First and foremost: congratulations to Josh Taylor on becoming undisputed world light welterweight boxing champion last weekend. He now joins the likes of fellow Scot Ken Buchanan, Joe Calzaghe, Jimmy Wilde and Tom Cribb on the list of the all-time great British pugilists and is only the sixth man to become undisputed champion of a weight division in the four belt era. He also possesses The Ring belt, which is usually a good indication of who the real champion in a division is when the belts are dispersed. That he achieved the feat of unifying the belt in spite of obvious bias by both judges and referee makes it all the more special.
To reiterate my introduction to the last GKC article, the
Chesterton family were ever friends to the nationalist cause. Whatever
flaws they as individuals had were minor ones; their hearts were in the
right place. It gives me great pride that I wrote an article for the magazine founded by A K Chesterton, Candour, which itself was the successor to Cecil Chesterton's New Witness and which I advise everyone to support by purchasing their literature etc. They also publish many books worth reading. Perhaps G K Chesterton's biggest flaw was that he only made it half-way
to Paganism in adopting Roman Catholicism as his religion, in spite of
him acknowledging that the things he loved in life and culture were the
remnants of our Pagan past, and he often railed against the Puritan
wellspring of liberalism and capitalism. In this article, he highlights the reasons why marriage and the home are a boon for the British lower classes and, conversely, why the capitalist plutocrat, often in the guise of a socialist, who are of the same ilk, wishes to destroy them.
The Chesterton family were ever friends to the nationalist cause. Whatever flaws they as individuals had were minor ones; their hearts were in the right place. It gives me great pride that I wrote an article for the magazine founded by A K Chesterton, Candour, which itself was the successor to Cecil Chesterton's New Witness and which I advise everyone to support by purchasing their literature etc. They also publish many books worth reading. Perhaps G K Chesterton's biggest flaw was that he only made it half-way to Paganism in adopting Roman Catholicism as his religion, in spite of him acknowledging that the things he loved in life and culture were the remnants of our Pagan past, and he often railed against the Puritan wellspring of liberalism and capitalism. In this article, which is as much for our time as that of 1917, he highlights the conspiracy of the media, for which he would probably be called a conspiracy theorist today, in spite of every word he says about the media being true. The end paragraph refers to the Marconi Scandal and how the media avoided naming the principle movers and shakers in the corruption as Jewish.