Identitarians and others making up the European resistance lack a
doctrine that truly serves as a political and ideological synthesis
of who they are - a doctrine that speaks above parties and sects,
above rival sensibilities and wounded feelings, that brings the
resistance together around clear ideas and objectives, uniting them
in opposition to the Europeans' dramatic decline. Our people today
face the gravest peril in their entire history: demographic
collapse, submission to an alien colonisation and to Islam, the
bastardisation of the European Union, prostration before American
hegemony, the forgetting of our cultural roots, and so on. In the
form of an introductory text and a dictionary of 177 key words,
Guillaume Faye, one of the most creative writers of the European
'Right', makes a diagnosis of the present situation and proposes a
program of resistance, reconquest, and regeneration. He holds out
the prospect of a racial and revolutionary alternative to the
present decayed civilisation. The manifesto's principal objective
is thus to unify the resistance by developing a common doctrine
that unites everyone and every tendency seeking to constitute a
European network of resistance - a doctrine that goes beyond the
old sectarian quarrels and superficial divisions. All relevant
subjects, including politics, economics, geopolitics, demographics,
and biology are broached. As it was for the Nineteenth-century Left
with Marx's Communist Manifesto, Why We Fight is destined to become
the key work for Twenty-first century identitarians. This edition
of Why We Fight contains the complete text of the original French
edition, as well as additional material that was added for the
German edition. Also included is an original Foreword by translator
Michael O'Meara, author of New Culture, New Right, as well as a
Foreword by Dr. Pierre Krebs, Chairman of the Thule-Seminar in
Germany. With a doctorate in political science from Paris'
Institute of Political Science, the essayist Guillaume Faye was one
of the principal theoreticians of the French Nouvelle Droite in the
1970s and '80s prior to his growing sympathy for the identitarian
movement. He has also been a journalist at Figaro-Magazine,
Paris-Match, Magazine-Hebdo, Valeurs Actuelles, and a radio
commentator. For several years he was the editor of J'ai tout
compris (I Understood Everything), a private newsletter.
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