2,128 words “The [scariest] shortcoming of the human race is our inability to understand the exponential function.” — Albert Allen Bartlett To procreate, people need to be sociable enough to meet someone and decisive enough to choose them. Similarly, to make money they need to pick a career and shut out all other options. Such […]
In 2019 the Hollywood Reporter gathered together seven Hollywood executives regarded as being among the most powerful in the business for a roundtable discussion, which is pictured here (click to enlarge). From the left, they are Scott Stuber, head of original films for Netflix; then-Disney Co-Chair Alan Horn; Tom Rothman, “Chairperson” of Sony Pictures; Donna […]
Rishu Sunak 2,188 words We’ve tried the cowboys, now for the Indians There is nothing so exciting or colorful as the election of a Hindu Prime Minister. The splendor of India, the heat and dust, the parade of many-armed goddesses and elephant gods, the dusky maidens in bright saris doing that thing with their necks […]
3,517 words SPOILERS AHEAD When I was a little girl, my parents wouldn’t allow me to go south of eight-mile . . . and I didn’t even know what that meant until I got a little older. And I started realizing that’s where the city started, and the suburbs ended. — Yara, It Follows David […]
2,274 words It has become an important part of Right-wing lore to mock liberals for framing current events in terms of Harry Potter. Donald Trump restricts entry to persons from a number of Muslim countries? That’s just like Voldemort persecuting Muggles! A court refuses to convict a white person for defending himself against black crime? […]
3,564 words Introduction here, Chapter 3 here Translated by F. Roger Devlin Illusion, threat, wrong turn, and temptation are some of the words that recur most frequently nowadays in public discourse regarding populism. Having become a genuine foil, standing accused of awakening bad inclinations within the popular classes, and being useful to the dominant classes […]
1,163 words We are a small group of highly committed people with ambitious aims whose achievement will require the mobilization of great masses of our people. For this reason, the first thing to say about our battle of ideas is that it will have to be fought on more than one level. We have distinct […]
1,282 words Not long ago, I met with some of my fellow deplorables. For the first time, I got to see one of our vast subterranean bases. I was pretty jazzed about that! (Naturally, gratitude for permission to use these cavern complexes goes to our Vril-ya comrades way down under — mighty white and out […]
7,101 words Introduction here, Chapter 3 Part 2 here Translated by F. Roger Devlin Books on the crisis or dysfunction of democracy have been multiplying for some time now.[1] Their authors belong to different political families, but many of them are in agreement on at least one point which seems to serve as their central […]
The Clash at the 1983 US Festival. 2,812 words On Memorial Day weekend, 1983, The Clash held their final concert. It was a meaningful one aside from that, given that it was part of a four-day festival in San Bernardino, California that featured some of the most popular music acts in the world at the […]
Neville Goddard 705 words This year, Counter-Currents is raising $300,000. Thus far our grand total is $179,160.94. That puts us at 59% of our goal. Thanks so much to all our donors for their support. Complete information on how you can help appears below. But first, a few inspirational words from James J. O’Meara. Greg […]
824 words Counter-Currents has a new matching grant. Over the last few days, many of you have been enjoying chapters from Alain de Benoist’s book The Populist Moment. This is a very exciting book. I liken it to Robert Eatwell and Matthew Goodwin’s National Populism: The Revolt Against Liberal Democracy, which demonstrated just how long-standing […]
265 words On Saturday, October 22nd, 2022, Millennial Woes welcomes Aureus Press to Counter-Currents Radio at noon Pacific, 3pm Eastern Standard Time, 8pm UK time, and 9 pm Central European time, at: DLive: https://dlive.tv/Counter-Currents Odysee: https://odysee.com/@countercurrents/ccradio Send questions & donations to Entropy: entropystream.live/countercurrents On Sunday, October 23rd, 2022, Nick Jeelvy welcomes HapaPerspective and American Krogan […]
7,590 words 1. Knowledge of the Right Use of All Things To explain what philosophy is, we always have to go back to the beginning. Pythagoras (ca. 570-495 BC) is said to have been confronted by Leon, the tyrant of Philius, who demanded to know if he was wise. He responded that he was not […]
France’s Estates-General of 1789, where the concepts of a political Left and Right were allegedly born. 5,436 words Introduction here, Chapter 2 Part 1 here Translated by F. Roger Devlin Many people who sincerely consider themselves to be on the Left or Right are glad to give a definition, often quite clear, of what this […]
1,357 words While the United Kingdom and the Commonwealth were in their official period of mourning following the death of Queen Elizabeth II, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau participated in a crass publicity stunt that outraged many. Two days before the Queen’s funeral, Trudeau was recorded singing “Bohemian Rhapsody” in a London pub. In addition […]
1,851 words In days gone by during times of economic collapse and social uncertainty, non-white minorities were convenient scapegoats. Looking back on things, some minority groups were actually tremendous scapegoats — they were so effortlessly unlikable that you couldn’t even tell they were being scapegoated. Y0u just naturally assumed they were to blame. Nowadays, as […]
Alain de Benoist 6,688 words Introduction here Translated by F. Roger Devlin Opinion democracy? Televisual democracy? Market democracy? Democracy is in crisis, and the pathologies which affect contemporary democracies increasingly occupy observers’ attention. The common opinion is that these pathologies, far from being inherent in democracy itself, result from a corruption of its principles. Some […]
René Descartes 2,176 words I rooted out of my mind all those errors that had formerly crept in . . . — René Descartes, Discourse on the Method I know this much is true. — Spandau Ballet, “True” There are famous concepts in Western philosophy, but it is hard to find any better known than […]
2,762 words Peter Brimelow Alien Nation: Common Sense About America’s Immigration Disaster New York: Random House, 1995 Is it really wise to allow the immigration of people who find it so difficult and painful to assimilate into the American majority? — Peter Brimelow In retrospect, the years of the Clinton administration were baffling. On the […]
2,561 words Author’s Note: On October 15, I debated Mark Collett on the Ukraine war. My opening statement is here. After our opening statements, the format was to answer questions posed by the host/moderator Joel Davis. These are my answers to the first five questions. I appended my answer to the sixth and final question […]
1,823 words As regular readers might know, I am a little finicky when it comes to consumer goods, ranging from food to clothes. Owing to my tactile hypersensitivity, I have problems when it comes to wearing certain types of material, most of them synthetic or unnaturally smooth, or perhaps even too rough. Since synthetic materials […]
Stephen Grey has finally founded the pro-white movement that whites everywhere have been looking for — only WITHOUT THE HATE! 2,520 words Finally, a Hate-Free Group for White People! If, like me, you’ve been leapfrogging from one hate group to another for decades, I think we can agree that the main problem is that they […]
1,582 words Author’s Note: This is my opening statement in my debate with Mark Collett on the Ukraine war hosted by Joel Davis on YouTube on Saturday, October 15th. I got cut off at the end. The last paragraph here was written for the very end of the debate, but by then the format had […]
2,218 words C. R. Hallpike Ship of Fools: An Anthology of Learned Nonsense about Primitive Society Kouvola, Finland: Castalia House, 2018 C. R. Hallpike’s Ship of Fools should prove to be an embarrassment to the scientific community — the most fascinating, righteous, and gratifying embarrassment there could possibly be. Armed with his many years of […]
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