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First of all we need to remember that the parlament in the European Union is almost an wholesome impotent theater. That's why many many Europeans don't even participate in the election process at all. But it's been interesting time before the election around Europe.
The enemies of Europe has been all about "right wing takeover is to expect" and other funny stuff. And sure, you could be happy or disappointed of the outcome in the election. But what we see now is more problematic than the outcome.
It's how many good nationalistic forces and good people place their faith in the struggle, their will to power in a shitty election in the EU.
What are these democratic lowlife tendencies we see?
Why even care so much about who's sitting in Brussels with wine and fine dining? It's nothing.
It is as Nietzsche said in Beyond good and evil:
"And if you gaze for long into an abyss, the abyss gazes also into you."
Embrace all the energy that has been released now instead. The Sweden Democrats was singing "Ausländer Raus" during the electionnight.
More and more people see the EU for what it is. A modern superstate who have struggle holds on many nations and it's peoples.
The youth is voting more and more far right.
We don't really care which democrat who is sitting in Brussels. But we care that our ideas is taking steps forward behind the speeches, behind the demagogs of the partys.
The election was a good proof that radical ideas will form Europe of tomorrow.
Back to work now!
XIV 🏴☠️
"You lonely ones of today, you expelled ones, you should one day be a folk; from you, you who have chosen yourselves, a select folk should emerge: - and from it, the over-man!"
— Nietzsche
“If you live according to nature, you will never be poor; if you live according to opinion, you will never be rich.”
Seneca
"A soldier surrounded by enemies, if he is to cut his way out, needs to combine a strong desire for living with a strange carelessness about dying. He must not merely cling to life, for then he will be a coward, and will not escape. He must not merely wait for death, for then he will be a suicide, and will not escape. He must seek his life in a spirit of furious indifference to it; he must desire life like water and yet drink death like wine."
― Chesterton
At midnight last night I heard a whistling sound of an otter by the river. Went to the bank and it was very loud and there was a big splash sound but it didn’t swim off but kept whistling at me so I whistled back at it. Couldn’t see it in the darkness but we whistled back and forth for a while before it left.
Читать полностью…“If you are doing your proper duty let it not matter to you whether you are cold or warm, whether you are sleepy or well-slept, whether men speak badly or well of you, even whether you are on the point of death or doing something else: because even this, the act in which we die, is one of the acts of life, and so here too it suffices to 'make the best move you can'.”
— Marcus Aurelius
“Neither a person nor a nation can exist without some higher idea. And there is only one higher idea on earth, and it is the idea of the immortality of the human soul, for all other ‘higher’ ideas of life by which humans might live derive from that idea alone.”
— Dostoyevsky
"Both my moral and intellectual development have been influenced by several existential philosophers, most notably Friedrich Nietzsche, a 19th-century German philosopher, poet, and critic. In line with what existentialists teach, I believe that each individual is responsible for his or her own actions and this responsibility cannot be imposed on some aspect of our psyche, such as the id or the subconscious, nor can we attribute it to the conspiracy of a demon or some kind of errant impulse. We are all responsible for what we do!"
— Mike Mentzer
RACE, SEX, AND INTELLIGENCE
Available now from Arktos:
A Tribute to Helmuth Nyborg
This volume celebrates Helmuth Nyborg’s 85th birthday by honouring his influential research on intelligence and its links to race and sex, which has significantly impacted developmental psychology. Leading experts worldwide contribute chapters that assess Nyborg’s work, explore the research it has inspired, and propose enhancements to his theories, culminating in discussions on the future of intelligence studies and underscoring Nyborg's enduring legacy in the field.
Purchase the book here:
https://amazon.com/dp/1915755190
6 June: The Legacy of Heinrich Severloh
Karl Richter highlights the potential farce of today’s 80th anniversary of the Normandy invasion, emphasising its implications for European sovereignty and freedom.
"How many US soldiers fell or were put out of action due to Severloh’s efforts is unknown — it must have been hundreds."
https://www.arktosjournal.com/p/6-june-the-legacy-of-heinrich-severloh
'Die Arbeit im Dienste einer Idee hält uns wie ein Segen und ein Fluch. Ich kann nicht mehr anders. Das sehe ich jetzt klar: ich muß dienen und opfern.'
'Work in the service of an idea grips us like a blessing or a curse. I can no longer change my ways. I can now see clearly: I must serve and sacrifice.'
(Tagebücher: August 29th 1925)
“In short, spirit must be viewed as the special characteristic that differentiates man from the animals. It is the only essential difference.”
― Mishima, Forbidden Colors
“Now is the time to get serious about living your ideals. How long can you afford to put off who you really want to be? Your nobler self cannot wait any longer. Put your principles into practice – now.”
