periodic reset of civilizations

"Conflating Christianity with Catholicism; two things diametrically-opposed.
It's to be expected from an ignorant simpleton intent on hating Christ. Willful ignorance, at its best."

Me:
Typical tribal mentality, clinging to a chthonic cult of abandonment. Christianity is inherently degenerate; the only remnant of value in Catholicism is its preservation of rites (though devoid of true understanding). Beyond that, Christianity offers nothing valuable—only the production of ghouls, destined for reintegration into the Earth’s primordial forces, their true origin.

Metaphysical part:

Title: The Subversion of Rome: Christianity’s Dissolutive Role in the Western Tradition
Tags: #Rome #Christianity #Decadence #SpiritualSubversion #ImperialDecline #MetaphysicalWar #AntiTradition #KaliYuga #Evola #Traditionalism

1. Decline of Roman Virtus – Christianity accelerated the erosion of Roman virtus, replacing the heroic and patrician ethos with a morality of humility, sin, and passive salvation.
2. Asiatic and Semitic Influences – The religion emerged from Judaic messianism and Eastern cults, importing a spirituality of suffering, egalitarianism, and divine abasement alien to the Roman-Indo-European spirit.
3. Rejection of Imperial Sacrality – Christians refused the sacrum of the Empire, denying the fides owed to Caesar and undermining the unity of spiritual and temporal authority (regnum et sacerdotium).
4. Dualism and Deconsecration – Christian supernaturalism severed nature from the divine, demonizing the ancient cosmic religion and fostering an asceticism hostile to life and hierarchy.
5. Anti-Heroic Pathos – Early Christianity stigmatized the active, warrior-aristocratic ideal, replacing it with a slave morality of redemption through suffering and grace.
6. Egalitarian Subversion – The doctrine of universal brotherhood negated the Roman principle of organic hierarchy, laying the groundwork for later democratic and collectivist degenerations.
7. The Feminine Devolution – The cult of the "Mother of God" revived chthonic, telluric religiosity, contrasting with the Olympian, masculine spirituality of Rome’s origins.
8. Imperial Degeneration – Even as the Caesars upheld solar and liturgical symbolism, their power waned amid Christian infiltration, which corroded the last remnants of traditional legitimacy.
9. The Ass as Symbol – The ass, an infernal emblem in multiple traditions, accompanied Christ’s mythos, signaling Christianity’s role as a dissolutive force in the Roman cosmos.
10. The Kali Yuga Acceleration – Christianity epitomized the Dark Age’s inversion, exalting the lowest human type (the sinner, the outcast) and dismantling the last structures of the ancient sacred order.
Conclusion: Rome fell not merely from external pressures but from an internal spiritual betrayal—Christianity severed the West from its transcendent roots, setting the stage for centuries of decline. Only a return to the Imperium of the Spirit can reverse this dissolution.

The rise of Christianity signaled the onset of irreversible decline. Rome, once a sacred and virile civilization rooted in ius, fas, and mos, had severed itself from its primordial Atlantic and Etruscan-Pelasgian origins, crushing the remnants of Southern decadence and resisting foreign cults. Yet, despite its earlier resistance, Rome succumbed to the Asiatic tide—mystical, pantheistic, and effeminate cults that eroded its inner virtus and corrupted its imperial essence.

The Caesars, rather than reviving the Roman spirit through hierarchy and selection, imposed a sterile centralization, dissolving distinctions of rank and citizenship. The Senate’s decline mirrored the empire’s disintegration, as the imperial idea—though still sacred in form—became a hollow symbol, carried by unworthy hands. Even those with traces of ancient Roman dignity, like Julian, could not reverse the decay.

The imperial age was marked by contradiction: while its theology of kingship grew more refined—evoking solar symbolism, divine laws, and liturgical consecration—the reality was one of chaos. The Caesars were hailed as bringers of a new Golden Age, their adventus likened to a mystical epiphany, their rule tied to cosmic signs. Yet this sacred façade could not mask the empire’s inner collapse—a descent into leveling, cosmopolitanism, and spiritual ruin.

