Showing posts with label David Bowie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label David Bowie. Show all posts

AFFIRMATIVE RIGHT EDITOR COLIN LIDDELL PUBLISHES BRILLIANT NEW BOOK

NOTE: This dispassionately impartial review of Colin Liddell's first book was originally published at our sister site Trad News

In an astounding act of literary excellence, Colin Liddell, known to many as one of the founders of the Alt-Right, and now the leader of the Affirmative Right, has just published his first book.

Instead of being a load of tedious blackpill essays about how the Jews run everything or simpering visions of how perfect the future White ethnostate will be or a lot of try-hard philosophical jargon that the writer pretends to understand—as too many books in the Dissident Right unfortunately are—Liddell's subject matter is OBJECTIVELY INTERESTING and FRESH, featuring a lot of fun interviews with—and cynical obituaries about—a lot of people that everyone actually knows.

The book is literally star-studded, and shows Liddell's legendary writing and interviewing prowess at its best in head-to-heads with the likes of Johnny Rotten of the Sex Pistols, Iron Maiden front man Bruce Dickinson, and even the leader of the Japanese Communist Party. Filling the incisive obituary slots are key political and cultural figures, like Margaret Thatcher, David Bowie, and Nelson Mandela. In the last of these Liddell really takes off the gloves (my eyes needed an eye bath after that one!).

As he truthfully writes in the short and highly readable introduction:
There are already too many words in the world, so my sincere apologies for inflicting yet 40,000 more on the public.

My plea in this case is that many of the words contained here are those of famous people, while others are mine, but about famous people.

While not exactly an ideal excuse for contributing to "The Great Wordflation," as I have called it in one of my essays (not included here), this is at least, I hope, an inducement to read what is contained here, as the effortless act of reading is what is important here.
Priced very reasonably at $9.77 in the US and £6.81 in the UK for 128 quality pages, we highly recommend this book to our many readers. Also check out the astounding cover design. That, my friends, I assure you, will be a collectors item.

Because of their great rarity, Liddell's published works have extremely HIGH APPRECIATION VALUE. For example, the first issue of Radix Journal (2012), dominated by his seminal essay "The Anti-Civilisation of the West," originally sold for around $20. But now it has a book value of $795 :00 on Amazon!!!

So, not only is this book an aesthetically-designed fun read with hard-hitting intellectual content, but it is also a better investment than Bitcoin was a couple of years ago.

BOWIE: THE CULTURIST REVIEW



To make a culturist critique is to tie an event or person to larger cultural trends. David Bowie (1947-2016) symbolizes the West’s recent progressive cultural apex. After all, he led the charge into gender bending and then married a black Muslim woman. But, these acts stand in stark contrast to the West’s developing tsunami of masculine cultural protectionism.

Matthew Arnold (1822-1888) – the first person to be called a ‘culturist’ practicing ‘culturism,’ – asserted that the West cycled from expansionist, flexible, (progressive) ‘Hellenism’ to contracting, law-abiding, tough, ‘Hebraism.’ The Hellenic periods lack discipline, the Hebraic ones lack ‘sweetness and light.’ In his time, Arnold saw his England as being too Hebraic and France as too Hellenistic.

We in the Alt-Lite / Alt-Right fringe, foresee a coming reckoning that may involve considerable violence. Currently, the West is experiencing a Hellenic peak; soon we will adopt the Hebraic traits of hating foreign cultures, and again accept that successful cultures usually see violence as an honorable duty. Bowie’s death represents the death of the expansionist Hellenic period, and so the dawn of the Hebraic contraction.

PODCAST 51: THE YEAR OF THE FROG



Colin and Andy are joined by Alt-Right stalwarts Richard Wolstencroft and Alex Fontana to take a long look back at the "Current Year" that will soon be no more. Among many topics discussed are Bowie, Brexit, Trump, the Alt-Right, and the nature of Capitalism. Will Trump live up to the hopes placed in him, or will he disappoint? All this and more in the final Alt-Right podcast of 2016, a remarkable and revolutionary year. Onward and upwards to 2017!



PODCAST 40: THE LIFE AND DEATH OF DAVID BOWIE


Novelist Ann Sterzinger joins Andy and Colin to commemorate the life of David Bowie. Topics under discussion include his music, acting, proto-trolling activites, and relevance for the Alt-Right, as well as why his death has had such a big impact decades after his most creative period.



DAVID BOWIE: VISIONS OF SWASTIKAS



David Bowie, who recently died after an 18-month battle against cancer, will be remembered for many things. But one of the most interesting points about the man was the degree to which his creativity, especially at its height, coexisted with what came to be considered extremely taboo views, and the degree to which his talent tapered off as he became more acceptable in the eyes of the establishment.

