On this day in 993 AD, St. Ulrich of Augsburg was canonized.  A German monk of Alamanni and Swabian descent, he lived a devout life of celibacy and simplicity before becoming Bishop of Augsburg.  He would later become a general in the dfense of Augsburg against the Magyars.

In 1054, Chinese and Arab astronomers recorded a supernova in the region of ζ-Tauri, making the Crab Supernova the first to be recorded in human history.

In 1359, Gil de Albornoz, supported by the Malatesta of Rimini, defeated Francesco II Ordelaffi, securing the northern Italian city for the Papacy.

In the United States, this otherwise uneventful day is known as Independence Day.  But what is America?  From its beginnings, America has always represented the false idol of progress, and Americans worshipped this idol more above all else, Chistianity included.  Wherever there was an old idea to be overturned, Americans were the first to embrace such ideas, and thus gave rise to the disease we now label ‘liberalism’.  As a result, America has become a cultural wasteland, in which the only products of creativity are mass-marketed items such as rap music, Hollywood movies, and the like.  In modern times, internally and externally, America represents the other side of the Bolshevist coin.  The most dangerous strain of Bolshevism may only take root through the ruthless uprising of the masses, and establish the so-called ‘worker’s state,’ and deprive the people of their material well-being in the process.  Americanism, though it does not value dialectal materialism is just as dangerous in being advocates of its unmasked opposite.  Furthermore, as an economic system, Bolshevism can co-exist and protect certain aspects of culture; the Soviet Union, for example, was far more resistant to cultural degeneracy than America.  In this respect, Americanism is the far more dangerous beast, for while uttering the false spell of ‘liberal democracy’, and with the standardization so commonplace through mass indoctrination in the media, begins the crumbling of higher culture.

In a previous entry, I discussed the concept of Eurasianism and Atlanticism.  Having defined the character of Americans, it is now much clearer when we speak of the kulturkampf of the Eurasian and Atlantic worldviews.  To put it concisely: the former is the world of being, while the latter is the world of ceaseless becoming.   

I leave the gentle reader with some famous quotations and food for thought:

“America is the first country to have gone from barbarism to decadence without the usual intervening period of civilization.” - Oscar Wilde, English author

“The Americans are the living refutation of the Cartesian axiom, ‘I think, therefore I am’: Americans do not think, yet they are. The American ‘mind’, puerile and primitive, lacks characteristic form and is therefore open to every kind of standardisation.” - Julius Evola, Italian philosopher in ”Civiltà Americana

“Everything about the behavior of American society reveals that it’s half Judaized, and the other half negrified. How can one expect a State like that to hold together?” - Adolf Hitler, German politician

“[The Americans]…are enterprising, defiant, and touchy; impatient of authority; furious politicians; very tolerant of fraud and violence; possessing much high and generous spirit, and some true religious feeling, but strongly addicted to cant.” - Francis Galton, English naturalist

“[Their] preferred music…is created by Negroes to satisfy their love of noise and to whet their sexual desires” -Sayyid Qutb, Egyptian scholar, in Amrika allati Ra’aytu

No related posts.

One Response to “What is AmeriKwa?”

  1. 1
    ejenni niyarma Says:

    It seems that the US will elect a black president. Things are bound to get worse.

    The last quote is my favorite.

Leave a Reply

Preview:

Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 United States
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 United States