Some Stuff I Think You Might Like: May 2025
“The State calls its own violence 'law', but that of the individual 'crime'.” - Max Stirner, German philosopher (1806–1856)
As has been stated by an ever-growing chorus of increasingly anxious writers, Substack is undergoing something of a transformation of late. With the rollout of features such as Twitter-like Notes and Instagram-style Reels (alongside the influx of purple-checkmarked bullshit artists) the platform—variously heralded as a haven for insightful, longform commentary or a repository of eloquent bigotries—has come to resemble, both in terms of functionality and composition, the kind of attention-sapping, dopamine-dealing social media it first sought to distinguish itself from, albeit with a better grasp of semicolons.
Naturally, this has provoked much consternation among those of us who flocked here during the Great Censorship Surge of 2020. Many have gone so far as to proclaim it the beginning of the end for Substack as a refuge for the heterodox and subversive, and while I no doubt share their concerns, neither am I ready to succumb to their pessimism. Yes, things are changing, and not always for the better. Nevertheless, at least for now, this platform remains the best outlet we have for keen and inquiring minds to find (and critically, to support) the writers who first gave Substack its identity—writers, incidentally, very much like these:
Technology, Transhumanism, and the Great Reset
1. Archeofuturism: The Secret Doctrine of the American Techno-Right - An articulate and ambitious essay by
which contends that the American New Right, through figures like Peter Thiel and VD Vance, has quietly adopted the vision of Guillaume Faye—an obscure French fascist whose work fused mythic traditionalism with technological futurism. bemoans the emergence of a new type of human: the hollowed-out, unthinking conduit for AI, whose reliance on technology to formulate his thoughts, tastes, and even character, signals a broader societal retreat from the possibility of genuine expression.3. Agenda 2030 and Sustainable Development Goals Are On the Way to the Slaughterhouse - Dissecting the U.N.’s legacy as the chief engine of eco-authoritarianism,
analyzes how decades of Agenda 2030 policies are at last facing collapse amid funding crises and a revived push for sovereignty in the wake of U.S. withdrawal.4. Build AI or Be Buried By Those Who Do - The ever-illuminating
divides the AI battleground into three distinct camps—evangelists, skeptics, and doomers—warning that unless the Right embraces these new technologies, it faces permanent irrelevance and submission.World War III
1. Rational anger at Jews - Addressing the topic with commendable tact,
explores how decades of censorship and defamation by Jewish activists have eroded their cultural capital across the Anglosphere, leaving the community increasingly isolated amid rising global hostility.2. Camp of the Feints - India vs. Pakistan - A fascinating conversation from the
podcast which assesses the US-brokered ceasefire between India and Pakistan as well as highlighting the potential of escalation between two nuclear-armed adversaries.3. The Establishment Slowly Wearies of Netanyahu and Israel -
frames recent criticism of Israel as an effort to preserve Western hegemony, claiming that this pivot is driven less by concern for Palestinian lives than by the need to mitigate their unraveling credibility.Vaccine Genocide and Alternative Health
1. First Do Harm: The Hidden Epidemic of Doctor-Induced Deaths -
presents modern medicine as a global death machine fueled by corrupted science and a campaign to suppress holistic healing, one responsible not just for failing to treat patients, but for creating the very epidemics it claims to fight.2. From Dust Bowl to Life: Time to Regenerate our Nation from the Ground Up - Following a deadly 2025 dust storm in Illinois,
calls for a return to farming practices based on a reciprocal relationship with the environment rather than merely extraction.3. Nearly everything that we've been told about genes and autism is wrong - Challenging the dominance of genetic determinism in autism research,
breaks down the scientific, political, and economic forces that sustained this flawed consensus, positing that environmental triggers, not genes, are key to tackling the epidemic.4. Covid-19 and the Vaccination Dogma -
maintains that the US’s aggressive Covid booster strategy reflected not the holy ordinances of Science™, but political theater aimed at propping up the failing vaccination paradigm.The War for Your Mind
1."Voice of God” Weapon: Harassment via Audio Hallucinations for Mind Control (Part 2) -
describes his personal experiences with unexplained “audio hallucinations”—struggles which prompted him to conduct his own investigation into little-known technologies such as low-frequency waves and electromagnetic weapons utilized by the military, the CIA, and other such shadowy organizations. Part One is also available.2. The Language of Control - An insightful and unflinching exposé from
unpacking how terms like “democracy promotion” and “rule of law” are adopted by Western elites not to empower citizens, but to justify regime change abroad as well as lawfare against populist uprisings at home.3. When Feminism Becomes a Tool for Assimilation -
