Yes, that's the problem. This tweet is plain as day in the context of his other writings. His theory states that groups of people born of different "climate" are "more beautiful and all ways better disposed." (p 67)
This tweet is part of the same idea. His theory takes this idea to the concept of a "peculiar love for the people of own race and country". He attempts to obfuscate "ethnicity" to be about culture, but connects it to the "blood ties in ethno-genesis". It's all in the book, folks.
Chapter 3 of the book covers most of these things. By the end I am certain that most will conclude that Wolfe's theory is distinctly ethno-nationalist.
Since @CalebDixonSmith (he blocked me) says I'm being dishonest, allow me to provide more evidence. Let's start with this tweet from Wolfe, which I suspect he deleted while his account was private yesterday. Archive:
It's ridiculous how hard it is to find a use of "No More Brother Wars" outside of a white-nationalist context. Here's someone posting the 14 Words of white nationalism under a video from five years ago.
Here's the cover of a compilation album from 1996, entitled "No More Brother Wars", from the white-nationalist label Di-Al Records. Track 15 is "White Legion" from the band Konkwista 88. Track 17 is "Hail The Superman" from Svastika.
Here's someone from almost four years ago telling you exactly what the phrase means.
Well, would you look at this? "No More Brother Wars," that Eric Conn is repeatedly tweeting over the Joel Webbon situation, is a known white-nationalist slogan. hatepedia.ca/guide/explicit…
Let's do this. The most notable references I caught in the deliberately Nazi, White Boy Summer video, removing any excuse that these people didn't know exactly what they were sharing. 🧵
A man watches people in BDSM gear at a pride parade and is made to look like he's thinking of footage of Wehrmacht soldiers.
A bust of Stonewall Jackson with who I believe is @totusjustice, the white-nationalist founder of @SacraPress. He and his company recently made waves for publishing the Nazi book Positive Christianity in the Third Reich.
Let's take a look at who's involved in @BaptistLeaders, the new lobbying group headed by @William_E_Wolfe that's trying to shape the future of the SBC, specifically those men's ties (or that of their associates) to white nationalism and fascism. 🧵 1/12 centerforbaptistleadership.org
The public financier, @AmReformer, is a journal that has published multiple articles along these lines, from a defense of Nazi jurist Carl Schmitt, to claiming deporting the ethnic other is true hospitality, to direct references of white nationalists (even by their EIC). 2/12
The Executive Director of AmRef kicked up a storm last year when he tweeted, "Basically, America is going to need a Protestant Franco." Francisco Franco sent his political enemies to concentration camps and kidnapped their children. He extra-judicially executed ~300k people. 3/12
Let's talk the out-in-the-open kinist (white nationalist) CREC church in Pella, IA, Christ the Redeemer, pastored by Michael Shover. I have so much evidence that I have to be highly selective here. 🧵 1/11
In the ☝️ photo, you have Shover, Jesse Van Der Molen, Darrell Dow, and Thomas Achord, among others. The account belongs to Van Der Molen, who regularly posts pictures of himself on it. It's well known among those in the CREC that the account is his, despite the "Tom" handle. 2/11
Thomas Achord (1st on right) was the podcast co-host of Stephen Wolfe (@PerfInjust), who had an anonymous white nationalist account (@TuliusAadland). Darrell Dow (4th on left) was his co-author on the kinist book, Who is My Neighbor?: An Anthology in Natural Relations. 3/11
My rebuttal of your article will include things like your explicit use of "no enemies to the right" to dismiss race hatred and your "glowing" review of el Caudillo.
I ask for patience as I finish rebutting Wolfe's book. I promise I will give you an intellectually honest rebuttal
Cursory read and this stood out. Interested in your reasoning, as it will help my rebuttal. Is this not projection/hypocrisy, since your entire phrase is based on only attacking one side? I think a conservative Christian faces far more social backlash attacking the right nowadays