General

Horus on Substack: “A classic essay from 2012 by Brenton Sanderson…”

Classic indeed!

A classic essay from 2012 by Brenton Sanderson on how Australia was re-defined by politicians and academics in order to justify the mass importation of strangers from all over the world, which they are currently doing at the fastest rate in history, obviously with the aim of reducing white Australians to a hated minority, as is occurring in nearly every white country. These things do not just happen. They are driven by particular anti-white activists who can be overthrown and prosecuted as traitors.

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Disappointing interview of Mel Gibson by Joe Rogan

Around 26:40 they start discussing the resistance to Gibson’s Passion of the Christ movie, attributing what was an assault by Jewish Hollywood as just due to Hollywood secularism.

Some other material on Gibson from the TOO archives:

What’s Up with Mel Gibson

Mel Gibson’s father, Hutton, made several appearances before his passing. Hollywood media attacked him furiously for it, but he never backed down. AFP readers might remember that Hutton Gibson was also a friend of Willis Carto and spoke at some gatherings that Willis organized.

From the NYTimes obituary:

In 2003, as Mel Gibson was directing “The Passion of the Christ,” his film about the crucifixion, Hutton Gibson gave an interview to The New York Times laced with comments about conspiracy theories. The planes that crashed into the World Trade Center on Sept. 11, 2001, had been remote-controlled, he claimed (without saying by whom). The number of Jews killed in the Holocaust was wildly inflated, he went on.

“Go and ask an undertaker or the guy who operates the crematorium what it takes to get rid of a dead body,” Mr. Gibson said. “It takes one liter of petrol and 20 minutes. Now, six million?”

In a radio interview a week before the February 2004 release of “The Passion,” Mr. Gibson went further, saying of the Holocaust, “It’s all — maybe not all fiction — but most of it is.” The comments added to an already simmering controversy that the film was anti-Semitic; the chairmen of two major studios told The Times that they wouldn’t work with Mel Gibson in the future.

Interviewed by Diane Sawyer of ABC News, the actor was asked to repudiate his father’s statements. He stopped short of doing so, saying: “He’s my father. Gotta leave it alone, Diane. Gotta leave it alone.”

Candace Owens interviews Phil Tourney on the Israeli attack on the U.S.S. Liberty

Candace Owens is getting completely based on Jewish issues. Great interview which once again shows the power of the Israel Lobby over the U.S. government and mainstream media. I doubt that Tucker Carlson would be bold enough to do some honest journalism on this.

Hegseth Grilled by Feminist Fantasists

Hegseth Grilled by Feminist Fantasists

Dems Go To War For Women in Combat, But Not Swimming

Wouldn’t you know it? Defense secretary nominee Pete Hegseth’s grilling by the Senate Armed Services Committee about his opposition to women in combat would have to come the very week that Los Angeles’ all-female leadership team was performing so masterfully at subduing wildfires. The way things are going, the fires should be out by Memorial Day.

Between the gals who just let about a third of L.A. go up in smoke and Sen. Joni Ernst, R-Iowa, the 5-foot-tall “combat veteran,” Hegseth had his work cut out for him. (Adding to his difficulty, women didn’t want Pete to solve this problem for them, they just wanted him to listen.)

As Ernst could have explained to Hegseth, it’s one thing to acknowledge the blinding fact that females don’t stand a chance against males in tennis, soccer, running, throwing, swimming, discus throwing, pole vaulting, etc. But that has NOTHING to do with women’s abilities when it comes to trivial things like policing, fire-fighting and waging war. (To prove it, Ernst wears Army fatigue high heels!)

More than 100 women athletes — including Martina Navratilova, one of the greatest tennis players of all time — submitted a brief to the Supreme Court last year that cited study after study after study establishing beyond cavil that human males have significantly more muscle mass, strength, spacial awareness and protection from stress fractures compared to women. (Among other things.)

E.g.:

— “On average women have 50% to 60% of men’s upper arm muscle … 65% to 75% of men’s thigh muscle … 50% to 60% of men’s upper limb strength and 60% to 80% of men’s leg strength,” the brief noted.

— “The athletic advantages conferred by men’s larger and stronger bones includes ‘greater leverage for muscular limb power exerted in jumping, throwing, or other explosive power activities’ and greater male protection from stress fractures.”

— “[O]n average men are 7% to 8% taller with longer, denser, and stronger bones.”

