Sunday, November 29, 2009

Jim Giles has a new interview with Arthur Kemp. Mr. Kemp makes a valid point about the Jewish question and the need for nationalists to distance themselves from oddballs, conspiracy theorists, and Holocaust revisionists. The most successful pro-white politician in the U.S., David Duke, ran on an essentially non-"anti-Semitic" platform. Yes, as a former leader of the Ku Klux Klan he did have a questionable past, but if Mr. Duke had talked about Jews and Zionism during the election campaign, he wouldn't have received thirty percent of the vote. The BNP only began to become politically successful when it stopped talking about Jews, the Holocaust, and WWII, and focused on the Islam problem, an issue with which the general voter seems to have some sympathy. The same goes for other far-right political parties in Europe, from Flemish Interest to the Geert Wilders' Party of Freedom. Shouldn't we adopt the platform that has borne the most fruit?

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