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Regime Change from the Right: A Strategic Sketch

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Martin Sellner is one of the most prominent identitarian activists in Europe today. Many in the English-speaking world are aware of him as an activist, but he is also a prominent thinker. Until now, his thought has been inaccessible to English speakers. This new English translation of Regime Change from the Right makes Sellner’s thought available to the Anglosphere for the first time.

This book deals with the most burning question of our how do we save our peoples from dispossession and demographic replacement?

Sellner’s answer Reconquista. The right must achieve metapolitical dominance—cultural and intellectual power—to delegitimise our opponents, shift the Overton Window, and make it possible for these issues to be openly discussed and for the implementation of alternative policies to become politically feasible. This strategy, for moral and pragmatic reasons, is resolutely non-violent.

In addition, this book examines strategies other than Sellner’s, analysing where they have succeeded and failed, making it useful even for those who disagree with Sellner’s conclusions. It is sure to spark a badly needed strategic debate on the right.

Informed by years of experience in activism and extensive reading, Regime Change from the Right is essential reading for anyone who is concerned about the future of European peoples, and looking for a path forward.

288 pages, Kindle Edition

First published June 15, 2023

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About the author

Martin Sellner

8 books19 followers
Martin Sellner is an Austrian Neue Rechte activist, leader of the Identitäre Bewegung Österreichs (IBÖ, Identitarian Movement of Austria), and a part of the alt-right movement.

In 2008, he helped leading Austrian Neo-Nazis hinder liberal demonstrations and made pilgrimages to memorial services for Wehrmacht soldiers.

In March 2018, he was denied entry and deported from the United Kingdom.

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309 reviews
November 19, 2025
I just got it on a whim because I stumbled across him on the uncensored intertube. The part I read so far was surprisingly interesting. His thinking is very clear, and he uses big, nuanced words without sounding pretentious. He feels a bit like a Marxist strategist, an Alinsky of the other side. I think he even quotes some Marxists in his theory framework.
The author, of course, had his home raided by the thought police for his expressions. Apparently the Austrians are applying some anti-mafia law to forbidden speech now. The book explains why these repressions are increasing now: they are compensating for the declining dominance of the old "metapolitical" narrative; a term that refers to the amassed political 'education' (aka. public enlightenment) of the population, i.e. their standing assumption of who to obey, from which the current elite derives its power. It is this metapolitical background assumption that Sellner wants to reform with his activism. It is also why old power structures are so hysterical about censoring other viewpoints; the battle of ideas seems to determine which way the guns point, and from that comes political power.
It is interesting that "wanting the population to survive" has become a "far right extreme" position, for which you get dragged out of bed by the thought police. Isn't it just the natural duty of any government to aid the survival of its population? [CENSORED] As such Sellner doesn't even need to style himself as an identitarian; his position could be framed as the much more palatable "neutrality" or "non-interference".

[CENSORED DUE TO SPEECH PERSECUTION]
From a long-term libertarian perspective, the destruction of the rule of law, such as the legalization of left-wing terrorism for use as convenient foot soldiers, can be seen as an (almost necessary) sign of the breakdown of old power structures. [CENSORED]

[CENSORED DUE TO SPEECH PERSECUTION]
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