their cultural/historical identity.

 

4 Dec ember 2011

The European Rebirth

Pierre Krebs

An Italian Marxist, Antonio Gramsci, was the first to understand that the state is not confined to a political apparatus. In fact he established that the political apparatus runs parallel to the so-called civil apparatus. In other words, each political apparatus is reinforced by a civil consensus, the psychological support of the masses. This psychological support expresses itself through a consensus on the level of culture, world-view and ethos. In order to exists at all, political power is thus dependent on a cultural power diffused within the masses. On the basis of this analysis Gramsci understood why Marxists could not take over power in bourgeois democracies: they did not have . . .

 

3 Dec ember 2011

The Reception of Evola in Italy

Alberto Lombardo

When Julius Evola died on June 1974 the eleventh, his books used to be read by a huge part of the right-wing political youth in Italy. The traditionalist thought of Evola, since the first years after World War II, had been a central point of reference for people who didn’t accept the destiny of decadence and spiritual destruction of his country and of the whole world. As is well known, and as Evola often wrote, not only the defeated countries, infact, lost parts of their national territory, prestige and international authority, but all the European coutries lost in a few years their colonial dominions and empires (England, France, Portugal, Spain) and went losing their influence with all the advantage of the two more powerful political blocks, the western and the eastern one: the world of Las Vegas, Coca-Cola and Hollywood and the communist empire.

 

1 Dec ember 2011

Giorgio Freda:
The Unclassifiable Revolutionary

Edouard Rix
(Transl. Anonymous
Revised by Greg Johnson)

“I hate this book. I hate it with all my heart. It gave me glory, that paltry thing called fame, but it is also the source of all my miseries. For this book, I have known many months in prison, . . . police persecution as petty as cruel. For this book, I experienced the betrayal of friends, enemies, bad faith, selfishness and the wickedness of men. From this book has originated the stupid legend that made me out to be cynical and cruel, a sort of Machiavelli disguised as Cardinal de Retz that they like to see in me.” Though written by Curzio Malaparte in the introduction to his famous essay Technique of the Coup, Giorgio Freda, the author of The Disintegration of the System, could have made these lines his own. Because, in writing this small booklet of about sixty very dense pages that undermined the basis of the bourgeois system, the young publisher has suffered years of judicial and media persecution.

 

28 November 2011

Wagner as Artist and Revolutionary

Friedrich Wilhelm

On May 11th, 1848, the royal Kapellmeister of Dresden composed his essay, Entwurf zur Organisation eines deutschen National-theaters für das Konigreich Sachsen (On the Organization of a German National Theatre for the Kingdom of Saxony.) The Kapellmeister, Wilhelm Richard Wagner now approaching his 35th birthday was merging his artistic vision with a political vision. Theatre had become a mirror image of the reactionary society that needed to be changed if he were to achieve his artistic ambitions. 1 By this time Wagner had already been recognized in the musical world for the compostion of three operas, Rienzi, Der Fliegende Hollander, and Tannhauser. Each of these operas was given a debut at the famous Dresden opera house which in less than a year would go up in flames under uncertain circumstances. A century later . . .

 

27 November 2011

For a Society of Declining Growth

Serge Latouche

"Declining growth is a pure necessity . . . The volumes of worldwide traffic of persons and goods with its negative consequences could be put in question (relocalization). The loud sensational advertising with its disastrous consequences could be put in question. Finally, the vast amount of throwaway products and gadgets could be put in question. We must alight from the logic of the economy . . . " The French sociologist and philosopher of technology Jacques Ellul was . . .

 

26 November 2011

The History of the Knights Templar

David Hatcher Childress

The Knights Templar have been associated with all sorts of incredible activities including: having the Ark of the Covenant, the Holy Grail, a secret fleet that sailed the oceans, and an awe-inspiring self-confidence and courage that made their enemies shudder in fear. Despite their fearsome, battle-hardened reputation, the Knights Templar were learned men, dedicated to protecting travellers and pilgrims of all religions, not just Christians. They were great statesmen, politically adept, economic traders, and they were apparently allied with the great sailor-fraternity that had created a worldwide trading empire in Phoenician times. espite a great deal of negative propaganda against the Templars at the time of their suppression, they are still known today as the preservers of knowledge and sacred objects. While the origins . . .

 

25 November 2011

A Prophecy from the Inner Earth?

