2/28/2008

David Duke just appeared on a national radio program!

Posted under: — @ 11:55 pm
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Hear David Duke’s interview with Alan Colmes or Download

David Duke just appeared on a national radio program: LISTEN TO THIS SHOW, NOW!

In the radio program Dr. Duke discusses the Obama candidacy and his association with Black racist organizations and individuals. Also, be sure to read and listen David Duke’s new article and broadcast on Barack Obama, now available.


How a Handfull of Marxist Jews Turned Western and U.S. Culture Upside Down

Posted under: — @ 12:30 am
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Video: “The History of Political Correctness”

Here is an interesting video and article that documents the history of Political Correctness, except for one detail, both the video and the article are too politically correct to mention the tribal affiliation of nearly all the perpetrators of this modern day malady. Could it be a coincidence that nearly everyone responsible for bringing us Political Correctness: Georg Lukács, Max Horkheimer, Herbert Marcuse, Theodor Adorno, Erich Fromm, and Wilhelm Reich are all Jews? Or as Professor Kevin MacDonald has suggested is the promotion of Political Correctness, whether consciously or unconsciously, another manifestation of a Jewish group evolutionary strategy at work, ultimately resulting in the weakening of a homogeneous society? We post this video and article and leave you to decide — admin

The Historical Roots of “Political Correctness”

By Raymond V. Raehn

America is today dominated by an alien system of beliefs, attitudes and values that we have come to know as “Political Correctness.” Political Correctness seeks to impose a uniformity of thought and behavior on all Americans and is therefore totalitarian in nature. Its roots lie in a version of Marxism which seeks a radical inversion of the traditional culture in order to create a social revolution.

Social revolution has a long history, conceivably going as far back as Plato’s Republic. But it was the French Revolution of 1789 that inspired Karl Marx to develop his theories in the nineteenth century. In the twentieth century, the success of the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917 in Russia set off a wave of optimistic expectation among the Marxist forces in Europe and America that the new proletarian world of equality was finally coming into being. Russia, as the first communist nation in the world, would lead the revolutionary forces to victory.

The Marxist revolutionary forces in Europe leaped at this opportunity. Following the end of World War I, there was a Communist “Spartacist uprising in Berlin, Germany lead by Rosa Luxemburg; the creation of a “Soviet” in Bavaria led by Kurt Eisner; and a Hungarian communist republic established by Bela Kun in 1919. At the time, there was great concern that all of Europe might fall under the banner of Bolshevism. This sense of impeding doom was given vivid life by Trotsky’s Red Army invasion of Poland in 1919. (more…)


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