Willis Carto
Born
in Fort Wayne, Indiana, The United States
July 17, 1926
Died
October 26, 2015
Website
Genre
Influences
|
The coming American fascism: The crisis of capitalism
by
—
published
1993
—
5 editions
|
|
|
An Appeal to Reason: a Compendium of the Writings of Willis A. Carto
by
—
published
2008
|
|
|
Populism vs. Plutocracy: The Universal Struggle
—
published
1982
—
5 editions
|
|
|
Imperium: The Philosophy of History and Politics
by |
|
* Note: these are all the books on Goodreads for this author. To add more, click here.
“How the press, for example, loves to brag to its victims— its readers—about its freedom. Yes, the press may be free to lie and distort and suppress and deceive and malign, but is it free to tell the truth?”
― An Appeal to Reason: a Compendium of the Writings of Willis A. Carto
― An Appeal to Reason: a Compendium of the Writings of Willis A. Carto
“The nationalist, however loves his own kind as the extension of his family, realizing that universal values are primitive values or no values at all; that men can be free and content only within their native cultural environment. This profound insight completely escapes the immature internationalists. The nationalist seeks peace— not the peace of the pacifist or the slave but the peace of the free and independent. He believes in nonaggression, nonintervention and neutrality whereas the internationalist sees every dispute anywhere in the world as an excuse for the raising of an army, the floating of a bond issue and the raising of taxes—letting the suckers, of course, do the fighting, the buying of bonds and the paying of taxes. Nationalism is the only sane approach to the problem of world
peace in an increasingly crazy and dangerous world. It is the spirit
of live and let live, the healthy ethic of self-respect, racial integrity
and conscientious concern for the rights of others.”
― An Appeal to Reason: a Compendium of the Writings of Willis A. Carto
peace in an increasingly crazy and dangerous world. It is the spirit
of live and let live, the healthy ethic of self-respect, racial integrity
and conscientious concern for the rights of others.”
― An Appeal to Reason: a Compendium of the Writings of Willis A. Carto
“Neo-Spenglerians who are attuned to the racial view of history (call them "racists" for convenience) hold that the "final" phase of a Culture—the imperialistic stage—is final only because the cultural organism destroys its body and kills its soul by this process. Obviously, if we are to draw analogies between cultures and organisms we must agree that the soul of the organism dies only because of the death of the body. The soul can sicken—the soul of the West is now diseased and perhaps mortally ill—but it cannot die unless the organism itself dies. And this, point out the racists, is precisely what has happened to all previous cultures; death of the organism being the natural result of the suicidal process of imperialism.”
― An Appeal to Reason: a Compendium of the Writings of Willis A. Carto
― An Appeal to Reason: a Compendium of the Writings of Willis A. Carto





