conservatives
As I said yesterday, I will be busy for a long time trying to salvage what remains of my library. But I can afford to make a brief comment.
Four of the most popular websites on the American racial right have been mentioning the recent murder of Charlie Kirk: one of the most prominent conservative activists in the United States and a trusted ally of President Donald Trump, who has little to do with us. But when it was recently revealed that Alex Linder, who was one of us, had died of cancer, all these major sites remained silent: zero obituaries.
The reason is not difficult to understand.
The vast majority of white nationalists are not National Socialists but de facto conservatives. And conservatives don’t like exterminationist voices like Linder’s that also harshly criticise Christianity (since it is the Christian ethics that atheists have adapted that have prevented us from behaving, shall we say, like Cro-Magnons).
It is essential to understand this when trying to investigate why white nationalism has never emerged from the ignored fringes of society: they cling to the old paradigm. And just as society in general ignores the intellectual work of the racial right, racialists themselves ignore the more radical racist voices, while honouring the memory of conservatives like Kirk.
One reply on “De facto”
Conservative commentators have been pointing out that the Woke Left is celebrating Kirk’s murder. But what they still don’t understand is that this is a war between two Christian factions: the traditional and the secular, what we call atheistic hyper-Christianity.
Anyone who hasn’t read Tom Holland’s book will never understand the POV of The West’s Darkest Hour.