This was but a fleeting light in an era dominated by dark forces—passions, violence, and betrayals spreading like a plague. Over time, the situation grew ever more chaotic and bloody, despite occasional strong leaders who imposed order on a crumbling world. Eventually, the imperial function became merely symbolic; Rome clung to it desperately amid relentless upheavals. Yet, in truth, the throne stood empty. Christianity only deepened this disintegration.

While primitive Christianity contained diverse elements, we must not overlook their fundamental opposition to the Roman spirit. My focus is not on isolated traditional fragments within historical civilizations, but on the overall function and direction of these currents. Thus, even if traces of tradition persist in Christianity—particularly Catholicism—they do not negate its essentially subversive nature.

We recognize the ambiguous spirituality of Judaism, from which Christianity emerged, as well as the decadent Asiatic cults that aided its spread beyond its origins.

Christianity’s immediate precursor was not traditional Judaism but rather prophetic currents dominated by notions of sin and expiation—a desperate spirituality that replaced the warrior Messiah (an emanation of the "Lord of Hosts") with the suffering "Son of Man," a sacrificial figure destined to become the hope of the afflicted and the object of an ecstatic cult. The mystical figure of Christ drew power from this messianic pathos, amplified by apocalyptic expectations. By proclaiming Jesus as Savior and rejecting the "Law" (Jewish orthodoxy), early Christianity embraced themes intrinsic to the Semitic soul—themes of division and decline, antithetical to true tradition, particularly the Roman one. Pauline theology universalized these elements, severing them from their origins.

Orphism, meanwhile, facilitated Christianity’s spread not as an initiatory doctrine but as a profanation akin to Mediterranean decadence—centered on "salvation" in a demotic, universalist sense, detached from race, caste, and tradition. This appealed to the rootless masses, culminating in Christianity’s crystallization as an antitraditional force.

Doctrinally, Christianity is a degenerate Dionysianism, appealing to irrationality rather than heroic or sapiential ascent. It substitutes faith for initiation, feeding on the anguish of a fractured humanity. Its eschatological terror—eternal salvation or damnation—deepened this crisis, offering only the illusory liberation of the crucified Christ. Though bearing traces of mystery symbolism, Christianity debased it into sentimental mysticism, reducing the divine to human suffering.

Unlike the Roman and Indo-European spirit, which upheld divine impassibility and heroic distance, Christianity embraced a pathetic soteriology—the dying god of Pelasgic-Dionysian cults, now absolutized ("I am the way..."). The virginal birth and Marian cult further reflect the Great Mother’s influence, antithetical to Olympian virility. The Church itself adopted the Mother archetype, fostering a piety of abjection—prayerful, sin-conscious, and passive.

Early Christianity’s hostility toward virile spirituality—denouncing heroic transcendence as pride—confirms its emasculated nature. Even its martyrs, though fanatical, could not redeem Christianity’s essence: a lunar, priestly decline.

Christian morality reveals clear Southern and non-Aryan influences. Whether equality and love were proclaimed in the name of a god or a goddess matters little—this belief in human equality stems from a worldview antithetical to the heroic ideal of personality. Such egalitarianism, rooted in brotherhood and communal love, became the mystical foundation of a social order opposed to the pure Roman spirit. Instead of hierarchical universality—which affirms differentiation—Christianity promoted collectivity through the symbol of Christ’s mystical body, an involutive regression that even Romanized Catholicism could not fully overcome.

Some credit Christianity for its supernatural dualism, yet this derives from Semitic thought, functioning in direct opposition to traditional dualism. Traditional doctrine saw the two natures as a basis for higher realization, whereas Christian dualism rigidly opposes natural and supernatural orders without subordination to a higher principle. This absolutized division negated active spiritual participation, reducing man to a mere "creature" severed from God by original sin—a Jewish-derived concept that deepened the divide.

