H/T Partnering with Eagles & For Love of God and Country’s Blog by Thomas DiLorenzo, The New American, June 26, 2023 In an essay titled “A Strategy for the Right,” the late economist and libertarian scholar Professor Murry N. Rothbard called John C. Calhoun’s “Disposition on Government” one of the most brilliant essays…
Category: Southern Nationalism
The New Ottomans
The New Ottomans “Within the United States, Dixians have become what the Turks were in the Ottoman Empire. The Dixian influence on the history of the United States is easy enough to spot. The early Republic is certainly a testament to this – the War for Independence and the Constitution would be unthinkable without…
Know Your Southern History: Southern Reconstruction 1865-1877 (Part 1 of 7)
Southern Reconstruction 1865-1877 Reconstruction was not a plan to rehabilitate the Southern economy. It was a plan to remake the South into the ideological image of the North, plunder its resources and economy, insure Republican political power in Washington for the long term, and punish the South for its rebellion and sins. The…
Obscure Civil War History: The Confederacy’s Canadian Raiders
The Confederacy’s Canadian Raiders — How Rebel Agents Waged War On the North from Foreign Soil Great example of a well-trained and dedicated small unit of guerilla’s infiltrating deep behind enemy lines and using every manner of insurgent warfare (to include urban terrorism) to strike FEAR into the heart of the enemy.
Celebrate Straight White Christian Pride!
Piss off the Government Supported Anti-Christian, Anti-White Trans-Agenda Today! Celebrate Straight White Christian Pride!
Had Enough Yet?
National Divorce TNM
Requiem for a Culture, Part 5: The Graves of the Ancestors
Requiem for a Culture, Part 5: The Graves of the Ancestors This is the fifth essay in an occasional series. Previously: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4 “The past is never dead. It’s not even past.” — William Faulkner, Requiem for a Nun, Act I, Scene III (page 80 in the Vintage paperback edition)
Top 5 Biographies of Robert E. Lee
1. R.E. Lee by Douglas Southall Freeman Published in 1934, this four-volume book by Douglas Southall Freeman chronicles all of the major events and highlights of Robert E. Lee’s military career. The book discusses everything from Lee’s experiences in the Mexican-War to his surrender at Appomattox. Freeman depicts Lee as an honest, straightforward man who is…
Know Your Southern History: Why We Eat Black-Eyed Peas
Why We Eat Black-Eyed Peas Grandson (excitedly): “Wait, I think I know!: was it black-eyed peas?” Grandpa: “Yes, that’s right. Although our ancestors from those days usually called them by other names such as ‘cornfield peas’ or ‘cow peas.’” Grandson: “Why did they call them that?” Grandpa: “They called them cow peas because they fed them to their cattle and…