Anonymous

The entrances to the Interior Earth are to be found at the poles, as well as in the Antarctic Oases and possibly on the top of this mountain. They can be reached by travelling through the deep waters which flow beneath the ices.

In this Interior Earth are the Cities of Agharti, Shambhalla and the Caesars, inhabited by the immortal Siddhas. There the Golden Age still exists. The Discs of Light, covered in orichalcum, fly out from there. They carried our guide off to a place of safety. It is the invulnerable Paradise which our people have rediscovered, where the science of resurrection and eternal love is guarded. It is the starting point of the journey to our star.

— Miguel Serrano, NOS: Book of the Resurrection

 

24 November 2011

The Lord of the World

William Grimstad

It's hard to think of an "occult" topic, other than Atlantis or "flying saucers" or the Bermuda Triangle, that has been the subject of more irresponsible writing and spurious research than has the vexed subject of Agartha. For obscure but seemingly inborn psychological reasons, the idea of a sort of hidden pope coordinating all the secret activities of the world from an underground kingdom in the vastness of the Himalayas has a recurring glamour. Starting with a 19th century traveller and romancer named Louis Jacolliot, the line of such superficial commentary slides to a reductio ad absurdum in the fantasies of "pop" mystic Robert Charroux: "There are four entrances to Agartha: one between the paws of the sphinx at Gizeh, another on the Mont-Saint Michel, a third . . . "

 

23 November 2011

Music of the Future

Christopher Pankhurst

An interregnum is a time of ultimate possibility. Poised as we are between the end of the old European culture and the possibility of a new, reborn, European culture it is useful to give some thought to the direction that our new culture should take. That the old culture has died will be obvious to anyone who has any sensitivity to such matters whatsoever. The great musical tradition that reached a high watermark with Bach, and that subsequently sought expression through the individual genius of Beethoven and Schubert, had its funeral song in Strauss’ Metamorphosen. This intensely sad work for strings evoked the destroyed greatness of the German opera houses where Strauss had had so many successes, and which, like the musical tradition itself, were lying in ruins in the 1940s. Atonality, serialism, jazz, all strode arrogantly and somewhat vengefully over the grave of the Western tradition. Now, in the second decade of the twenty-first century, ugliness has become so ubiquitous that we are in danger of forgetting what makes beauty worthwhile in the first place.

 

22 November 2011

Gnosis

Frithjof Schuon

It is a fact that too many authors — we would almost say: general opinion — attribute to gnosis what is proper to Gnosticism and to other counterfeits of the sophia perennis, and moreover make no distinction between the latter and the most freakish movements, such as spiritualism, theosophism and the pseudo-esoterisms that saw the light of day in the twentieth century. It is particularly regrettable that these confusions are taken seriously by most theologians, who obviously have an interest in entertaining the worst opinion possible concerning gnosis; now the fact that an imposture necessarily imitates a good, since otherwise it could not even exist, does not authorize charging this good with all the sins of the imitation.

 

20 November 2011

Notes on the French Revolution

Charles Maurras

The sovereign freedom of a state makes it externally independent of its neighbors, but internally renders it subject to the disciplines of strength, fruitful endeavor, justice and peace. The freedom of the different associations, institutions, and groups of which it is composed consists in remaining in control of their own rules of conduct: it cannot mean the freedom to disintegrate in internal strife. Finally the freedom of the citizens themselves, according to their different roles and stations in life, is but a proposition to each that he should pursue a mode of life which is appropriate to what he must do, and wishes to do. Freedom cannot authorize them to break ranks in disorder, it is the binding force against death, it is the defensive force against division.

 

19 November 2011

Vilfredo Pareto and Political Irrationality

Tomislav Sunic

Few political thinkers have stirred so much controversy as Franco-Italian sociologist and economist Vilfredo Pareto (1848-1923). In the beginning of the twentieth century, Pareto exerted a considerable influence on European conservative thinkers, although his popularity rapidly declined after the Second World War. The Italian Fascists who used and abused Pareto's intellectual legacy were probably the main cause of his subsequent fall into oblivion. Pareto's political sociology is in any case irreconcilable with the modern egalitarian outlook. In fact, Pareto was one to its most severe critics.

