Entries by Kevin MacDonald

IQ Matters: Low-IQ Troops in the Vietnam War Paperback (2015)

McNamara’s Folly: The Use of Low-IQ Troops in the Vietnam War Hamilton Gregory  Infinity Publishing, 2015 In 1966, President Lyndon Johnson and Defense Secretary Robert McNamara were desperate to find additional troops for the Vietnam War, but they feared that they would alienate middle-class voters if they drafted college boys or sent Reservists and National […]

Dugin: Russia’s Liberal Saboteurs

Russia has the same problems with its bureaucracy as the U.S. and the West general have. In the U.S. the vast majority of federal bureaucrats are Democrats and, if the first Trump administration is any indication, they will again do all they can to sabotage the policies of the elected government. Trump and Musk are […]

Matt Goodwin on the NHS (UK)

The UK is the worst of all Western countries in self-destruction. The powers-that-be hate the White British. Here are two things the British people learned about their National Health Service (NHS) in recent weeks. First, rats and cockroaches are invading hospital beds and wards, the sick and elderly are being treated in corridors and car […]

Haiti: The most dysfunctional society ever?

The writer describes a totally dysfunctional society still dependent on the U.S. for basic services and still sending migrants to the U.S. Then he threatens that it will get worse if U.S. aid and willingness to import Haitians stop. Since last spring, when gangs in Haiti banded together to attack the government, they have mostly […]

The Empire Strikes Back at the Menacing Darryl Cooper

I kept hoping for an evenhanded account of Churchill’s drunkenness, his chronic indebtedness, his Jewish financial benefactors, and essentially Jewish organizations and media promoting war, as Horus has written about authoritatively. But in vain. (Here and here Horus defends Cooper after his appearance on the Tucker Carlson show.) But the “newspaper of record” just provides […]

How to Evade Taxes in Ancient Rome? A 1,900-Year-Old Papyrus Offers a Guide.

How to Evade Taxes in Ancient Rome? A 1,900-Year-Old Papyrus Offers a Guide. “The papyrus reflects the suspicion with which the Roman authorities viewed their Jewish subjects,” said Anna Dolganov, a historian of the Roman Empire with the Austrian Archaeological Institute, who deciphered the scroll. She noted that there is archaeological evidence for coordinated planning […]