Archive for July, 2021

Judgement Eve: Verse 1 Golgolundra

Posted July 28, 2021 By John C Wright

Note that this tale first appeared in  Engineering Infinity, ed. Jonathan Strahan, Solaris Books, London (2011)

It is reprinted in ALL MEN DREAM OF EARTHWOMEN AND OTHER AEONS, and made available here in preview, as a courtesy to my readers.

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Judgement Eve is now posted.

In which the deadly mirth of the Sons of Typhon is described, on the final day of a condemned globe, and the Invigilators of the Will, whom the vulgar call angels, hover above the carnage on wings of light.

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The Love Life of Superman

Posted July 27, 2021 By John C Wright

Andrew Klavan quotes a Larry Niven article, and makes a few observations about the love life of Superman.

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The Paradox of the Postchristian

Posted July 24, 2021 By John C Wright

A reader with the alphanumeric name of dgg3565 remarks, in regard to a conversation, or, perhaps, conflagration, held in this space over recent days with certain romantics of the neo-monarchist school:

“Still further, they disdain the history and traditions of the land into which they were born, so their claim of a return to tradition is doubly false.”

The are not the only persons who take a romantic view of the past and from it draw doubly false conclusions. Neopagans share this shortcoming with neomonarchists.

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Scepter of Nowhere, part 7: My Last Day of Light

Posted July 21, 2021 By John C Wright

Scepter of Nowhere, part 7: My Last Day of Light is now posted.

I aimed at the golden satellite more carefully this time, picking which whorls in the design I thought might be the electromagnetic accelerators. I fired again, and again. The unseen ray sliced neatly through the golden sphere, and the release of energies were causing blue incandescence — maybe this was what fires looked like in zero gravity.

 

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Re Monarchist Radicals

Posted July 20, 2021 By John C Wright

A reader with the daffy but mechanical name of LugNuts writes:

“I think the king thing is one that Wright [sic] loathes as a self-described Virginian regardless of position on anything else.”

It is because I am a conservative. Having a king is a degenerate jury rig make shift necessitated by the break down of the authority of the Commonwealth of Rome.

I am perfectly in favor of a form of government where two consuls, elected for two year terms on even and odd years, must rule in comity as supreme executives, while senators organize and direct the army, and the assemblies of tribes govern the collection of taxes from landowners. But you are not discussing an old, time-tested, tried and true form of government, like the Roman Republic. You are talking about barbarian warlords and how they govern their stinking, blue-painted braves.

Since the Commonwealth of Rome is no longer available, we in Virginia have renewed that form of government here. As happened to Rome before us, we are inundated with barbarians, called Democrats, who wish to install a new Caesar, and curtail our ancient forms of law.

Monarchy is a new-fangled, radical idea. I will have none of it, thank you.

For the record, a return of aristocrat forms of government requires the return of proper forms of address and etiquette, since it is the difference in manners that reinforces the difference in classes. Courtesy requires that you address a married landholder as “Mister”  and not address him as one would address a servant.

So until and unless you actually act as if you mean what you say about a royalist or aristocratic form of government, and act with the manners of a gentleman rather than a lout, villain, or a rustic bumpkin, I suggest you keep your comments to yourself while your betters are talking.

 

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Time to Repeal the First Amendment

Posted July 19, 2021 By John C Wright

Grim humor from Mark Dice

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Election Fraud Link Round-Up

Posted July 18, 2021 By John C Wright

I am putting all these links in one spot for my own convenience. If any reader of mine find this convenient also, please look at these items before YouTube removes them.

I have marked those I discovered had been removed.

It is rather remarkable how quickly Americans grow accustomed to censorship. It is now routine on every news and commentary channel I regularly watch, to hear the pundit simply state there are topics and words he cannot mention without being punished.  Several mention their shadow banning and demonetizations.

Sadly — for at one time I subscribed to and defended Dailywire — Dailywire is not one of them. The forbidden topics are simply not mentioned there, and there is no public kicking against the goads that I saw.

If Shapiro, Klavan, Walsh, Knowles or Candice Owens discusses the 2020 voter fraud, please let me know, and I may patronize them again.

