
Matt Parrott gives a brief recap on what’s been going on in Indiana during the break from airing the weekly show then shares an essay he’s recently written, entitled “Cat Lady Logic“. After the break, he interviews Dr. Greg Johnson, the editor of Counter-Currents Publishing, discussing his latest projects and articles from his book, Confessions of a Reluctant Hater.
For a limited time, Lighthouse Literature is offering a special discount of 5% to Radio Free Indiana’s fans who buy the book with the coupon code RFI. Three free excerpts from the book are also available at the site, including the ones discussed in tonight’s podcast.
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Great interview and discussion. The ‘Cat Lady Logic” piece serves a very grand purpose of empowering activists with just the right ways of putting things to gain a perspective that will in turn be used by others to educate and more clearly articulate the real problems before us . Thanks for all you do Matt!
I very much appreciated listening to this interview with Greg Johnson, and I hope that he does many, many more. I was especially glad to hear him take such a hard stance on Libertarianism, and the likes of Ron Paul.
It bewilders me that so many of us who are apparently concerned with national integrity and the preservation of our European heritage consciously and unconciously support and advance the poison of the likes of Milton Friedman, Ayn Rand, Thomas Friedman, David Brooks, Mark Levin, etc. It is especially disconcerting when the evidence is overwhelming that what they recommend (for the whole world, no less) has been a harmful and disastrous failure, and that it is a Trojan Horse designed by those who care only for their own bulging pockets.
For a number of decades, the countries with the most stable economies, highest wages, and the best educated, most socially mobile, healthiest and happiest populations have been places that are often dismissed as being “socialist.” These countries include Iceland, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, The Netherlands, Finland and Switzerland. The problems those countries are dealing with today come from these two things, for the most part: Non-European immigration, and a wider acceptance of the prescripts of the likes of Thomas Friedman.
It is one of my biggest wishes that the Globalism-pushers stop trying to wreck such countries, and that we wise-up and recognize Libertarianism for what it is.
Good interview. I understand Greg’s point about not getting too enthused over Ron Paul’s candidacy, but it and the Tea Party do merit interest, since they’re major currents defining much of contemporary middle-class White politics. I think some WN 2.0 is demonstrating that it’s possible to fish in those waters without getting swept up.
Regarding Paul’s effect on the body politic, Justin Raimondo has a new article mapping the pretty amazing grass-roots “isolationist” trend within the Republican party.
Very interesting interview. Good to see so many people are writing and talking about White issues today. It was mentioned that the system inside the US might crash at some point, and having heard this idea discussed before, I think we have to consider the possibility that there won’t be any major dramatic crash in the next 10 or 20 years.
It seems like the most likely scenario is a stagnation perhaps with rolling recessions, like Japan has experienced. Now it may get worse here (due to our diversity and other problems) but I can’t see the whole thing totally crashing. However, that may be a good thing, since it would allow us the time to develop our ideas and networks in the meantime.