We live in an age of oppressive political correctness, where almost anybody of prominence is forced to toe the line, lest they offend, "trigger," or commit "micro-aggressions"; and, if they do, they are required to humbly beg for forgiveness even where none is offered. Such intolerance even includes rock stars, the wild, shamanistic figures we reared up in the spiritual vacuum of the 1960s and 70s, through our appreciation of the Dionysian aspects of a fast-mutating musical culture.

But what about David Bowie and his obvious interest in Nazism and Fascism? Going by comments made in interviews, song lyrics, and stage imagery, the singer clearly had a crush on the 20th century's real counter culture. Why wasn't more made of this? Why was he let off the hook?

First the evidence of Bowie's fascism. Back in his 1970s heyday, he gleefully told reporters that "Hitler was the first pop star" and declared that "the best thing that can happen is for an extreme right government to come."

In his 1971 song Quicksand, he wrote:
I’m living in a silent film

portraying Himmler’s sacred realm of dream reality.
 Then there is his 1977 composition China Girl, which became a hit in 1983:
I stumble into town, just like a sacred cow

Visions of Swastikas in my head, plans for everyone.
But Bowie had gone even further than that. There are famous pictures of him waving and sieg heiling from an open-top black Mercedes of the kind that Hitler used.


Here's Hitler in a similar car (and with a better crowd response):


Definitely not a coincidence. Then there is the lightning flash mark, a symbol of fascism, that was used for Aladdin Sane, as well as the SS symbols he used onstage for the Ziggy Stardust tour:


Of course, Bowie was an eclectic style stealer and far from being an "actual Nazi." His general sexual and narcotic degeneracy would have precluded that. However, he was at least open to elements and aspects of Nazism and Fascism in a way that made sense for someone in his creative, cerebral, and iconoclastic niche.

His Nazism quotient was certainly high enough to provide endless ammunition for "Social Justice Warriors" and "antifa" with nothing better to do. It is surprising therefore that more was not made of Bowie's flirtations with fascism and his frequent one-night stands with Nazism. Throughout his long career, no public statement or press conference was forced from him, in which he begged for forgiveness for his "hurtful" and "insensitive" comments, lyrics, or actions.

Communism killed 100 million
and all I got was this lousy
Manic Street Preachers T-shirt.
But then again, in the 1970s and 80s countless bands, including the likes of  The Sex Pistols, Joy Division/ New Order, The Skids, and Spear of Destiny played with Nazi imagery. Even the Jewish musician Mick Jones, who later found fame with the Clash, started off in an outfit called London SS!

Toying with Nazi imagery was certainly no worse than toying with Communist imagery, and in my opinion a lot less offensive, as Nazism only killed large numbers of people under wartime conditions, whereas Communism did the same and much worse under peacetime conditions.

But, given the hysteria that surrounds such symbols as the swastika and Confederate flag today, and the totalitarian "zero tolerance" attitude of political correctness, it is still surprising that the PC bigots left Bowie and his legacy alone.

Why is this? Probably it was due to a combination of factors – his age, his Somalian wife (perhaps that's one reason he married her), and his past bisexuality and androgyny. All these factors made him a slightly awkward target for SJWs to attack, as did his powerful lawyers.

But there was also some clever PR management. In rock histories and biographies of the man – like the one I read most recently, Christopher Sandford's Bowie: Loving The Alien (a solid, "meat and potatoes" effort) – Bowie's fascistic dalliance is more-or-less explained away as an aspect of his drug-addled years, rather than anything significant. This, of course, is the kind of excuse an average member of the public would not be allowed if he or she tweeted or shared similar words or imagery on social media after a few drinks too many.

But has PC exacted a cost on Bowie?

Some will say that his talent declined simply because of age; while others will ascribe his creative decline to the same cause as his "fascism" – a brain burnt out on massive amounts of drugs. Both explanations are quite feasible. But I would entertain a third possibility, that for an iconoclastic soul like Bowie his creative downturn was related to the growing intolerance of our age and the unrealistic expectation that rock stars be "respectable" and line up their ideological ducks with the establishment.

This trend really started to get going in the 1980s, and it is perhaps the reason why that decade was also the last truly creative decade in the history of popular music. Bowie's dip in creativity almost perfectly matches the growing imposition of political correctness in the 1980s, with his 1983 album Let's Dance being his last potent record (with the possible exception of his just released final album). Alongside the fascistic China Girl, that album also included gestures towards political correctness, like the narrative touting the "oppression" of the Aborigines on the video for the album's title track.

What is a rock star if he cannot exist beyond the taboos that circumscribe the rest of us? Answer: a mere musician with an stupid hair cut. During the lifetime of David Bowie (1947–2016), visions of swastikas were incapable of ever bringing back the Third Reich, but they might have helped the occasional taboo-busting rock star find a seam of true creativity.

A version of this article was originally published at The Revenge of Riff Raff