 

18 November 2011

The Relation of Hindu and Celtic Culture

Druuis Belenios Ategnatos

The Celtic peoples are defined for the purpose of this article as referring to those people who in the past spoke a language of the Celtic branch of the Indo-European language family and also lived according to the ancient culture considered to be that of the speakers of Celtic as based upon Celtic traditions and stories and on archeology. Archeological and linguistic evidence traces them to the Danube river valley in Europe back to around 6000 BCE, and further back to the region of the Aral Sea of Central Eurasia. In Western China in particular, there is much evidence for a culture of people who physically looked like the Celts of Europe until the Turkic Uighur people and others moved into the region about the eighth century. Mummies with European features have been found in that region going back to 1500 BCE.The occasional . . .

 

17 November 2011

UFOs and Vimanas

Stephen Knapp

In supplying information about the advancements of Vedic science, the subject of Vedic airplanes, vimanas, is almost in a classification of its own. Some of this information is so amazing that for some people it may border science fiction. Nonetheless, as we uncover and explain it, it provides serious food for thought. First of all we need to understand that the Vedic conception of universal time is divided into different periods. For example, a period called one day of Brahma is equivalent to 4,320,000,000 of our years on earth. Brahma's night is equally as long and there are 360 of such days and nights in one year of Brahma. Each day of Brahma is divided into one thousand cycles of four yugas, namely Satya-yuga, Treta-yuga, Dvapara-yuga, and finally the Kali-yuga, which is the yuga we are presently . . .

 

16 November 2011

Hyperborea and the
Quest for Mystical Enlightenment

Jason Jeffrey

Far north, somewhere near the icy regions of the North Pole, legend speaks of an ancient and mostly forgotten civilisation. Mythical in character, the Hyperborean civilisation is said to have flourished in the northern most region of planet Earth at a time when the area was suitable for human habitation. According to certain esoteric systems and spiritual traditions, Hyperborea was the terrestrial and celestial beginning of civilisation. The home of original Man. Some theories postulate Hyperborea was the original Garden of Eden, the point where the earthly and heavenly planes meet. And it is said Man transgressed Divine Law in this Golden Age civilisation, the ultimate price being his banishment to the outside world. Man ventured into other regions of Earth, establishing new civilisations, bringing to an end this great and glorious Golden Age.

 

15 November 2011

The Latest Edition of Our
Electronic Newsletter is Now Up

James Stevenson

The latest edition of our electronic newsletter is now up on our website. The electronic newsletter contains product highlights from our online book store, information about our forthcoming book titles (the next one is Francis Parker Yockey's The Proclamation of London), and information about our extant catalogue. Click here to view the newsletter. You can have these newsletters sent directly to your email inbox by subscribing. To subscribe just send us a blank email with 'Subscribe to electronic newsletter' in the subject line.

 

15 November 2011

Tito Perdue's The Node

Chip Smith

Tito Perdue has been described as "America's lost literary genius" (New York Press) and as "a reactionary snob" (Publisher's Weekly). Originally released in 1991 under the estimable Four Walls Eight Windows imprint, Perdue's first published novel, Lee, has since become a cult classic. Notably, it introduced Perdue's enduring anti-hero (and presumed alter-ego), Leland Pefley, a dyspeptic, cane-wielding misanthrope at war with the modern world. "Lee's language is vitriolic and hallucinatory," wrote a critic for The New York Times Book Review, who further praised the book as "a portrait both exceedingly strange and troubling." In describing Perdue's work as "troubling," this early critic displayed unwitting prescience. For as Perdue's literary career has come to bloom in the years since Lee was published, so has his . . .

 

14 November 2011

The Legionary Movement in Romania

Alexander E. Ronnett and Faust Bradescu

It is the authors' observation that most people make the mistake of not considering socio-political phenomena in their natural context in order to discover the legitimate causes, the true sense of their development, and especially their importance in the environment which fostered them. Carried away by the passion of political convictions or by the hope of immediate benefits, they reduce every phenomenon to a linear problem: good or bad, to be accepted or rejected. Moreover, governments, the authorities, "reason" in the same manner. This maintains an atmosphere of suspicion and misunderstanding and is detrimental to the awakening of consciousness to what we believe are certain essential truths. In addition, when the age has been ravaged by bloody conflicts and when bad memories or hates are not yet dissipated, nothing is easier then to maintain this partial and prejudiced way of judging matters each time that circumstances bring the discussion of such a problem before the public.

