The common ‘White Nationalist case for Israel’—that if it’s ok for Jews to have an ethnostate, then it is also ok for us to have one—is not wrong, but the case is actually far more precise than that. Our interest in the Israel Question is not simply to defend the idea of ethnonationalism as such,...
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The Plymouth 400 Symposium
There is a woeful lack of ethnic consciousness and cohesion among Anglo-Saxons worldwide. In a groundbreaking essay published in 1980, John Tyndall, former head of the British National Party, defined the Anglo-Saxon ethnos as consisting of the English, Scots, Welsh, Anglo- and Scots-Irish communities and their counterparts in Australia, New Zealand, the United States, and...
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JayMan • February 8, 2017 • 1,900 Words
Throughout my American Nations series (based on the books American Nations: A History of the Eleven Rival Regional Cultures of North America by Colin Woodard and Albion's Seed: Four British Folkways in America by David Hackett Fischer) I've talked about how North America is divided into distinct ethnocultural regions based on historic settlement patterns. These...
Read MoreJayMan • May 21, 2014 • 7,300 Words
Post updated, 6/10/14. See below! As we saw previously (see My Most Read Posts), my post Maps of the American Nations is the single most popular post so far here on my blog. Americans all over are supremely interested in both their origins and the reasons for the cultural quirks of the different American regions....
Read MoreJayMan • November 11, 2013 • 900 Words
Colin Woodard's book, American Nations: A History of the Eleven Rival Regional Cultures of North America, is currently generating a lot of buzz. This is, in good part, thanks to an article that appeared in Tufts Magazine in which Woodard describes his work. Like David Hackett Fischer's Albion's Seed: Four British Folkways in America before...
Read MoreJayMan • October 11, 2013 • 1,000 Words
Another map of the American nations: This is where the states stand on Obamacare's expansion of Medicaid. As you can see, it's far from universally embraced. Now let's compare that to this map: And for that matter, this map: Most of the usual suspects. Most prominent among those who reject the Medicaid expansion are those...
Read MoreJust so you guys know that this expression which I stated that New Englanders use wasn't just bullshit. Taken this week by me in Maine: Gotta love those Puritan values. They (might) love you, but you'll always be a PFA.
JayMan • August 14, 2013 • 2,300 Words
Continuing my on-going series on the regional differences – genetic regional differences – between the different Euro-Americans in the United States and Canada, here I will present a series of maps demonstrating some of the evidence for the existence and significance of these differences, beyond the historical circumstances explored by David Hackett Fischer (DHF) in...
Read MoreJayMan • July 29, 2013 • 2,900 Words
Continuing my series on the American nations (see also A Tentative Ranking of the Clannishness of the “Founding Fathers”; Flags of the American Nations; Sound Familiar?), I take a look at the Cavaliers. The founders of the U.S. Tidewater and Deep South were people of noble blood that originated primarily from southwestern England, in an...
Read MoreJayMan • July 26, 2013 • 2,400 Words
Post updated, 1/14/15. See below! Let me start by once again giving the disclaimer that I am an unapologetic atheist. Of course, I would conclude that being an atheist is the only natural position one can have if one is being a true scientist. Now, that said, I realize that I am only able to...
Read MoreJayMan • July 23, 2013 • 1,900 Words
My previous two posts featured some of the flags – assigned by me – of the various "nations" of North America, as described by Colin Woodard, and as derived from David Hackett Fischer. Inspired by the Bloomberg map of the American nations, where Woodard assigned a flag to each nation, I thought I'd make my...
Read MoreWhat Mainers really mean. Good Puritan values: