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| | Non Est - Volume 9, Issue 1 |
 | | His key is to build worldwide recognition of racial rights, rights that serve to keep the respective races independent, separate, pure, and, probably, trustworthy, brave, and reverent too. |
 | | Similarly, McCulloch disparages individualism as "idiocy" and defends racial groups as whole objects: "individual entities, whether tree or human being, come and go in their generations, but the larger entity of which they are a part, whether forest or race, lives on" (my emphasis). |
 | | Racial preservation depends upon the development of a conservationist ethic for race, or human nature, similar to the conservationist ethic developed for nonhuman nature." He then cites Vice President Albert Gore on environmentalism to support his point. |
| www.credenda.org /issues/9-1nonest.php (782 words) |
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