— “There is a clear sex difference in both muscle mass and strength even adjusting for sex differences in height and weight.”

— “The gender gap has not evolved since 1983.”

If that doesn’t convince them, we’re forcing the court to watch a video of the FC Dallas under-15 boys squad beating the U.S. Women’s National Soccer Team in 2017.

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This is to say nothing of the mental and psychological differences between the sexes, detailed in Steven Pinker’s “The Blank Slate.” Illustrating the male propensity for violence, Pinker cites the case of a surgeon and anesthesiologist who came to blows in the operating room, while the patient lay on the table waiting for her gall bladder to be removed.

But you must erase all of that from your memory when the subject is parachuting into enemy territory to clear terrorist cells; engaging in hand-to-hand combat with a 300-pound psycho in a public housing crack den; or lugging 75 pounds of gear to a raging fire, then carrying a full-grown man out of a burning building.

Reality must not be allowed to intrude on feminist fantasies about girl cops, girl firemen and girl soldiers.

“Stonewall” Ernst, for example, is a combat veteran for bravely driving trucks back and forth from Kuwait to Iraq for three or four months, during the 2003 hostilities, without ever having to parallel park. She never encountered resistance, much less an enemy combatant, except one day when some Iraqi boys laid down on the road in front of her vehicle. Thanks to Ernst’s quick reflexes and steely resolve, she vanquished the rapscallions by proceeding to drive slowly, forcing the guys to roll out of her way.

Based on Ernst’s combat medal for that feat of derring-do, I’m submitting the names of the male park rangers who crashed through a climate activist protest at Burning Man last year for the following awards: Medal of Honor, Distinguished Service Cross, Silver Star and Purple Heart. Also military pensions, early boarding on all commercial flights and a lifetime of people saying, “Thank you for your service.”

Someone said — I can’t find the quote and neither can Grok — that the final aim of the totalitarian is to force people to humiliate themselves by affirming as true what they know to be false.

Anyone passingly familiar with Lia ThomasImane Khelif, Riley Gaines, Martina Navratilova or dozens of other athletes, but who nonetheless claims to support women in the military, on police forces or in fire departments, has been fully subjugated. He’s lying and knows he’s lying.

If this lunacy prevails, Pete may have to invoke the nuclear option and announce that he’s a lesbian.

COPYRIGHT 2025 ANN COULTER

The Telegraph: The great firewall keeping out the hard-Right collapses across Europe

The great firewall keeping out the hard-Right collapses across Europe

Victory for Austria’s hard-Right marks a paradigm shift for the continent as traditional coalitions between moderate parties crumble

Establishment parties in Austria have failed to strike a pact to keep Herbert Kickl's hard-Right faction from power

Establishment parties in Austria have failed to strike a pact to keep Herbert Kickl’s hard-Right faction from power

The next chancellor of Austria could be Europe’s most Right-wing leader after establishment parties failed to strike a pact to keep a populist pro-Putin faction out of power.

The victory for Herbert Kickl’s Eurosceptic and anti-migrant Freedom Party of Austria (FPO) marks a paradigm shift on the continent as traditional coalition building between moderate parties falters.

The centre-Right People’s Party (OVP) and other establishment groups in Austria initially refused to hold coalition talks with the FPO after federal elections in September 2024.

But their attempt to form a “firewall” – or “cordon sanitaire” – against the far-Right failed after negotiations among themselves to form the next government collapsed.

Now, talks between the far-Right FPO and conservative OVP are on, sparking protests across the country that saw tens of thousands of people take to the streets in anger last week.

The cordon sanitaire, which is formed by pacts between traditional parties to keep extremists from government, has a long history in Europe.

But as more and more hard-Right parties rise to prominence, such firewalls have come under increasing pressure.

Jeremy Cliffe, the editorial director and senior policy fellow at the European Council on Foreign Relations think tank, said: “Austria was once an outlier, now it looks more like a forerunner of wider trends across the continent.

“The so-called firewall is breaking down across Europe, albeit at different speeds. The growth of the radical Right vote combined with the fragmentation of the rest of the political spectrum is making it ever-harder to form majorities against it.

“The European radical Right is here to stay for the foreseeable future,” he added.

The average vote share of far-Right parties in 35 European democracies hit a record high of 14.1 per cent in 2024, according to Telegraph analysis of Parlgov data.

The rise coincides with a decline in support for the Left, slumping to a record low of 40.6 per cent.

