Confessions of a Reluctant Hater
- Authors
- Johnson, Greg
- Publisher
- Counter-Currents Publishing
- Tags
- politics , white nationalism , political philosophy , race , metapolitics , tea party , immigration
- ISBN
- 9781940933436
- Date
- 2016-01-01T00:00:00+00:00
- Size
- 0.49 MB
- Lang
- en
Greg Johnson’s Confessions of a Reluctant Hater contains 52 short essays, reviews, and opinion pieces that
chronicle the author's discovery of a white worldview and a white voice to
defend it. The second edition contains 24 new essays and is 40% longer than the
first. Greg Johnson discusses multiculturalism, immigration, economic policy,
the Tea Party, and the 2008, 2010, and 2012 elections, rampant political
correctness and conservative resistance, and books by Christian Lander, Jim
Goad, Vox Day, and Malcolm Gladwell. Greg Johnson shows that White Nationalism
is not a rigid, right-wing orthodoxy by including searching and controversial
essays on drug legalization, race-mixing, homosexuality, "West Coast White
Nationalism," and counter-culture guru Alan Watts. He also argues that
White Nationalism will not triumph until white racial consciousness leaves its
right-wing ghetto and becomes the common sense of the whole political spectrum.
Greg Johnson is a master of defending radical and uncompromising views with
wit, clarity, seductive logic, and brutal frankness.
Praise for Confessions of a Reluctant Hater:
“Greg Johnson’s work is something rarely seen but badly
needed on the so-called New Right. His learning is both wide and deep, but
lightly worn. He is not afraid to challenge the orthodoxies of Left and Right.
He brings a sensitivity both West Coast and Traditional to the cultural
politics of today. The works collected here will, like his website, serve as a
foundation for any serious attempt to regain control over our destiny.”
—James J. O’Meara
“Greg Johnson is a rare writer, in that he can combine lucid
insights with humor and off-the-wall ideas, offering an analysis of
contemporary Western man, culture, and society that transcends disciplinary
barriers and highlights the subterranean processes that govern the grand
panorama of history. This may sound grandiose and esoteric, but the reader need
not fear having to push his way through a caliginous jungle of abstruse
terminology and turgid, sludge-like argumentation: Johnson’s simple and easy
prose makes reading about these weighty matters an effortless task, clearing
the decks for the reader to rethink the world.”
—Alex Kurtagic, author of Mister