― Epictetus
Review: ‘The Sixty-Year Caucasian War’
Christopher Jolliffe reviews the newly released book The Sixty-Year Caucasian War (Antelope Hill, 2024), which deals with the long-standing conflict between Russia and Islamic forces in the Caucasus, examining the implications for contemporary geopolitics and cultural identity.
Read the review here:
https://www.arktosjournal.com/p/review-the-sixty-year-caucasian-war
Julius Evola murió hace cincuenta años y su nombre sigue cargado de prejuicios apriorísticos recientemente reavivados por la batuta periodística dominante destinada a promover un volumen mal informado en el que el pensador tradicionalista es presentado, nada menos, que como el «instigador moral» de la «violación de Circeo».
✍️ Giovanni Sessa
🗣 La vida aventurera del filósofo Julius Evola
“Man can be master of nothing while he fears death, but he who does not fear it possesses all.”
― Leo Tolstoy, War and Peace
I had the pleasure of speaking with Russel Walter on his channel.
Good times!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IEWOfpGO_cU
“Just as one candle lights another and can light thousands of other candles, so one heart illuminates another heart and can illuminate thousands of other hearts.”
— Leo Tolstoy
“Our doubts are traitors, And make us lose the good we oft might win, By fearing to attempt.”
― Shakespeare
Patriotic Victories in Europe:
AfD Becomes Germany's Second Strongest Party
FPÖ Secures Victory in Austria
Le Pen's Party Achieves a Resounding Win in France
The philosopher said, "Man's character is his fate".
Consider the significant impact words exercise on one's mindset and how they shape one's perception of the world.
Language is a fabrication of the mind, and although we use words to define objects and abstract concepts, what is a word but an approximation, a derivation of the very thing in question?
Due to its inherent imperfection caused by its very nature, language sets boundaries on the speaker's mind when he thinks of the different manifestations of reality that occupy his thoughts when he thinks or talks about them.
Given their structure and sound/vibratory attributes, some languages like Sanskrit and Ancient Greek are mind-unshackling, while others are downright manufactured to limit their speakers' consciousness.
Aside from the sounds/vibrations one produces when speaking a certain language, each word one chooses to employ will therefore draw certain limits and consequently predispose one to either success/failure, vitality/weakness, proactiveness/passiveness/ health/illness, etc.
Even though one's native language with its figures of speech is not something one gives much thought to, it would seem prudent to do away with euphemisms and mindless everyday little sentences that condition one to be weaker and passive, instead of powerful and master of one's fate.
Do away with the language of victims and slaves and train yourself to speak the language of kings and conquerors.
“A line is a fuse
that's lit.
The line smolders,
the rhyme explodes—
and by a stanza
a city
is blown to bits.”
― Vladimir Mayakovsky
“He hadn't been able to explain his ideas of glory and death, or the longing and the melancholy pent up in his chest, or the other dark passions choking in the ocean's swell.”
― Mishima, The Sailor Who Fell from Grace with the Sea
Development occurs as ebb and flow as time's tide permits one's passage.
E N D L E S S C Y C L E S
O F
F U T U R E P A S T
Ever again, pacification is followed by increase ...
... which is again followed by pacification:
The flowers have taken their full form;
Spring drove life into the plants
And the Lady's Mantle now blooms in the alpine meadows.
The peak of luminosity is bygone,
Pruning is complete and sickness is dispelled.
Emerald Austro's countless leaves keep on ever unfolding.
The Lady Moon is in retreat —
Her mantle serves to veil Her face,
Away from Sun's bright, fiery heat —
Maiden in Green, Mind-Mirror, Grace,
I N Y O U R
S U S P E N S I O N
You, Solar Womb, succeed.
Renew yourself —
Don't be too long —
The Light of Day awaits you.
New paper on ancient horse DNA reaffirms significance of Sintashta culture for developing the first modern horse breed.
Earlier Yamnaya horses were domesticated and ridden but were NOT significant for the expansion of IE peoples as more viable horses didn't become available until around 2200 BC, long after Corded Ware and Beaker folk etc had already expanded.
"new practices of DOM2 reproductive control, aimed at faster productivity, emerged by the late third millennium BCE, and were a prerequisite to early DOM2 breeding and adoption of widespread horse-based mobility."
"Our work does not reject the possibility of equestrianism developing in the Pontic steppe or the
Carpathian Basin before ~2,200 BCE. However, in such a scenario, the associated breeding practices would
not have involved close kin mating or accelerated generation times. The phenomenon would also have
remained confined in scale, both demographically and geographically, excluding long-distance fast mobility
as the primary domestication incentive."
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-024-07597-5