 

11 November 2011

Wotan

Carl Gustav Jung

En Germanie naistront diverses sectes,
S'approchans fort de l'heureux paganisme:
Le coeur captif et petites receptes
Feront retour a payer la vraye disme.
—Propheties De Maistre Michel Nostradamus, 1555

When we look back to the time before 1914, we find ourselves living in a world of events which would have been inconceivable before the war. We were even beginning to regard war between civilized nations as a fable, thinking that such an absurdity would become less and less possible on our rational, internationally organized world. And what came after the war was a veritable witches' sabbath. Everywhere fantastic revolutions, violent alterations of the map, reversions in politics to medieval or even antique prototypes, totalitarian states that engulf their neighbours and outdo all previous theocracies in their absolutist claims, persecutions of Christians and Jews, wholesale political murder, and finally we have witnessed a light-hearted piratical raid on a peaceful, half-civilized people.

 

10 November 2011

Miguel Serrano: In Nehru's India (Pt. 2)

Cecilia Valdés Urrutia
(Translated by Alex Kurtagic)

Editor's Note: The following is an interview with Miguel Serrano, originally published in El Mercurio, in Santiago, Chile on 18 October 1998. The interview appeared as one piece, but we have broken it into two parts. What follows is part two. Part one was published yesterday.

In India, you received a letter from Professor Carl Gustav Jung, who wrote a preface for one of your books, The Visits from the Queen of Sheba.

Yes. And in a recent biography about Jung that I found, by German professor Gerhard Wehr, the latter dedicates two chapters to refer to Jung’s relationship with me. He tells that Jung barely received visits from members of his family or his disciples, but that he did receive mine. And that he talked with me about things that he had not talked about with anyone else. It’s true. Because with him I touched a key point.

 

9 November 2011

Miguel Serrano: In Nehru's India (Pt. 1)

Cecilia Valdés Urrutia
(Translated by Alex Kurtagic)

Editor's Note: The following is an interview with Miguel Serrano, originally published in El Mercurio, in Santiago, Chile on 18 October 1998. The interview appeared as one piece, but we have broken it into two parts. What follows is part one. Part two will follow in a day or so.

Like few and no other Chilean, Miguel Serrano walked around and worked in India (1953-1962) almost like a member of Prime Minister Nehru’s family. He interned himself in their lives, their beliefs, and India’s millenarian culture. His relationship with Indira Gandhi transcended national borders. For the first time he tells, here and in the third volume of his memoirs, something about the truth of his intimate closeness to her. Likewise he reveals aspects of his friendship with notable figures, like Professor Carl Gustav Jung, who hosted him, towards the end of his days, when he almost no longer spoke to anyone, and who prefaced one of his books, an event never before seen. Serrano also talks about his close contact with Hermann Hesse and many others, like Arnold Toynbee and the Dalai Lama.

 

8 November 2011

Available for Pre-Order:
Our Memorial Edition of Francis Parker Yockey's The Proclamation of London

James Stevenson

A memorial edition of Francis Parker Yockey's The Proclamation of London is now available for pre-order. Written in 1949, this was Yockey's manifesto for his then newly formed group, the European Liberation Front. As such, it distills the ideas developed in his neo-Spenglerian magnum opus, the 600-page Imperium. The Proclamation was initially circulated in pamphlet form, and as have the few, fugacious re-prints that appeared in the decades following. With our memorial edition this will be the first time that this important text, unique in the English language, appears in a durable, library-grade format, for the benefit of Yockeyist, collectors, and researchers alike. It will come with a major introductory essay by Michael O'Meara, along with Kerry Bolton the world's . . .

 

8 November 2011

Jung and the Völkisch Movement

Kerry Bolton

Carl Gustav Jung (1875-1961), in founding Analytical Psychology did so as a break and a contradistinction from the psychological school of his mentor Sigmund Freud. The Jungian and the Freudian stand as the contrasts between the Germanic and the Jewish world-views in the realm of psychology. Indeed it has been suggested that Freud's observations were largely derived from mainly Jewish patients. Jung commented: "... It is a quite unpardonable mistake to accept the conclusions of a Jewish psychology as generally valid." The Jewish spirit that infuses Freudianism has been remarked upon by others qualified to speak, both Jew and Gentile. The Jewish historian Howard Sachar considered the chief motivation of the Jewish Freudians to be . . .

 

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