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A Knight’s Path
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Aristocratic nationalism. Militarism. Fascism.

Cultural and psychological warfare
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"I am an aristocrat. I love liberty, I hate equality."

- John Randolph of Roanoke
Scout Snipers of the United States Marine Corps. Sangin, Afghanistan, September 2010.
Forwarded from Diary of an Underground Ronin
4th of June celebrations at Eton College, celebrating the birthday of King George III.
A cadet of the Eton College Combined Cadet Force in an armoured warfare exercise. Eton College has produced many military officers for the British Armed Forces throughout its history.

During the two World Wars, many Old Etonians filled the officer corps of the British Empire’s military forces. 1,157 Old Etonians were killed in combat in the First World War, and 749 were killed in combat in the Second World War. These men fought bravely and died honourably, and shall be remembered.
The Hotel Metropole, Brighton, East Sussex, England, British Empire. Early 20th century.
Bal Masqué by Charles Hermans. 1880.
“We do not merely study the past: we inherit it, and inheritance brings with it not only the rights of ownership, but the duties of trusteeship. Things fought for and died for should not be idly squandered. For they are the property of others, who are not yet born.”

- Sir Roger Scruton
"I am a strong wind in the face of inferior natures and I offer this advice to my enemies: be careful not to spit into the wind."

- Friedrich Nietzsche
The British Empire
Forwarded from Diary of an Underground Ronin
Australian Special Forces (Special Air Service Regiment). Afghanistan, 2012.
The Eton Wall Game, 1916.

“The Battle of Waterloo was won on the playing-fields of Eton”.
- George Orwell

“It is here that the Battle of Waterloo was won”.
- Lord Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington, while revisiting his alma mater, Eton College.
When you see a lion devouring an antelope, who do you identify with? Who do you sympathise with?

I notice a strong tendency in modern society for people to identify with the victim, the oppressed. This has been a disaster for British society and for British politics. Saying you are British used to be a proud boast of an imperial people, and being able to say you are an Englishman was an even prouder boast within the Empire. Nowadays, this pride has been reversed and subverted. Scots, Welsh, and Irish today often try to disassociate from their imperial past and emphasise their local identities, often acting offended when people call them English. “It’s the English who were the ones going around the world bullying people, not us”, they would say. “The English oppressed us too”, they would also say. They do not realise that building the largest empire to date is a glorious achievement that should be regarded with extreme pride.

What is ironic is that Scots were actually overrepresented in Imperial positions in the colonies, although Englishmen still filled the majority of Imperial positions. Welsh and Irish as well were fully participating in empire building and Imperial rule.

At the height of empire, being British was something people regarded with great pride, and being English was the crème de la crème.

But now people often want to be the victim rather than the victor, the oppressed rather than the conqueror. What a shame.

Even among the English, there is this tendency to identify with the victim. Many English nationalists today would rather identify with the conquered Saxons rather than the conquering Normans, even though the overwhelming majority, likely all, of English people have Norman blood. Likewise, there is a tendency among the middle and lower classes to emphasise their ordinary backgrounds, foolishly thinking that being ordinary is something to be proud of. It is not.

Being extraordinary is something to be proud of! Being a victor is something to be proud of! Being a conqueror is something to be proud of!

Don’t identify with the antelope. Identify with the lion!