Christian spirituality thus framed divine influence passively—as grace, election, or salvation—while rejecting heroic human potential. Humility, fear of God, and mortification replaced active transcendence. Though fleeting references to spiritual violence (Matthew 11:12) or divine potential (John 10:34) exist, they had no real impact. Christianity universalized the path of the inferior human type, reflecting the decline of the Kali Yuga.

The discussion concerns man’s relationship with the divine. A second consequence of Christian dualism was the desacralization of nature. Christian "supernaturalism" led to the definitive misunderstanding of the natural myths of antiquity. Nature was stripped of its living essence; the magical and symbolic perception that underpinned the priestly sciences was rejected and condemned as "pagan." After Christianity’s triumph, these sciences rapidly degenerated, leaving only a weakened remnant in later Catholic ritual traditions. Nature thus came to be seen as foreign, even demonic. This shift also laid the groundwork for a world-denying, life-rejecting asceticism (Christian asceticism), entirely opposed to the classical Roman spirit.

The third consequence unfolded in the political sphere. The declarations "My kingdom is not of this world" (John 18:36) and "Render unto Caesar what is Caesar’s, and unto God what is God’s" (Matt. 22:21) struck directly at the traditional concept of sovereignty and the unity of spiritual and temporal power, which Imperial Rome had formally restored. According to Gelasius I, no man after Christ could be both king and priest; any claim to unite sacerdotium and regnum was deemed a diabolical counterfeit of Christ’s unique priestly kingship. Here, the clash between Christian and Roman ideals erupted openly.

The Roman pantheon, ever inclusive, could have accommodated the Christian cult as merely another sect emerging from Jewish schism. Imperial universalism sought to unify and order all cults without suppressing them, demanding only a supreme fides—a ritual acknowledgment of the transcendent principle embodied in the Augustus. The Christians refused this act, rejecting the sacrificial offering before the imperial symbol as incompatible with their faith. This obstinacy, incomprehensible to Roman magistrates, fueled the martyrdom epidemic.

Thus, a new universalism, rooted in metaphysical dualism, displaced the old. The traditional hierarchical view—where loyalty carried supernatural sanction, since all power descended from above—was undermined. In this fallen world, only the civitas diaboli remained possible; the civitas Dei was relegated to an otherworldly plane, a gathering of those who, yearning confusedly for the beyond, awaited Christ’s return. Where this idea did not breed defeatism and subversion, where Caesar still received "what was Caesar’s," fides was reduced to secularized, contingent obedience to mere temporal power. Paul’s dictum—"all authority comes from God"—proved hollow, stripped of real force.

Thus, while Christianity upheld a spiritual and supernatural principle, historically it acted in a dissociative and destructive manner. Rather than revitalizing the materialized and fragmented remnants of the Roman world, it introduced a foreign current, aligning with what in Rome had ceased to be Roman—forces that the Northern Light had once held in check throughout an entire cycle. Christianity severed the last remaining connections and hastened the demise of a great tradition. Rutilius Namatianus rightly equated Christians with Jews, as both were hostile to Rome’s authority. He accused the former of spreading a pestilence (excisae pestis contagia) beyond Judea, and the latter of corrupting both race and spirit (tunc mutabantur corpora, nunc animi).

The symbolism of the ass in the Christian myth is revealing. Present at Christ’s birth, the flight to Egypt, and his entry into Jerusalem, the ass traditionally represents an infernal, dissolutive force. In Egypt, it was sacred to Set, the antisolar deity of rebellion. In India, it was the mount of Mudevi, the infernal feminine. In Greece, it was tied to Hecate and the chthonic realm, consuming Ocnus’s work in Lethe. This symbol marks the hidden force behind primitive Christianity’s success—a force that rises where the "cosmos" principle wavers.

