Pro Patria

By Frank Hilliard for the Council of European Canadians The Germans have a word for what we’re all feeling today, Schadenfreude; the feeling of pleasure at seeing someone else’s discomfort. It’s bitter-sweet because the discomfort of woke, leftist, Millennials is tempered by the real possibility of a wave of deaths …

Democracy Dies in Darkness

By Giles Corey for Counter Currents The Democratic Party is profoundly stupid. The unholy alliance of neoliberal oligarchs and neoconservative Jews that constitute the American ruling class, armed with the cudgel of POC puppets (or as Tucker Carlson referred to them, “a constellation of aggrieved interest groups animated by their …

Not All Jews!

By George Mackenzie for Occidental Observer Many Jews become fearful or enraged when anyone criticizes even one single Jew. From a collectivist viewpoint, many Jews see this as a possible attack on all Jews and mobilize to resist it. Laurent Guyenot in his book From Yahwey to Zion explains the …

Candle in the Wind

By Alfonz Cavalier for the American Sun Chances are, if you’re reading this, you probably don’t care about rugby. After all, the publication is called ‘The American Sun’, and Americans haven’t really been noted for their prowess in Rugby Football since roughly the 1880s. More than that, however, there is …

Dirty Little Secrets

By Jason Collett for Renegade Tribune The unexpected views of four key diplomats who were close to events. Just consider the following:   Joseph P. Kennedy, U.S. Ambassador to Britain during the years immediately preceding WW2 was the father of the famous American Kennedy dynasty. James Forrestal the first US …

The New Dark Age

By Ferdinand Bardamu for the Occidental Observer What is a Dark Age? In historiography, the term “Dark Age” may describe intervening centuries for which we have little or no documentary evidence. Accordingly, the time period between the collapse of the Mycenaean civilization to the birth of the polis is known …

The Hollow Cult

By Tobias Langdon for the Occidental Observer Suppose a hungry donkey was placed exactly midway between two identical piles of hay. Could it choose one of the piles to eat or would it hesitate, growing ever weaker, until it starved to death? This was the question posed in the medieval …

Leni Riefenstahl

By John Wear for Inconvenient History Leni Riefenstahl was an extraordinary woman of extraordinary accomplishment in many creative fields. Angelika Taschen writes of Riefenstahl: She began as a celebrated dancer in Berlin during the early twenties, became an actress, then finally directed and produced her own films, several of which …