Prof Frank Furedi, the executive director of MCC Brussels, a conservative think tank, predicted that 2025 would be the year that the “monopoly of power” would be challenged and that the days of the cordon sanitaire were numbered.

“I think that the cordon sanitaire is fast unravelling…You cannot put increasingly popular Right-wing parties under a political quarantine,” he told the Telegraph.

“The old mainstream parties no longer possess the authority to ignore the support enjoyed by populist parties and certainly the millions of citizens who have opted to support these movements are not going to allow their voices to be ignored,” he said.

In 2002, voters in France joined forces to support centre-Right Jacques Chirac and exclude far-Right Jean-Marie Le Pen

In 2002, voters in France joined forces to support centre-Right Jacques Chirac and exclude far-Right Jean-Marie Le Pen Credit: Claude Paris /Ap

In France, a broad constellation of Left-wing parties joined forces to form the Popular Front after being convinced that riots in 1934 were an attempt at a fascist takeover.

This tradition has continued. Voters of all political persuasions joined forces in 2002 to support the centre-Right Jacques Chirac against the far-Right Jean-Marie Le Pen in the second round run-off for the presidential elections. Mr Chirac won 82.21 per cent of the vote share over Mr Le Pen, whose death this week at the age of 90 was greeted with street parties in Paris.

Last summer, Leftist factions formed the New Popular Front to prevent Marine Le Pen, who has brought her father’s Holocaust-denying party back into mainstream French politics, from seizing power in snap parliamentary elections called by Emmanuel Macron.

After the July vote, Mr Macron named Michel Barnier as the prime minister of a Right-leaning minority government. It promised to crack down on illegal migration to placate Ms Le Pen’s National Rally but collapsed after three months, when she withdrew her tacit support.

In nearby Belgium, the far-Right Vlaams Belang, which has long been blocked by a cordon sanitaire, came second in elections held in July. Lengthy coalition negotiations have still not resulted in a new government.

“Macron’s inability to form a stable government in France, Spain’s fragile minority coalition, now the collapse of Austria’s ‘grand coalition’ talks – it all points to the growing difficulty of forming viable governments while excluding the radical Right,” Mr Cliffe said.

Elsewhere, establishment parties in The Netherlands and Sweden have found ways to involve far-Right pirates in government, while maintaining an appearance of exclusion.

Michel Barnier's Right-leaning minority government in France collapsed after just three months

Michel Barnier’s Right-leaning minority government in France collapsed after just three months Credit: Ludovic Marin/Shutterstock

The Sweden Democrats are propping up a conservative coalition of less controversial Right-wing parties but they are not officially part of the government. However, their influence is clear in the once liberal Scandinavian country’s crackdown on illegal migration.

Mark Rutte was the longest serving prime minister in Dutch history before his government collapsed in 2023. During his nearly 14 years in office, Mr Rutte had always made plain that his pro-business VVD alliance would never enter a coalition with Geert Wilders, the veteran anti-Islam firebrand.

Dilan Yeşilgöz-Zegerius, Mr Rutte’s successor, vowed to drive down migrant numbers but did not rule out a pact with Mr Wilders and his PVV party, which won a landslide victory.

After extensive negotiations, a coalition deal was struck whereby Mr Wilders would not officially be part of the Dutch cabinet but one of his party members would take on the job of minister for migration. It was not long before Mr Wilders claimed credit for The Netherlands’ “strictest ever” asylum policy.

The Austrian OVP has suggested it could enter into a coalition with the FPO in a deal that would exclude Mr Kickl.

Firewall is ‘losing effectiveness’

The centre of pro-EU parties held in the European Parliament after bloc-wide elections in July also saw a surge in support for Right-wing alliances.

A cordon sanitaire intends to shut out hard Eurosceptic nationalist unions from influential posts but before the elections, the centre-Right adopted many of the policies they championed, such as a backlash against Brussels’ Net Zero regulations.

According to Prof Furedi, the cordon sanitaire is losing “effectiveness” because of the emergence of soft and hard Eurosceptic parliamentary groups.

“As mainstream parties seek to win back voters they are often adopting elements of its political offer, narrowing the gap and making cooperation less of a leap,” agreed Mr Cliffe.

Belgium's far-Right Vlaams Belang came second in elections held in July 2024

Belgium’s far-Right Vlaams Belang came second in elections held in July 2024 Credit: Shutterstock

“In some countries we will see growing arguments for letting radical Right parties burst their own bubble by assuming power and all the challenges it brings. It’s a risky strategy.”