Christianity’s triumph was only possible because the Roman heroic cycle had been exhausted: the "Roman race" broken in spirit (evidenced by Julian’s failed restoration), traditions faded, and the imperial symbol degraded amidst ethnic chaos and cosmopolitan decay.

periodic reset of civilizations

Title: The Subversion of Rome: Christianity’s Dissolutive Role in the Western Tradition
Tags: #Rome #Christianity #Decadence #SpiritualSubversion #ImperialDecline #MetaphysicalWar #AntiTradition #KaliYuga #Evola #Traditionalism

1. Decline of Roman Virtus – Christianity accelerated the erosion of Roman virtus, replacing the heroic and patrician ethos with a morality of humility, sin, and passive salvation.
2. Asiatic and Semitic Influences – The religion emerged from Judaic messianism and Eastern cults, importing a spirituality of suffering, egalitarianism, and divine abasement alien to the Roman-Indo-European spirit.
3. Rejection of Imperial Sacrality – Christians refused the sacrum of the Empire, denying the fides owed to Caesar and undermining the unity of spiritual and temporal authority (regnum et sacerdotium).
4. Dualism and Deconsecration – Christian supernaturalism severed nature from the divine, demonizing the ancient cosmic religion and fostering an asceticism hostile to life and hierarchy.
5. Anti-Heroic Pathos – Early Christianity stigmatized the active, warrior-aristocratic ideal, replacing it with a slave morality of redemption through suffering and grace.
6. Egalitarian Subversion – The doctrine of universal brotherhood negated the Roman principle of organic hierarchy, laying the groundwork for later democratic and collectivist degenerations.
7. The Feminine Devolution – The cult of the "Mother of God" revived chthonic, telluric religiosity, contrasting with the Olympian, masculine spirituality of Rome’s origins.
8. Imperial Degeneration – Even as the Caesars upheld solar and liturgical symbolism, their power waned amid Christian infiltration, which corroded the last remnants of traditional legitimacy.
9. The Ass as Symbol – The ass, an infernal emblem in multiple traditions, accompanied Christ’s mythos, signaling Christianity’s role as a dissolutive force in the Roman cosmos.
10. The Kali Yuga Acceleration – Christianity epitomized the Dark Age’s inversion, exalting the lowest human type (the sinner, the outcast) and dismantling the last structures of the ancient sacred order.
Conclusion: Rome fell not merely from external pressures but from an internal spiritual betrayal—Christianity severed the West from its transcendent roots, setting the stage for centuries of decline. Only a return to the Imperium of the Spirit can reverse this dissolution.

The rise of Christianity signaled the onset of irreversible decline. Rome, once a sacred and virile civilization rooted in ius, fas, and mos, had severed itself from its primordial Atlantic and Etruscan-Pelasgian origins, crushing the remnants of Southern decadence and resisting foreign cults. Yet, despite its earlier resistance, Rome succumbed to the Asiatic tide—mystical, pantheistic, and effeminate cults that eroded its inner virtus and corrupted its imperial essence.

The Caesars, rather than reviving the Roman spirit through hierarchy and selection, imposed a sterile centralization, dissolving distinctions of rank and citizenship. The Senate’s decline mirrored the empire’s disintegration, as the imperial idea—though still sacred in form—became a hollow symbol, carried by unworthy hands. Even those with traces of ancient Roman dignity, like Julian, could not reverse the decay.

The imperial age was marked by contradiction: while its theology of kingship grew more refined—evoking solar symbolism, divine laws, and liturgical consecration—the reality was one of chaos. The Caesars were hailed as bringers of a new Golden Age, their adventus likened to a mystical epiphany, their rule tied to cosmic signs. Yet this sacred façade could not mask the empire’s inner collapse—a descent into leveling, cosmopolitanism, and spiritual ruin.

This was but a fleeting light in an era dominated by dark forces—passions, violence, and betrayals spreading like a plague. Over time, the situation grew ever more chaotic and bloody, despite occasional strong leaders who imposed order on a crumbling world. Eventually, the imperial function became merely symbolic; Rome clung to it desperately amid relentless upheavals. Yet, in truth, the throne stood empty. Christianity only deepened this disintegration.

While primitive Christianity contained diverse elements, we must not overlook their fundamental opposition to the Roman spirit. My focus is not on isolated traditional fragments within historical civilizations, but on the overall function and direction of these currents. Thus, even if traces of tradition persist in Christianity—particularly Catholicism—they do not negate its essentially subversive nature.

