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We are in the midst of a very serious e-begging extravaganza, but I figure I must produce content as part of this begging operation, although the site is actually shut down, technically. But today I have a story of a Christmas miracle. It actually happened on Easter, but never mind that. In probably 2003, I... Read More
The Avengers are Assembling to take revenge against unborn infants, whites, and heterosexual men. Woe unto ye, oh Babylon. CNN: At least Chris Pratt wasn’t there. That would have made me sad. Pratt is obviously the kosher version of a right-wing movie star (they don’t let Mel Gibson be in Disney movies), but I like... Read More
This is true of every woman’s career. Men don’t know about women, and how easy they have abortions. Men also don’t know about women’s sexual lives, and that they are only horny when they are ovulating. Women can only get pregnant during a 72 hour window every month, and this corresponds with a testosterone spike.... Read More
I was never a fan of Michael Jackson (MJ). Neither what I had heard of his music nor what I had seen of his danse routines appealed to me, although I did find his moonwalk pretty cool. So MJ’s artistic genius escaped me—until, that is, I very recently started to pay attention and realized that... Read More
Japan is a bit like the Germany of the East. Boundless potential that must be constrained by its enemies. The only reason it didn’t take over the global economy after WW2 is because Richard Nixon industrialised China and “international finance†created property bubbles that crashed Japan’s economy in the 1990s. After WW2, while the German... Read More
This could almost be framed as a revolt against modernity. This “art†should not even exist. It’s an insult to all of civilization. If my 3-year-old painted that, I would slap the shit out of him and lock him in a box for a week, feeding him only uncooked rice. Van Gogh is such garbage.... Read More
“Raw with newness.†That’s a phrase from the most famous book by the great English writer Rosemary Sutcliff (1920-92). She’s describing Hadrian’s Wall, the giant Roman fortification completed in about 130 A.D., nearly two thousand years ago. That’s what the book, The Eagle of the Ninth (1954), allows both children and adults to do: fly... Read More
The translation of rap songs from ebonics into English is intended to promote cross-cultural understanding. In particular, I want to promote the understanding among white people that black people, if left to their own devices, behave like tribal savages from Africa thousands of years ago. Previous Stormer Ebonics Translations can be found here. English translation... Read More
Far from most modern “horror†fare, Late Night with the Devil is an engaging, thoughtful, and entertaining demon possession film that takes a complex and educated approach to the subject matter, while also serving as a quaint period piece documenting the culture of 1970s America. The film is part mockumentary, featuring “found footage†of a... Read More
This guy is handsome. He was in movies and shit. He was in the Lord of the Rings. Now he’s the pet of a 40-year-old woman, doing dishes in order to get his pecker patted? New York Post: Shut up, bitch. You aren’t doing housework. You live in LA. The Mexicans do the housework. (LA... Read More
If, after a decade of researching the Jewish question, you had revealed to me that Jews largely invented the reality television genre, my reaction would hardly be one of surprise. Given Jewish overrepresentation in the television industry overall and the altogether sordid and sleazy nature of reality TV, it seems almost a given to assume... Read More
James Baldwin would have celebrated his 100th birthday on Aug. 2, had he lived so long. He didn’t: He died young. He was but 63 on Dec. 1, 1987, the day he slipped away at the shabby-grand house in Saint–Paul-de–Vence, France, where he had lived since 1970, a refugee from … from a lot of... Read More
Black Barbie (2023) is a documentary on Netflix about Barbie dolls and their psychological impact on black children. The first half tells the history of these dolls. As a Barbie collector, I found it interesting, even though I have never bought a black doll. The second half is about Mattel’s DEI efforts and how children... Read More
In the right wing’s attempt at creating a parallel society, they have an entire spectrum of political video streams that act as de facto news bulletins and current affairs programming. This also includes political documentaries with genre classics like Europa The Last Battle being successfully used as a normie-sphere propaganda weapon. But in its embryonic... Read More
Little remembered today, Wyndham Lewis (1882–1957) was an influential British painter, writer, and critic who still fascinates cultural historians. He developed a style of painting known as “Vorticism,†an attempt to combine cubism and futurism. His career was interrupted by the First World War, most of which he spent as an artillery officer. During the... Read More
Authors and their literary heroes are always subject to conflicting interpretations in different historical contexts. Sophocles’ tragedy Antigone was performed quite differently in the Greek city state of fifth-century Greece than it is in contemporary versions crafted by modern producers and directors beholden to modern literary critics. The story of the mythical and rebellious princess... Read More
