Nedan följer en oöversatt recension av den amerikanska originalutgåvan av The Racial Compact (Det rasliga fördraget) hämtad ur Instauration vol. 19, nr. 10 september 1994. Instauration utgavs och skrevs till större delen av Wilmot Robertson, författare till The Dispossessed Majority som i hög grad inspirerade Richard McCulloch till att börja skriva på sin första bok. För mer information om Wilmot Robertson, se hans recension av Änglarnas levnadsöde.

 

 

A Racial Bill Of Rights

 

If individuals are protected by a Bill of Rights, why not races? All sorts of laws are on the books to prevent discrimination against minorities, but what about the Majority, which is under attack 24 hours a day? Doesn't America's largest population group deserve a break? Richard McCulloch, who has written several books on racial matters, proposes The Racial Compact, the title of his latest work. McCulloch wants to see a universal agreement, something on the order of the United Nations Charter, to protect and preserve all races, not just the ones currently in favor. The author has gone to the trouble of making a comprehensive draft of his proposal. In contrast to the UN's Genocide Convention, which is primarily based on hate, McCulloch's Racial Compact is founded on mutual respect. To lend weight to his idea, McCulloch has come up with a Charter of Racial Rights, one of which asserts, “All races have the right to have their existence and identity recognized, respected and protected...”


What McCulloch is getting at is a legal way to stop or at least slow miscegenation which, he claims, weakens both the number and character of the two races from which the hybrids emerge. In his considered opinion, multiculturalism and multiracism lead not to diversity but to a dull, monotonous overall sameness.
McCulloch’s charter is a racial Magna Carta that will be anathema to anti-racists, whom he calls racial nihilists. His position is that racial protectionism will do much more to bring peace to the world than racial integration. We've all seen what integration has done to the school system. We should be alert to what it is doing to the entire social order. To McCulloch a major threat to any race is one race's interference and meddling into the affairs of another. As he says in his book, “let Poland be Poland, Sweden be Sweden... China be China, India be India.” But this can only be accomplished if governments are dedicated to enforcing racial preservation.


The idea of a racial charter subscribed to by all nations is just one of McCulloch’s interesting insights. Another is his tracing what he calls “racial nihilism” to gnosticism, which he defines as “claiming that the only true reality is non-material or spiritual.” Racial nihilists entertain ethical beliefs and shrug off “factual beliefs” (belief in facts). At present ethical believers practically criminalize anyone who produces facts about racial differences.


McCulloch admits that his concept of a Racial Compact derived from searching for some way to save Northern Europeans, whom he calls members of a Nordish race, both here and abroad, since their very existence has been threatened by non-Nordish immigrants, a low birthrate and an anti-Nordish ideological crusade headed by one minority, which he is careful not to identify.


Everywhere the Nordish people are losing the simmering racial war. New ideas are needed to help turn the war around and inspire a successful counterattack. If put into practice, McCulloch’s ideas could be much more effective than bullets.
The Racial Compact is well worth reading and rereading in preparation for the dark times ahead. Our enemies will find its content difficult to refute. Our potential friends will find it attractive and insightful.