>>2472826>EvolaI've only read a handful of his books, but I thought Myth of the Blood quite clearly states that he thinks ancestry matters, just that it is not the end all be all. I would tend to agree, as overlapping bell curves neatly illustrate. I think that since he is a Med, who are a more visually mixed bunch and whose populations have included Afro-Asiatic as well as Germanic components for thousands of years, it is also harder for him to make the hard determinations based directly on descending from a single group of visually similar people. So far, his works that I've read seem to circle closer and closer to something meaningful, but not quite get there yet, like a sneeze slowly building up. We'll see - you may be right.
>ColonialsHard agree.
>Other authorsMy wife, being a recovering feminist, tends to read books written by women, and has been battling with Savitri Devi. As a result, I've read a few passages here and there, and look forward to properly reading her 'tism. I'll be sure to check that the rest are also on my list. I spend most of my free time /in/doors drawing (you might enjoy the latest post in the shovelthread) rather than reading, to my great shame when talking to better read people like yourself.
>TravelYeah, we seem to agree here too. I've seen both Americas, Europe, Anatolia, North Africa (only from across the sea, but I consider my time in Iberia to be a good indicator of life over there) and hell, even Greenland and Iceland, and while living outside Europe (and even thriving there, as Marcus Aurelius would insist) is definitely possible, my grandchildren's grandchildren would not recognize me. Since I believe in reincarnation into the kin, I am very keen on continuing a lineage that retains a sense of self. I do think that the southern hemisphere's comparable parallels and climates might work just fine, like southern Argentina and New Zealand, but that is just theoretical - I've never been.