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No Chastity, No Peace

Posted July 17, 2021 By John C Wright

A reader with the tropical yet frosty name of Bahama Ymir observes:

“For all our lives we have been presented this Hello Kitty version of homosexuals. That it is not our business what happens between consenting adults, that the gay man goes skipping about brimming with goofy exuberance and goodwill, that he just wants the same rights as you or I and to deny him our unreserved acceptance is something akin to kicking a puppy. But always underneath there is the commanding whip of lustful passion which can accept no boundary to depravity, and the pursuing shame which will abide no judgement. Peace was never an option.”

Hear, hear.

Not long ago, I was deceived by the Libertarian mantra that all things should be lawful save for those which caused harm to another.

Leaving aside that fact that abolishing the nuclear family and normalizing perversion has more wide ranging harm than any imaginable changes to law and custom, the idea would have been foolish even if the vice were harmless in that sense.

Light can tolerate darkness. Darkness cannot tolerate light. Vice cannot coexist with virtue.

The thinking behind the Libertarian mantra of legalizing all things harmless to others was the idea that that the coercive power of the law, while being a necessary evil, was evil, and could not be trusted to be used in a just and fair way, therefore should not be trusted to be used at all, save in those minimal situations where the peace was broken, the harm threatened was clear and present, and the aggression could be met with proportionate aggression, to preserve the peace.

Force is used to end force. To no other end, so runs the Libertarian theory, can force be used.

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Guest Column by Milo Yiannopoulos 

Posted July 15, 2021 By John C Wright
I wanted to share this column by my old boss with my readers, only to discover that it seems to have vanished from its original spot (which, for the record, is here: https://www.churchmilitant.com/news/article/milo-it-was-always-about-the-kids).
At the risk of a breach of Internet etiquette, I here reproduce the whole, unedited, to preserve a copy, just in case. If it reappears on Church Militant, read it there, along with the illos, and peruse their other offerings.

It Was Always About the Kids

by Milo Yiannopoulos  •  ChurchMilitant.com  •  July 8, 2021

“You think that we’ll corrupt your kids if our agenda goes unchecked. Just this once … you’re correct. We’ll convert your children, happens bit by bit, quietly and subtly. We’ll convert your children, reaching one and all. There’s really no escaping it. We’re coming for your children! We’re coming for your children! We’re coming for your children!”

Creepy or what? You’re probably wondering where I found this terrifying threat. An early episode of Buffy the Vampire Slayer? The trailer to Blumhouse Productions’ latest horror blockbuster, perhaps? A dream journal lifted from an insane asylum?

Nope. These are song lyrics from an organization more sinister and frightening than any scary movie you had in mind: the San Francisco Gay Men’s Chorus (SFGMC), a crying circle for Bay Area pederasts.

It’s what happens when clerical sexual abuse meets soullessness, joylessness and tunelessness.

The song, which keeps disappearing from YouTube because even leftists are shocked by its accidental truthfulness, cannot be unseen.

Musically, it is terrible, and of course boring — because ideas this ugly cannot be expressed in beautiful words or melodies. The singers look haunted — because they are. The message is unvarnished, explicit, unequivocal: It was always about the kids.

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Idol of Fentanyl Floyd Struck by Bolt from Heaven

Posted July 14, 2021 By John C Wright

Witnesses are saying that a Toledo mural of George Floyd, a career criminal famous for dying of a drug overdose, was struck by lighting and toppled.

The Toledo Fire and Rescue Department lists the cause of the collapse as a lightning strike based on witness reports and an inspection of the scene; but the Toledo building inspector, after interviewing witnesses and scene, blames natural aging.

https://nypost.com/2021/07/14/george-floyd-mural-collapses-witnesses-blame-lightning/

 

The mural showed the figure crowned as king and lord. Most of the images of the mural available through Google search, as it happens, have the crown cropped away.

Adjacent are the words “change of mind” — this is one translation of the Biblical term “metanoia” which refers to salvation through repentance.