A hot, slow, still month, the only social event of any note a sad one (more later). I trimmed my hedges, mowed my lawn, walked my dog, paid my estimated taxes, showed up for my annual physical. Concerning that last, I went over all the numbers with our family physician. You know the numbers I... Read More
I’m sure I agree with all of the various criticisms of Disney. I’m sure they’re woke lesbians who make terrible shows and people are right to hate them over it. However, I must also say: making a show that you know everyone is going to hate and then lashing out and blaming the fans when... Read More
American Fiction, Orion Amazon MGM Studios, 2023, written and directed by Cord Jefferson, based on the 2001 novel Erasure by Percival Everett Movies written and directed by blacks are now thoroughly mainstream, and it would be hard to think of one that does not insult whites, either openly or slyly. American Fiction, no exception, is... Read More
The American Right talks about power, realism, and human nature. It acts politically like a naïve child. The American Left talks about equality, empathy, and compassion. It acts politically like a single-minded tribalist. There are many reasons for this, but part is ideological. In one of his most overlooked and yet important articles, “The Other... Read More
At the very point that countries such as India and China are increasingly nationalistic and are increasingly inculcating their youth with militaristic and nationalistic values [Is the BJP altering textbooks to promote Hindu nationalism? By Murali Krishnan, DW, 25th May 2022], we are infantilising our own people. The newly published The Anxious Generation: How the... Read More
I was honored to be featured in yesterday’s Tehran Times. The front page announces Iran’s “clean victory†with its successful retaliation for Israel’s attack on its Damascus consulate. Ali Hamedin recently interviewed me for his two-part Tehran Times article on science fiction and colonialism. (Here’s Part 2 ). Much of the interview turned on James... Read More
If war movies generally dwell on the physical manifestations of war, understandable given its nature, there is a subset of the genre that deal with the POW experience away from the battlefield — THE GREAT ESCAPE begins in a prisoner-of-war camp but belongs more in the prison-break genre. Because we are shown enemies co-existing in... Read More
Peter Brimelow refers to an “interglacial†period in the 1990s when taboo books on race were released by mainstream publishers. Titles such as Paved With Good Intentions, The Bell Curve, Alien Nation, Why Race Matters, Race, Evolution and Behavior, and Hating Whitey are some of the books that challenged racial orthodoxy yet were still published,... Read More
The end of the greatness of Western Civilization in one man’s death. * * * On February 17, 1998, a frail centenarian passed away in Wilflingen, Germany. Born in 1895, Ernst Jünger’s life was far more noteworthy than simply its prodigious length — it was a life that epitomized the gallantry, curiosity, patriotism, intelligence, and... Read More
Sometimes it takes our bodies to return us to our souls. And our little pains to remind us of the indescribable pain of the savage killing and dismemberment of innocent children and adults in Gaza and many other places by U.S. weapons produced in clean factories by people just doing their jobs and collecting their... Read More
In May last year I found myself in Budapest, surrounded by Neo-Classical architecture. The centre of the city is incredibly beautiful, and so consistently so, that it’s easy to become lost. A young, and rather cynical, female student I was with actually commented, referring to two London skyscrapers: “Budapest needs a Gherkin or a Shard,... Read More
I see a lot of faggots and retards complaining about not having a girlfriend. Is there anything more gay? Kevin Costner, who is experiencing a massive career renaissance in his 60s, starring in one of the most popular shows on TV, Yellowstone, was recently divorced by his whore wife. They were married for 18 years,... Read More
Our society is coming to resemble a dystopian “peoples’ paradise†in its darkly disturbing features. Think back to iconic works of literature like Arthur Koestler’s Darkness At Noon and George Orwell’s Nineteen-Eighty-Four. Are we not living in a society which is little more than a cross between the nightmare visions of Koestler and Orwell? Do... Read More
Despite calendars and clocks and all the mental gymnastics we use to control life and time, surprises are at the heart of existence. This may seem like a truism, but if so, it is one of those truths we often avoid in our desire for stability and the quelling of anxiety. Our expectations, a form... Read More
Earlier: The NYT's "Banned Books" List: Grossly Misleading As A Measure Of American Close-Mindedness I spend most of my time in France after having worked there for 17 years, but I have access through an app called Cloud Library to e-books from the public library in my little town in Maine. The selections are quite... Read More
