Nixon speechwriter, thespian, game show host, and all-around great American Ben Stein blew the whistle on rising Democrat star Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez this week when he called out the totalitarian bent … Continue reading →
Before Thunderdome shitlord Mel Gibson became the establishment’s least favorite Hollywood A-lister for his unabashedly critical comments on Judaic influence, Thunder Road hellraiser Robert Mitchum had his own career non-fatality … Continue reading →
Revisionist History publisher Michael Hoffman stirred a trollstorm this past summer when, in issue 97 of his newsletter, he published an article titled, “Hitler Never Had a Snowball’s Chance in … Continue reading →
The most incendiary trend to scorch our political landscape these past few weeks has not been the literal rape apologetics espoused by defenders of Brett Kavanaugh. No, for the “woke” … Continue reading →
Two years ago, an acquaintance handed me several books by Carl Jung, one of which was 1957’s The Undiscovered Self. Actually, apparently having forgotten that he had already given it … Continue reading →
A reader expressed some interest in hearing about my trip to Morocco. It isn’t a pleasant memory. Back in the darkness of the late George W. Bush years, I was … Continue reading →
You can’t keep racist hipsters down. Heat Street reports: A record label has dropped the band Dream Machine after two of its members were caught expressing “ugly opinions” about political … Continue reading →
The writer and painter Wyndham Lewis presents a study in contradictions. He was, for one, a violent man and a soldier who longed for peace. “Lewis as an artist and … Continue reading →
Aryan Skynet is prouder than a Proud Boy to present this dynamic duet with Twitter titan and Houston Goylers Co-Founder and Chief Propagandist Goy Orbison, a.k.a. OrbiSon of a Gun. … Continue reading →
Emil Cioran (1911-1995) was a pessimistic Romanian antinatalist philosopher who lived the second half of his life in Paris where his existentialist writings were highly regarded. Several of Cioran’s works … Continue reading →