For Andrew Duff, a senior policy fellow at the European Policy Centre think tank in Brussels, the risk of contagion from extremist parties is very real.

“Cordon sanitaires were meant to stop the spread of infectious diseases. When they stopped working, other interventions were needed. Nowadays, in Europe the far-Right must be tackled head on by constant argument and persuasion,” he said.

The former Liberal Democrat MEP told the Telegraph that establishment parties should not be tempted to try and defang the far-Right by giving it entry to government.

“Why condemn states to even worse governments than they have already? Centrists should be less intimidated than they seem to have become.” Mr Duff added.

German firewall remains most robust

The situation in Austria has raised concerns in Germany after the recent state-level electoral successes of Alternative For Germany (AFD), which is classified by Berlin intelligence as “a suspected Right-wing extremist group”.

The AFD is polling in second place behind the centre-Right CDU and ahead of Olaf Scholz’s socialist faction before Germany’s general election in February.

Mainstream parties refused absolutely to cooperate with the AfD at a national level in a “Brandmauer” – or firewall – over a legacy of the country’s experience of the Nazi regime.

The cordon sanitaire remains most robust in Germany for obvious historical reasons. “Coalitions including the AfD at federal or state level are still unthinkable,” Mr Cliffe confirmed.

“But there have been instances of case-by-case cooperation at the local government level in the eastern states where the party is strongest. I would not be surprised if those became more frequent in the coming years.”

Herbert Kickl's FPO party was founded in the 1950s under a previous Nazi lawmaker

Herbert Kickl’s FPO party was founded in the 1950s under a previous Nazi lawmaker Credit: Helmut Fohringer/Getty Images

Once a cordon sanitaire is broken, it is very difficult to rebuild, as events in Vienna have shown. The ring fence in Austria keeping the FPO from national government was first broken in 2000 but this will be the first time that the party is the senior partner in a coalition.

Mr Kickl now expects to become the FPO’s first chancellor since the party was founded in the 1950s under a leader who had been a senior SS officer and Nazi lawmaker.

The group has a “friendship pact” with Vladimir Putin’s United Russia party and when Volodymyr Zelensky, the Ukrainian president, addressed the Austrian parliament in March 2024, FPO MPs walked out in protest.

“Honest government must be preceded by honest negotiations,” Mr Kickl said when Austria’s president tasked him with beginning coalition talks after the centrist firewall failed.

“No little games, no tricks, no sabotage.”

The talks continue.

EU Globalist Explicitly Threatens To Cancel German Election Result If Right Wing AfD Wins

EU Globalist Explicitly Threatens To Cancel German Election Result If Right Wing AfD Wins

Former French European Commissioner Thierry Breton has essentially openly confessed that the West stole the Romanian election and stands ready to do it again in Germany if deemed necessary.

“We did it in Romania, and we will do it in Germany if necessary,” a translation from the French of Breton’s recent appearance in European media said. Early last month a top Romanian court simply annulled the first round of the country’s presidential election in order to create what amounted to a ‘do over’ election.

The publication Romania Journal highlighted Breton’s words as follows: “If, on the other hand, the Tesla and X boss breaks the law, especially in Germany, by supporting the ‘extremist’ AfD party, the former European Commissioner believes that it will be necessary for the authorities to act as in Romania, where the presidential elections were canceled, writes the website of the French television BFMTV, which recalls Călin Georgescu’s TikTok campaign.

The court had decided “to annul the entire electoral process for the election of the President of Romania… to ensure the correctness and legality of the electoral process” – in the controversial ruling which was completely unprecedented.

The ‘problem’ was that Calin Georgescu, the widely dubbed ‘far-right’ contender, came out on top in a first round of voting in a ‘shock’ outcome which left political opponents claiming Russian election interference.

Apparently the ‘smoking gun’ is related to mere social media posts on platforms like TikTok. “The Constitutional Court’s unprecedented decision — which is final — came after President Klaus Iohannis declassified intelligence on Wednesday that alleged Russia ran a sprawling campaign comprising thousands of social media accounts to promote Calin Georgescu across platforms like TikTok and Telegram,” The Associated Press noted.

Here’s more from Breton’s words:

Now we are equipped, and we have to enforce this law to protect our democracies in Europe.

For now, let’s keep calm and enforce our laws in Europe, when there is a risk that they will be bypassed and if they are not enforced, they can lead to interference.

