I finally found some time to add a new post that a reader sent to me weeks ago! Other responsibilities prevent me from putting more energy into the site at this time, but the good news is I feel like I already have a critical mass of articles. My update frequency, therefore, will largely be a function of how much new material readers send in to me. Looking forward to hearing from you. – WS
commentary
Website: http://www.nationalpolicyinstitute.org/statement-of-principles/
1. The West is a cultural compound of our Classical, Christian, and Germanic past.
2. Race informs culture; it is the necessary precondition for cultural identity and integrity. In 1950 whites represented 28 percent of the world’s population. If current trends persist, this number will plummet to 9 percent by 2060. In the United States, whites are projected to become a minority of the national population in less than fifty years. The result will impoverish not only their descendants but the world in general and will jeopardize the civilization and free governments that whites have created.
3. America is part of the West, and as both a political and cultural order, is not “based on a creed” or “derived from a proposition.” America is neither a “universal nation” nor an “experiment” concocted by ideologues. America is the unique and irreplaceable product of centuries of specific racial, historical, and cultural identities. America and its cultural and political identity will endure only so long as the identities that created it and sustain it endure, and when they die, America will die. We do not wish this to happen and will work to ensure it does not.
4. The European identity of the United States and its people should be maintained.
5. The perfectibility, let alone the equality, of man is not possible and is not a legitimate political aspiration. Political efforts to achieve or enforce perfectibility and equality invariably demand an unacceptable degree of coercion and result in unnecessary and unjust pain, suffering, and social disorder.
6. The political and personal freedoms of the American order-including our rights of free expression and association-are in jeopardy from ethnic and ideological enemies and must be preserved.
7. Federal decentralization and territorial separation should be recognized as legitimate and humane means of preventing and resolving divisive social, ethnic, and racial conflicts.
8. The quality of life rather than constant and perpetual increases in the material standard of living should be the emphasis of social and economic policy and public concern.
9. Imperial expansion, military crusades, and similar adventures to promote “global democracy” and “human rights” should be rejected.
10. The intervention of foreign states in the internal politics and decision-making of the American people must be rejected.
William H. Regnery II
Samuel T. Francis
November 11, 2003
commentary explicitness:high
Website: http://www.un.org/preventgenocide/adviser/genocide.shtml
Description: This may at first seem like it is out of scope for this website, but it actually really does belong. The past couple weeks I have been listening to all of Bob Whitaker’s porch talk podcasts. As you may recall, I kind of discovered or re-discovered Bob through the White Rabbit Radio podcasts. The theme that keeps running through Bob’s podcasts and writings is genocide. Reflecting on my own lifetime in America, I can see the pattern now. There really is a genocide program in place against Whites. I didn’t see it clearly before listening to all these podcasts. Now I do. Read the UN statement. Listen for yourself.
What is genocide?
The Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (1948) defines genocide (article 2) as “any of the following acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group…” including:
(a) Killing members of the group;
(b) Causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group;
(c) Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part;
(d) Imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group;
(e) Forcibly transferring children of the group to another group.
All such acts are violations of human rights, and may also be crimes against humanity or war crimes, depending on the context in which they were committed. The Convention confirms that genocide, whether committed in time of peace or war, is a crime under international law which parties to the Convention undertake “to prevent and to punish” (article 1). Because it is a part of international customary law the Convention is considered applicable in all countries, irrespective of whether they have signed or ratified it.
commentary explicitness:high
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