We recognize the ambiguous spirituality of Judaism, from which Christianity emerged, as well as the decadent Asiatic cults that aided its spread beyond its origins.

Christianity’s immediate precursor was not traditional Judaism but rather prophetic currents dominated by notions of sin and expiation—a desperate spirituality that replaced the warrior Messiah (an emanation of the "Lord of Hosts") with the suffering "Son of Man," a sacrificial figure destined to become the hope of the afflicted and the object of an ecstatic cult. The mystical figure of Christ drew power from this messianic pathos, amplified by apocalyptic expectations. By proclaiming Jesus as Savior and rejecting the "Law" (Jewish orthodoxy), early Christianity embraced themes intrinsic to the Semitic soul—themes of division and decline, antithetical to true tradition, particularly the Roman one. Pauline theology universalized these elements, severing them from their origins.

Orphism, meanwhile, facilitated Christianity’s spread not as an initiatory doctrine but as a profanation akin to Mediterranean decadence—centered on "salvation" in a demotic, universalist sense, detached from race, caste, and tradition. This appealed to the rootless masses, culminating in Christianity’s crystallization as an antitraditional force.

Doctrinally, Christianity is a degenerate Dionysianism, appealing to irrationality rather than heroic or sapiential ascent. It substitutes faith for initiation, feeding on the anguish of a fractured humanity. Its eschatological terror—eternal salvation or damnation—deepened this crisis, offering only the illusory liberation of the crucified Christ. Though bearing traces of mystery symbolism, Christianity debased it into sentimental mysticism, reducing the divine to human suffering.

Unlike the Roman and Indo-European spirit, which upheld divine impassibility and heroic distance, Christianity embraced a pathetic soteriology—the dying god of Pelasgic-Dionysian cults, now absolutized ("I am the way..."). The virginal birth and Marian cult further reflect the Great Mother’s influence, antithetical to Olympian virility. The Church itself adopted the Mother archetype, fostering a piety of abjection—prayerful, sin-conscious, and passive.

Early Christianity’s hostility toward virile spirituality—denouncing heroic transcendence as pride—confirms its emasculated nature. Even its martyrs, though fanatical, could not redeem Christianity’s essence: a lunar, priestly decline.

Christian morality reveals clear Southern and non-Aryan influences. Whether equality and love were proclaimed in the name of a god or a goddess matters little—this belief in human equality stems from a worldview antithetical to the heroic ideal of personality. Such egalitarianism, rooted in brotherhood and communal love, became the mystical foundation of a social order opposed to the pure Roman spirit. Instead of hierarchical universality—which affirms differentiation—Christianity promoted collectivity through the symbol of Christ’s mystical body, an involutive regression that even Romanized Catholicism could not fully overcome.

Some credit Christianity for its supernatural dualism, yet this derives from Semitic thought, functioning in direct opposition to traditional dualism. Traditional doctrine saw the two natures as a basis for higher realization, whereas Christian dualism rigidly opposes natural and supernatural orders without subordination to a higher principle. This absolutized division negated active spiritual participation, reducing man to a mere "creature" severed from God by original sin—a Jewish-derived concept that deepened the divide.

Christian spirituality thus framed divine influence passively—as grace, election, or salvation—while rejecting heroic human potential. Humility, fear of God, and mortification replaced active transcendence. Though fleeting references to spiritual violence (Matthew 11:12) or divine potential (John 10:34) exist, they had no real impact. Christianity universalized the path of the inferior human type, reflecting the decline of the Kali Yuga.

The discussion concerns man’s relationship with the divine. A second consequence of Christian dualism was the desacralization of nature. Christian "supernaturalism" led to the definitive misunderstanding of the natural myths of antiquity. Nature was stripped of its living essence; the magical and symbolic perception that underpinned the priestly sciences was rejected and condemned as "pagan." After Christianity’s triumph, these sciences rapidly degenerated, leaving only a weakened remnant in later Catholic ritual traditions. Nature thus came to be seen as foreign, even demonic. This shift also laid the groundwork for a world-denying, life-rejecting asceticism (Christian asceticism), entirely opposed to the classical Roman spirit.