After being thunderstruck, the face was obliterated, but the borders of the image survived.

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Scepter of Nowhere, part 6: Wormwood

Posted July 14, 2021 By John C Wright

Scepter of Nowhere, part 6: Wormwood, is now posted.

I was standing on the white diamond roof of a tower above the edge of the stratosphere. In the same way I could, by an act of will, eliminate the sensation of cold, I made it so the near-vacuum did not disturb me. My skin gleamed with some strange, luminous coating.

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As Practical as Potatoes

Posted July 12, 2021 By John C Wright

Here is a quote I rather admire from our own Mr. Vic Q. Ruiz:

To me, the one indisputable truth taught by Christianity is that the human species is an imperfect one, always liable to error and corruption. Those who instead believe that mankind is perfectible inevitably create hells on earth.

Any society that assumes that leaders will be flawed, and builds in self-correcting mechanisms, is bound to be both more successful and more happy in the long run than is a system which only works if the leaders are particularly virtuous. In short, what is desirable is the rule of law, and the rights of Englishmen.

He goes on to describe himself as an ally of Christianity, albeit not Christian himself.

Allow me to quote a parallel passage from a man who was a very thoroughly converted Christian, Mr. G. K. Chesterton:

Modern masters of science are much impressed with the need of beginning all inquiry with a fact. The ancient masters of religion were quite equally impressed with that necessity. They began with the fact of sin — a fact as practical as potatoes.

Whether or no man could be washed in miraculous waters, there was no doubt at any rate that he wanted washing. But certain religious leaders in London, not mere materialists, have begun in our day not to deny the highly disputable water, but to deny the indisputable dirt.

Certain new theologians dispute original sin, which is the only part of Christian theology which can really be proved. Some followers of the Reverend R. J. Campbell, in their almost too fastidious spirituality, admit divine sinlessness, which they cannot see even in their dreams. But they essentially deny human sin, which they can see in the street.

The strongest saints and the strongest sceptics alike took positive evil as the starting-point of their argument. If it be true (as it certainly is) that a man can feel exquisite happiness in skinning a cat, then the religious philosopher can only draw one of two deductions. He must either deny the existence of God, as all atheists do; or he must deny the present union between God and man, as all Christians do. The new theologians seem to think it a highly rationalistic solution to deny the cat.

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The God of the Philosophers

Posted July 9, 2021 By John C Wright

Reason, by itself, cannot encompass all Christian teaching. There are things known about God that can be known only if God reveals them to Man. But the basics about God, those points on which Christian and Deist would agree, are open to philosophic reasoning.

One odd heresy, more popular during the generation of the Founding Fathers than now, is called Deism.

This is the belief that God can be read in the book of nature more truly than in the books of the Bible.

The Deist says that the God which unaided philosophical reasoning deduces from examining the order and wonder of nature is sufficient to prove the basics of monotheism.

The Roman Catholic Church holds, as a matter of sacred teaching, that God, the first principle and last end of all things, can be known with certainty from the created world by the natural light of human reason: but most men will not follow such a strait and narrow path of reasoning to its logical conclusion, out of dislike for where it leads.

But Deist and Papist agree on the role of reason here.

That being so, it may be entertaining or edifying, at least for dispelling the notion some atheists fondly repeat, that belief in monotheism is unreasonable. To the contrary, reason proves monotheism is self-evident, and atheism absurd.

Let us examine the Deist argument.

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Scepter of Nowhere, part 5: The Dancers of Utopia

Posted July 7, 2021 By John C Wright

Scepter of Nowhere, part 5: The Dancers of Utopia, is now posted.

In the center was a vast open space, paved with crystal clear as air. Underfoot was a ballroom on whose roof I stood. Here an endless congregation of nude figures, male and female, all of perfect form and physique, all adorned with crowns and rings and countless winking gems, were dancing in a long and sinuous line.

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Lyrics for Independence Day

Posted July 5, 2021 By John C Wright

Happy Independence Day! As a public service, I post below the lyrics of the National Anthem and the prayer for God to bless America. I draw the readers’ attention to the often overlooked second and third stanzas.

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