We did it in Romania, and if necessary, we will have to do it in Germany as well.

Elon Musk responded by saying this is what a tyrant sounds like…

The segment had discussed Musk and European officials’ allegations of his supposed interference in Europe’s internal affairs.

“Freedom of expression is a fundamental element in Europe,” Breton had claimed in the news segment. “If they don’t, there are fines and the possibility of a ban. We are equipped to enforce these laws to protect our democracies in Europe.”

“Let’s stay calm and enforce the laws in Europe, when they risk being circumvented and if not enforced, could lead to interference,” he had added.


In Huge Protest, Romanians Rail Against Do-Over Election Targeting Populist NATO Skeptic

Upwards of 100,000 Romanians of various political stripes took to the streets on Sunday to express outrage over the voiding of a presidential election that seemed poised to put a NATO and Ukraine War skeptic in power. George Simion, leader of the right-wing Alliance for the Unity of Romanians, summed up the intent of the demonstrations his party organized:

We are protesting against the coup d’état that took place on Dec. 6. We are sorry to discover so late that we were living in a lie and that we were led by people who claimed to be democrats, but are not at all. We demand a return to democracy through the resumption of elections, starting with the second round.” 

In November, Romania held the first balloting in its two-round election. It resulted in Europe’s latest instance in which a populist, nationalist, right-wing candidate posted a result that far exceeded what polls indicated he was capable of. In a 13-contender field, that candidate, Calin Georgescu, led the pack with 23%, setting him up to advance to the second and final round against reformist Elena Lasconi of the Save Romania Union party.

However, just two days before that second round was to take place on Dec. 8, Romania’s constitutional court annulled the election, and ordered a complete do-over of both rounds. Their justification: Supposed Russian meddling manifested in manipulated votes, campaign irregularities and secret spending. The ruling came after incumbent President Klaus Iohannis reportedly shared intelligence claiming Russia organized thousands of social media accounts to boost Georgescu’s campaign.

“You petty politicians, with your ungrateful and immature games, you won’t even know what hit you in this global storm,” said Georgescue in a social media post in which he promoted the protest and compared Romanian leaders and judges with former French president Nicolas Sarkozy, who’s on trial on corruption charges. “You are so small that you aren’t even able to understand anything. Nothing you do will make a difference anymore. The inevitable, is inevitable.”

On Sunday, crowds — estimated in size from tens of thousands to more than 100,000 — marched through the streets of Bucharest, with Reuters reporting that many left-wingers joined the protest. The slogans on their signs included “We Want Free Elections,” “Bring Back The Second Round,” “Freedom,” and “Democracy Is Not Optional.” In a country that is among the most religiously observant in Europe, many carried Christian Orthodox icons. According to video posted to social media, protesters also vented their aggravation with establishment media:

Social media was the principal catalyst of 62-year-old Georgescu’s success. He didn’t run as a member of any political party, but his TikTok account racked up 1.6 million likes for content showing him going to church, running, practicing judo, and being interviewed by podcasters.

Iohannis’ term was supposed to end on Dec. 21, but he’s now slated to remain in power until the do-over election is complete. The dates are not yet official, but, last week, leaders of the ruling coalition government said they’d agreed on holding the two rounds on May 4 and May 18.

Georgescu’s views are anathema to the European establishment. He’s pledged to restore Romanian sovereignty and put an end to what he characterizes as subservience to NATO and the EU. He has taken a hard line against the presence of NATO’s missile defense system that’s based in Deveselu, southern Romania, calling it a “shame of diplomacy” that is more confrontational than peace-promoting.

Romania shares a 400-mile border with Ukraine and hosts a NATO missile defense system in the country’s south (via Britannica)

He’s also pushed for Romania to pursue a non-interventionist policy in the Ukraine war, and said US arms-makers were manipulating the conflict. Since Russia’s invasion, Romania has facilitated Ukrainian grain exports and furnished military assistance including the donation of a Patriot missile battery. In addition to his broad theme of restoring Romanian sovereignty, Georgescu also ran on countering price inflation, addressing Romania’s worst-in-EU poverty rate, supporting farmers and decreasing the country’s reliance on imports.

However, now it is the sovereignty of the Romanian people themselves that is in peril. As a flag-wrapped economist named Cornelia told Reuters on Sunday: “At this rate we won’t be voting anymore, they will impose a leader like in the old days.”

Why the Drive to Ban TikTok?