The third consequence unfolded in the political sphere. The declarations "My kingdom is not of this world" (John 18:36) and "Render unto Caesar what is Caesar’s, and unto God what is God’s" (Matt. 22:21) struck directly at the traditional concept of sovereignty and the unity of spiritual and temporal power, which Imperial Rome had formally restored. According to Gelasius I, no man after Christ could be both king and priest; any claim to unite sacerdotium and regnum was deemed a diabolical counterfeit of Christ’s unique priestly kingship. Here, the clash between Christian and Roman ideals erupted openly.

The Roman pantheon, ever inclusive, could have accommodated the Christian cult as merely another sect emerging from Jewish schism. Imperial universalism sought to unify and order all cults without suppressing them, demanding only a supreme fides—a ritual acknowledgment of the transcendent principle embodied in the Augustus. The Christians refused this act, rejecting the sacrificial offering before the imperial symbol as incompatible with their faith. This obstinacy, incomprehensible to Roman magistrates, fueled the martyrdom epidemic.

Thus, a new universalism, rooted in metaphysical dualism, displaced the old. The traditional hierarchical view—where loyalty carried supernatural sanction, since all power descended from above—was undermined. In this fallen world, only the civitas diaboli remained possible; the civitas Dei was relegated to an otherworldly plane, a gathering of those who, yearning confusedly for the beyond, awaited Christ’s return. Where this idea did not breed defeatism and subversion, where Caesar still received "what was Caesar’s," fides was reduced to secularized, contingent obedience to mere temporal power. Paul’s dictum—"all authority comes from God"—proved hollow, stripped of real force.

Thus, while Christianity upheld a spiritual and supernatural principle, historically it acted in a dissociative and destructive manner. Rather than revitalizing the materialized and fragmented remnants of the Roman world, it introduced a foreign current, aligning with what in Rome had ceased to be Roman—forces that the Northern Light had once held in check throughout an entire cycle. Christianity severed the last remaining connections and hastened the demise of a great tradition. Rutilius Namatianus rightly equated Christians with Jews, as both were hostile to Rome’s authority. He accused the former of spreading a pestilence (excisae pestis contagia) beyond Judea, and the latter of corrupting both race and spirit (tunc mutabantur corpora, nunc animi).

The symbolism of the ass in the Christian myth is revealing. Present at Christ’s birth, the flight to Egypt, and his entry into Jerusalem, the ass traditionally represents an infernal, dissolutive force. In Egypt, it was sacred to Set, the antisolar deity of rebellion. In India, it was the mount of Mudevi, the infernal feminine. In Greece, it was tied to Hecate and the chthonic realm, consuming Ocnus’s work in Lethe. This symbol marks the hidden force behind primitive Christianity’s success—a force that rises where the "cosmos" principle wavers.

Christianity’s triumph was only possible because the Roman heroic cycle had been exhausted: the "Roman race" broken in spirit (evidenced by Julian’s failed restoration), traditions faded, and the imperial symbol degraded amidst ethnic chaos and cosmopolitan decay.

periodic reset of civilizations

America is a Mall

"Don’t make me laugh. We’re not one people. That’s just a myth Thomas Jefferson came up with. Jefferson’s treated like some American saint because he wrote those words, “All men are created equal.” But let’s be real—he didn’t even believe that himself. How could he, when he enslaved his own children? He was just a wealthy wine snob who got tired of paying taxes to the British. So yeah, he wrote some pretty words, stirred up the masses, and sent them off to die for those ideals while he sat back, sipped his wine, and exploited his enslaved women.

And now this guy wants to tell me we’re living in some kind of community? Give me a break. I’m living in America, and in America, you’re on your own. This isn’t a country—it’s a business."

Metaphysical part:

America is Not a nation.

