On Race and Racism
On Race and Racism Pertinence dictates that race and racism ought to be discussed within any wider treatise that purports to diagnose the modern world’s evident sickness. Not, though, because this demanded by apparatchiks of globalisation – which it invariably is – but precisely because questions of anthropology and its relation to the ecological sphere are not raised with adequate frequency. Ironically, given their eco-focused pretences, mainstream environmentalists appear to forget that man is of nature, not detached from it. They conveniently fail to recognise Natural Law’s jurisdiction over the human sphere, presumably because of the socially uncomfortable conclusions they will be compelled to draw from it – or rather, plainly, that their hypocrisies and insincerity might be exposed. Therefore, it is incumbent upon genuine, dissident environmental thinkers to posit the pertinent queries on this issue, and then to elucidate their conclusions without deference to feeble notions...