3 Comments
May 25Liked by Walt Bismarck

Other side of the pond listener here and I found the conversation very compelling. I was already aware of a good deal of what was being discussed but was informed by a lot more too. I get what both speakers were emphasising about anyone of a similar mindset not getting obsessed about race and jews 24/7. However when you have the Soros funded Alvin Bragg as the DA prosecuting Trump in New York and the New York Times and the Washington Post and perhaps worst of all The Atlantic where we find that duality going on. The Atlantic might even be the worst of the 3 where one of its editors has been in the IDF and where the content has been relentlessly pushing the anti white agenda-"white privilege ",stolen land "","indigenous genocide "and so on. If anyone has had white privilege it's been those diluted jews. But that narrative has come back to bite them since Gaza.

Expand full comment

You do a great job selling Florida

Expand full comment

Lots to chew on in this episode.

- Sounds like your advice to Desantis is that he should lean into Floridian stereotypes in the same way that Trump leans into New York stereotypes.

- It's interesting that from Hunter's perspective, the tiki march and the next day's brawl sound like they've combined into a single optics fail. Following the news hour by hour in another part of the country, it seemed to me like there was a stark difference. The tiki march was genuinely impressive, at least in photographs: young men who looked fit, disciplined and clean-cut, willing to take a calculated risk for a memorable show of force. (I'm not a WN, just an HBD-aware civnat, but I won't punch right here -- if I were a young man between the ages of 15 and 25 in the toxic media environment of the mid-2010s, I'd probably have become one.) But then the following day was a sorry spectacle, fat white trash with Sonnenrads brawling with fat white trash with dangerhair, culminating in the infamous car crash. What a tragedy.

- Regarding esoteric nationalism, I'm not a believer in it, but I've read a fair amount of Evola and other writers in that orbit. Guys like that see the Indian tradition as an Indo-European alternative to "Semitic" Christianity. Jesus was a Jew, but the Brahmins were the original "Aryans"; the similarities between Sanskrit, Greek and Latin, and between the Vedic gods and the various pre-Christian European pantheons, were immediately obvious once Europeans started studying Indian culture. There's a sense in which traditional India, with its plurality of gods for the masses coexisting with sophisticated philosophical systems for high-IQ Brahmins, really is closer to the spirit of classical Greco-Roman culture than the Christian West or the Islamic Middle East. (Whether these debates are worth your time depends on how motivated you are by spiritual and metaphysical questions, of course.)

Expand full comment