An Immigrant Remembers
By Harald Hesstvedt Scharnhorst. People came to America to build a new life for themselves, in the process creating one of the most remarkable experiments in national development and self-government in the history of mankind. Knut Scharnhorst Hesstvedt brought his family to these United States in 1949. He was disappointed that evil bureaucrats had taken power in Norway.
Plastic Empire
By John Q. Publius. Plastic Empire is John Q. Publius’s third book, exhibiting his familiar no-holds-barred commitment to tracking down and identifying the people and forces imperiling Western civilization. Here, the book tackles the war for the minds and soul of the West through the mechanisms of psychological and demographic warfare, the actors waging this war, and the nature of their ultimate aims. After diagnosing the ills of modern man—the isolation, atomization, alienation, and despair—and the consequences, Publius dissects the various strands contributing to societal break-down: mass immigration, pornography, media manipulation, and more.
Conquest of a Continent
By Madison Grant. Madison Grant (1865-1937) was one of America’s most influential racial thinkers. In Conquest of a Continent, Grant tells us of the European antecedents of the original settlers who tamed America.
Grant was an unapologetic Nordicist and, by using documented historical fact, proves that the colonists who opened up America for settlement were primarily of northwestern European stock. Grant provides an overview of the historical racial composition of Europe, and goes on to show how America reached its greatest degree of racial homogeneity in 1860. He tells us how later immigration steadily undermined this founding stock.
Re-Forging America: The Story of Our Nationhood
By T. Lothrop Stoddard. Re-Forging America: The Story of Our Nationhood. Written just after the passing of the 1924 Immigration Act, this book by one of America’s most prominent racial thinkers is an in-depth analysis of the racial developments which led to the American Revolution, the Civil War and the mass immigration of the late 19th century which disrupted the until-then almost entirely Northwestern European colonization of North America.