tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3289532.post-839412552002-11-02T21:47:00.000-05:002002-11-02T21:47:12.840-05:00INTEGRAL NATIONALISTS MAKING A COMEBACK IN BRAZIL <br /> <br /> By Kenneth J. Schmidt <br /> <br /> All sorts of good people all over the world are locked in a desperate struggle against the New World Order. Not all who take part in this battle are whites or of purely European heritage. We may not consider these people our racial or cultural brothers, but we admire and support their efforts. <br /> <br /> One example of a group making a difference is the Party for the Rebuilding of the National Order, a Brazilian group founded in 1989 by Dr. Eneas Ferreira Carneiro. Dr. Carneiro stunned Brazil last month when he and five of his supporters were elected to the national legislature. Carneiro himself received 1.5 million votes, more than any other congressional candidate in Brazilian history. <br /> <br /> For years Carneiro and his party were the butt of jokes, except in 1994 when he came in third place in the presidential stakes. Dr. Carniero is a funny looking fellow; a small man with a thick beard, huge glasses and a bald pate. He is, however, an excellent orator and implacable foe of international finance capital. Not confining his criticism to the bankers, he has aimed his withering rhetoric at Brazil's kleptocratic political elite. The good showing by the Party for the Rebuilding of the National Order has led many establishmentarians to propose changes so someone like Carniero can't be elected again. <br /> <br /> The good doctor has admitted similarities in ideology between his party and the Integralists , a political party in 1930's Brazil, that had its origins in Maurras and other pre-Fascist thinkers. Although we Third-Positionists are skeptical of the electoral route, it appears Nationalism is alive and well in Brazil and we applaud its resurgence. <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />JUSTICE FOR IRA EINHORN AND THE DEFEAT OF HIPPIEDOM <br /> <br /> By Kenneth J. Schmidt <br /> <br /> This week a jury in Philadelphia found hippie guru Ira Einhorn guilty of the 1977 slaying of Holly Maddux, a white woman. Einhorn's conviction was a blow for justice against international socialism and its capitalist allies. <br /> <br /> Back in the sixties and seventies, Einhorn was for all intents and purposes, the head hippie of Philadelphia and one of the most important hippie leaders in the nation. Significantly, Einhorn was one of the first hipsters to "go corporate." He took millions in consulting fees from giant corporations, eager to court "youth" and became a very wealthy man. Einhorn was a pioneer for the Clinton generation, that cadre of individuals that traded in their love beads and cut their hair, but infiltrated society with their sick vision of society unchanged. <br /> <br /> Like most hippies, Einhorn used all sorts of talk about peace, love and understanding to mask what was essentially a sociopathic personality. Einhorn seduced a young, beautiful but extremely naïve girl from Texas, Holly Maddux and persuaded her to live with him. After a few months, Einhorn preferred to put Marcuse's theory of polymorphous perversity into full practice and tried to embark on an "open relationship." Rather than let her get away with leaving, he killed her and stuck her body in a steamer trunk on his balcony. After several months, Philly police swore out a search warrant and found the body of Miss Maddux on Rinhorn's property. Ira made bail, but fled the US during the middle of his trial. <br /> <br /> For seventeen years Einhorn lived in the French provinces and hid from authorities with the help of influential French Leftists. He was finally arrested a couple of years ago, but his extradition was held up by his many high-ranking countercultural friends and the issue of his possible death penalty, should he be convicted in Pennsylvania. Finally, the State Of Pennsylvania agreed not to seek the death penalty and he was returned to the US. <br /> <br /> This will no doubt not be the end of the Einhorn saga, but people can now sleep better knowing that this man will probably spend a good many years behind bars. The Einhorn story shows us the total moral bankruptcy of the establishment that rules over us, most of whom were hippies in the sixties and seventies just like Einhorn. <br />Kenneth J.http://www.blogger.com/profile/00073061249615869112noreply@blogger.com