The Nationalist Review Online Season 2, Episode 7: Madness Begins at Birth

The Right Stuff
September 11, 2016

Host: Ryan Pinoy’Chet (NO1), Florian Geyer
Guests: Iron March – Slavros, Zeiger-san

The episode opens up with a discussion regarding Zeiger’s newest article concerning a conference between Jared Taylor, Peter Brimlow, and Richard Spencer. The opening discussion is followed up with a discussion on Christian Fascism and Iron March’s origin story as narrated by the founder of IM, Slavros.

Since becoming a Father, my focus in life dramatically shifted. Where I was once a Godless fool, I’ve become stronger in faith. Where I once thought only about my pleasure, I think about the future. I experience, every day, the strength of a family unit. I’m blessed with a wife who willingly chose to stay at home and breastfeed our daughter. My personal blessings, though, is a curse. My curse, or obligation, is my manhood and from it I see a world experiencing life without blessings. Truly, the gift of foresight is not a blessing for those weak of will and without purpose. God is our purpose, our beacon, and our guide in a world ruled by chaos.

Daily Heresy: Gay Priests! and The Best form of Motherhood: Lesbian Moms!

Life is stranger than fiction: Swedes trying to destroy the Danes, and #SoBrave campus reform placing tampons in bathrooms!
Gay Cakes but no Trump Cakes! The Silence is deafening.

Portraits of Madness:

“At some point, he might even find time to drop by L.A., where he has made a home with his longtime partner and husband of two years, Richard Buckley, 68, and their 4-year-old son, Jack. “We’re looking for a bigger place,” notes Ford, adding that their current house, a Richard Neutra original in Bel Air, is littered with children’s toys. (He denies reports that he’s been scoping out Bond producer Cubby Broccoli’s former $50 million estate.)”

Later on:

Ford’s latest movie, which Focus Features picked up for $20 million at the Cannes Film Festival in 2015, has a somewhat more complex narrative. Amy Adams plays Susan, a successful art dealer struggling to find enduring values in an increasingly disposable world, who has a life-altering experience while reading a novel about a family man who gets brutally attacked while driving through rural Texas.
Those two tales — the art dealer’s and the fictional family man’s (played by Jake Gyllenhaal) — intertwine throughout the film. And just as A Single Man touched on themes close to Ford’s heart, so does Nocturnal Animals, which explores the soul-sucking perils of materialism and consumerism (the very things that have made Ford — who sells a $19,400 Natalia alligator skin shoulder bag — a fortune).
“Susan is quite literally me,” he says. “She’s someone who has material things but realizes — maybe this happened to me seven or eight years ago — those aren’t the things that are important. She is struggling with the world that I live in: the world of absurd rich [people], the hollowness and emptiness I perceive in our culture.
“[Life] can be an endless, unfulfilling quest for some sort of happiness that is elusive,” he goes on. “Because the whole concept of happiness as peddled by our culture doesn’t exist. Nobody lives happily ever after. If you buy this and do that and build this house, you’re not going to be happy. Life is happy, sad, tragic, joyful. But that’s not what we’re taught, that’s not what our culture pounds into our heads.”
More madness, the tantamount of asshole worshipping:

But, unimaginative sex isn’t what convinced Rinaldi to try her experiment, and ultimately write a book about it. She says that she finally reached a breaking point in her early thirties when she realized that despite years of pleading, Mansfield would never be willing to have a child with
She wrote in The Wild Oats Project, “I refuse to go to my grave with no children and only four lovers … If I can’t have one, I must have the other.”
“I reached a point that a lot of us face in midlife where I was about to have an affair. I knew I was going to cheat, or we were going to get a divorce and something had to change. And I figured if I was going to do it, I was going to be fair and give him the freedom. I knew it was a long shot,” she explains.