Previously: Hamas Found Guilty of Rape in Another Dimension of the Multiverse The Jews have provided zero evidence for “mass rapes.†They said they accidentally destroyed all the evidence. Then they told totally absurd stories about women getting gang-raped and decapitated with shovels. Now they just present these claims as if they are established fact.... Read More
I discovered the great Latin American fabulist Augusto Monterroso through a bilingual Arabic-Spanish edition of La Oveja Negra y Demas Fabulas (The Black Sheep and Other Fables). I have read through it slowly several times, checking the Spanish words I don’t know against the Arabic, and the fewer Arabic ones against the Spanish. Monterroso is... Read More
With each passing year, society moves farther from tradition, leaving behind the foundations of the European culture and civilization we hold dear. Technological and geopolitical developments continue to render the history of millennia increasingly alien and impenetrable. At the same time, many of us have grown up in the “New World†and are many generations... Read More
In the age of Marvel, turbo charged self-aware irony, and shoehorned diversity in film, it’s becoming increasingly difficult to find something interesting to watch. By and large, movie lists are seldom worth publishing, but I’ve been told that I have a novel taste in cinema. Several of these are foreign, some deal with very dark... Read More
Now that our revels are ended, the holiday celebrations and feasts, if one had them, just a dream melted into thin air, our hungers perhaps richly satiated temporarily or not, our visions project us into a new year in which we hope to realize in a not insubstantial way the images we see before the... Read More
Taki Points Out that the Jews in Hollywood Are Doing the Same Work on White People that the Nazi Filmmakers Did on Jews “Hollywood is hard at work in maintaining the myth that everything that the West has achieved since the Greeks was due to the white man’s cruelty and ability to steal from the... Read More
If the Christmas Movie could be construed as a genre, its catalog is underwhelming to say the least. Stories draw strength from conflict, but most Christmas movies keep tensions to a minimum lest holiday cheers be dampened. The assumption is people watch Holiday Movies for uplift; they want to be blissed out, not pissed on.... Read More
A people without roots is a people without a future, perhaps not a people at all. The trend of “white erasure†in historical films, art, and even documentaries suggests that our rulers know this and are deliberately writing whites out of our own history. This includes even myths and legends. While non-white stories belong to... Read More
It is hard for those who have not lived through the shattering political assassinations of the 1960s to grasp their significance for today. Many might assume that that was then and long before their time, so let’s move on to what we must deal with today. Let some old folks, the obsessive ones, live in... Read More
The first Grand Theft Auto VI trailer dropped on Monday. This is the latest installment in the most popular video game franchise in history, a series of narrative-driven and cinematic action adventure games where the player takes the role of a criminal and carries out various crimes, including the titular crime. Making a new entry... Read More
James Kunstler's provocative opinion piece this year, “Call the Exorcistâ€, details the ways in which the current order isn’t merely corrupt, abusive, and/or tyrannical but downright insane verging on the demonic. According to the BBC film critic Mark Kermode, THE EXORCIST is the greatest movie ever, a rather extravagant claim. Still, Kermode's appraisal is understandable... Read More
Previously: Disney’s Latest Niggerfest May be One of the Worst Flops in Cinema History Legal scholar and conservative commentator Jonathan Turley has a piece up at The Hill about Disney’s latest SEC filing, wherein they admit that they are letting down shareholders by purposefully refusing to produce media that their consumer base enjoys, and instead... Read More
Should I stop putting “nigger†in the titles? I don’t think it matters at this point. The Daily Stormer is devolving into self-satire as its author prepares for merciful death. I wrote a thing a couple weeks ago about Disney’s own dive into self-satire, being pushed as a company that only produces George Floyd-oriented entertainment... Read More
People don’t really seem to be aware of it, but George Floyd’s fat, stupid corpse is still hanging over all of society. Probably, everyone is aware that Disney has turned the Marvel Cinematic Universe full George Floyd. However, people without kids and people with kids who don’t take their kids to the movies anymore because... Read More
Killers of the Flower Moon is the biggest-budget movie ever made in my home state of Oklahoma. Filmed in Osage County with its beautiful, rolling prairie, the movie is based on David Grann’s book, Killers of the Flower Moon: The Osage Murders and the Birth of the FBI. The book and film explore the murders... Read More
I was a huge fan of Ayn Rand from my early 20s until a few years back when I began to wonder whether there was “more to it†than the ostensible admiration for the productive classes and a ruthless advocacy for freedom from needless government interference in one’s life. Rand’s work even may have an... Read More