America was never a true nation in the traditional, organic sense—it was born from the revolt of mercantile interests against a weakening European order. Jefferson’s "equality" is a liberal myth, a subversive fiction that masks the natural hierarchies of men. His hypocrisy only proves the degeneracy of Enlightenment ideals: a slave-owner preaching universalism while upholding his own privilege.

Modern America is the triumph of the mercantile spirit—a soulless, deracinated machine where all higher values are reduced to transactions. There is no Volk, no sacred order—only the tyranny of economics and the illusion of individualism. The masses are exploited not by kings or warriors, but by bankers and demagogues who manipulate them with hollow slogans.

This is not a civilization—it is a usurer’s paradise, a final stage of Kali Yuga where all that remains is the worship of gold.

Title: America: The Triumph of Mercantile Degeneracy
Tags: #Traditionalism #AntiLiberalism #KaliYuga #Hierarchy #AntiModern

1. Anti-Nation: America was never an organic nation—it was a revolt of mercantile interests against the European order, lacking true spiritual or racial unity.
2. Jefferson’s Lie: The myth of "equality" is a liberal deception, masking the natural hierarchies that Enlightenment hypocrisy could never erase.
3. Enlightenment Degeneracy: The ideals of 1776 were born from bourgeois resentment, not sacred order—replacing kings with bankers and demagogues.
4. Mercantile Tyranny: America is a business, not a civilization—its soul is commerce, its god is profit, and its people are deracinated consumers.
5. False Individualism: The illusion of "freedom" disguises servitude to economic forces, eroding all higher values and traditions.
6. No Volk, No Order: Without a rooted people or sacred hierarchy, America is a machine of exploitation, where the weak rule the strong through finance and propaganda.
7. Kali Yuga Manifest: The usurer’s paradise—gold as god, men as cattle, and the final descent into materialist decay.
8. Anti-Hierarchy: The liberal myth of equality inverts the natural order, elevating the inferior while crushing aristocratic and spiritual elites.
9. Masses as Tools: The "people" are a manipulated herd, mobilized by slogans to die for illusions while the real powers profit.
10. No Return: America’s fate is sealed—it is the terminal stage of modernity, a warning to those who betray Tradition.

periodic reset of civilizations

America was never a nation—just a mercantile revolt against Europe. Jefferson’s 'equality' is liberal poison, masking true hierarchy. Now it’s a usurer’s hell, Kali Yuga’s endgame where gold is god. #Evola #Reaction #Hierarchy #KaliYuga

Charles Synyard
Finished my read of The Lightning and the Sun, by Savitri Devi. Three different life and times biographies—Genghis Khan, Akhnaton (Akhenaten), and Adolf Hitler—framed by Savitri’s (don’t call her Devi! https://www.savitridevi.org/mrs_devi.html) Hindu-inflected National Socialism.
The contents and tone vary widely across sections of this ”cult classic” text, which has influenced many major figures in the, ahem decidedly marginal, postwar NatSoc scene. After a first chapter of denunciations of the modern world, she gives a life of Genghis Khan, “the lightning”, the archetypal “man in time”. Savitri can be funny—throughout, she goes on and on about the poor innocent animals, and also about kindness in a Nietzschean fashion, but then she writes with the most palpable awe and wonder as Khan slaughters millions upon millions, and for no reason other than securing a brilliant future for his descendants, the “Golden Family” simply because they’re his own.
Then follows a section upon Akhnaton (originally Amenhotep IV), Pharaoh of Egypt, “the sun”, the archetypal “man above time”. Interpreted by Savitri as a deeply spiritual man trying to set up an ideal state without the Dark Age means of violence, and whose religious conceptions are precursors to modern scientific ideas, he manages to alienate almost all the country’s elites, get fooled by insincere followers, and lose several provinces by refusing to go to war.
I’d never read about Genghis Khan or Akhnaton before, so I found both lives highly informative. For all his violence, I certainly sympathized with the Mongol conqueror more than that very “head in the sand” Pharaoh whose pacifism led to the deaths of some of his most loyal governors; despite his lack of idealism, Genghis Khan’s empire was for some time a well policed, lawful, orderly place to live.
Savitri’s views on Adolf Hitler and National Socialism—“the Hitler faith”—are naturally the main draw. Hitler, “both lightning and sun” (actually, a little too much sun, she concludes), is the “man against time”, an avatar of Vishnu who proved to be “the one before the last”: the penultimate man against time, after whom a less merciful incarnation will finish the work, completely annihilating the forces of darkness, and bring about a new Golden Age. The retelling of Hitler’s life and mission is passionate and moving.
For Savitri, the Dark Age is characterized by a “man centered” worldview, and this is where the criticism of Christianity that often appears in racialist writing enters in. While she does say some good things about Jesus and Christianity as an individual faith, she constantly attacks its belief in human dignity, to which she opposes the belief in humans as just one more animal, and the respect for the animals she saw in National Socialism. As someone who does affirm human dignity (but not human rights) and rejects animal rights out of hand, her whining about the innocent beasts gets tiring.
But, one must hand it to her, she is completely unrepentant about any consequences of her worldview. I have to draw a line in the “sand”, and distance myself from this bracing passage, where she spurns humanitarian critiques of the SS ethic. As I said before, she thought Hitler had too much “sun”, not enough “lightning”—held back too much from violence(!), and also devotes some pages to praise of Heinrich Himmler. Savitri, though, makes the good point that historically, most or all great conquerors similarly sacrificed the weak for the strong; the difference is, unlike the “Nazis”, they weren’t honest about it.
My thoughts? The SS was a good idea: why not forge a racial elite to be the core of the nation? But I think there’s also room for compassion for the sick, the more physically ugly; I think they would benefit just by having more of the best-bred around, both for their superior ability to perform key tasks and just by raising standards of beauty.
In any case, Savitri Devi lived a most storied personal life, with Master’s degrees in chemistry, a Doctorate in Philosophy, and a c.v. that includes propaganda and espionage for Japan in India in World War II, and spreading NatSoc propaganda in postwar Germany, for which she was imprisoned. She was certainly brave, and I admire her life in service to an ideology that nearly toppled both liberal democracy and Marxism, and whose adherents remain a longstanding part of the alliance working to bring about those systems’ final demise.
The Lightning and the Sun, in addition to the lovely 2015 issue by Counter-Currents, is available online here.
http://www.savitridevi.org/lightning-contents.html
Photo: Christian Savitri Devi! From 1925. Would have liked if she had kept her childhood faith. #SavitriDevi #TheLightningAndTheSun #Hinduism #Hindu #GenghisKhan #Akhenaten #Akhnaton #AdolfHitler #Hitler #NationalSocialism #NatSoc #Aryan #KaliYuga #race #animalrights #philosophy #religion #history #books
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Charles Synyard
2/2 Bought after wanting for a long time. The Lightning and the Sun, by Savitri Devi. This is the complete, hardcover edition released by Counter-Currents @Counter-Currents https://counter-currents.com/2020/06/the-lightning-and-the-sun/ Got this one on eBay; a couple are still available from the seller. When I purchased said “3 available, 7 sold”, so neat they thought it worth stockpiling. https://www.ebay.com/itm/The-Lightning-and-the-Sun-by-Savitri-Devi-English-Hardcover-Book-Free-Shipping/391770751516
Have not read any of Devi before, but given her repute and fan base I’m sure I’ll devour the tome. Should I expect something like Evola meets Alfred Rosenberg? #SavitriDevi #TheLightningAndTheSun #CounterCurrents #AdolfHitler #Hitler #NationalSocialism #NationalSocialist #NatSoc #Traditionalism #Hinduism #Hindu #KaliYuga #avatar #religion #mysticism #philosophy #literature #books
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𝕰𝖈𝖔𝖋𝖆𝖘𝖈𝖎𝖘𝖙

the jews destroyed the roman empire by corrupting the people and opening the borders to barbarians. sound familiar?

history is always repeating itself. as western civilization dies, rejoice in the death of corrupt elites, western liberalism, and everything evil and corrupt that it has brought. #kaliyuga