dissects the ritualized performance of contemporary feminism, revealing how its emphasis on moral conformity turns a movement, ostensibly rooted in liberation, into a mechanism for assimilation and self-erasure.4. Chomsky, Epstein, and the CIA - Ruthlessly dismantling the public mythology surrounding Noam Chomsky,
depicts the leftist icon not as a renegade thinker or anti-establishment truth-seeker, but as a strategically positioned mouthpiece whose consistent alignment with official narratives suggests a role more akin to gatekeeper than radical.5. Moral Algorithms -
’s latest piece breaks down how much of today’s political language isn’t about facts, but about signaling moral instincts and triggering subconscious linguistic cues, words used not to describe reality, but to expand power and shape perception.American Civil War
1. The Spectre of Slopulism - Building on critiques laid down by
and , examines how the online right’s descent into performative histrionics and memetic outrage has not only undermined its intellectual credibility but also risks squandering a rare window of institutional power through unseriousness and self-sabotage.2. Enshittification: America's Safe, Meritocratic Slide into the Sewer -
chronicles the slow-motion collapse of American life under a “Merchant Caste” obsessed with efficiency, centralization, and profit-driven metrics.3. America: the Zombie Nation - In a somber meditation on American decline,
laments the disintegration of national unity and civic competence, portraying the country as directionless, demoralized, and utterly bereft of the self-reflection required for course correction.Moral and Societal Decay
1. What the Mormons Can Teach You About Not Living in a Dystopia - In a stark reversal of opinion,
recounts her transformation from outspoken skeptic to unexpected admirer of Mormon culture, touting its resilience, structure, and family-oriented norms as a much-needed antidote to modernity’s spiritual malaise.2. The American Hikikomori - Frustrated by misuse of the term “introvert,”
delves into the growing trend of social withdrawal—particularly among young men—not as a personality trait, but as a symptom of deeper cultural, economic, and psychological decay within American society.3. Celebrating Women’s “Assertive, Pleasure-Centered, and Selfish” Sexuality -
traces today’s trend of women airing their marital grievances on TikTok back to 19th-century free love feminism, arguing that while modern culture has embraced their ideas of sexual liberation, it has delivered none of the promised happiness.4. I Am Low Human Capital, Proudly - Inspired by a personal triumph at the gym,
considers how the relentless pursuit of status through outward achievement leads only to burnout, concluding that accepting one's identity as “Low Human Capital” is the only sane response to a rigged and unwinnable game.International Happenings
1. China’s Tech Power is Overrated - Disputing the popular conception of China as an innovation powerhouse,
shows that behind the headlines of booming patents and high-tech exports lie profound structural weaknesses.2. WTF, Germany?! - Lily illustrates that Germany’s post-World War II guilt complex, perpetuated by Allied narratives and annual commemorations, has been systematically weaponized to stifle national pride and dissent, all while a rigorously pushed "no borders, no nations" ideology continues to erode the country’s culture and identity.
3. "Genocide" Is What "Equity" Means - With the slow-motion genocide against Afrikaners at last gaining international coverage,
accuses the Western media of complicity, declaring it just one facet of a growing ideological hostility toward whites worldwide.4. The March Of Globalism - Through the lens of his personal travel experiences,
probes Uzbekistan’s history as a crossroads of empire and trade, theorizing that this often overlooked region of the world offers a model of selective adaptation, at once preserving its traditions while pragmatically engaging with global trade and technology.History, Philosophy, and Other Assorted Good Stuff
1. The Myth That Made the Modern World -
proposes that the modern West is spiritually and psychologically imprisoned by the memory of World War II and that in order to survive, our civilization must abandon this moral fable in favor of new myths anchored in pride, distinction, and cultural restoration.2. How Fantasy Literature Lost its Soul - Undoubtedly one of my favorite newly discovered writers on Substack,
laments how contemporary fantasy literature has traded the transcendent for progressive ideological obsessions, stating that unlike the works of Tolkien and Lewis—suffused with sacred meaning and moral order—the genre today articulates only a disenchanted worldview obsessed with identity, politics, and the self.3. The Alans - Spotlighting the story of the Alans, an immensely significant yet still obscure branch of the Aryan family,
evaluates their vast and enduring impact on Eurasian history, shaping everything from Roman cavalry traditions to the legends of King Arthur.4. Adolf Hitler and the Zio-Imperialist Mafia -
lays out a comprehensive exposition of how powerful Anglo-American banking interests—especially those linked to the Rothschild dynasty—orchestrated both world wars and even used Hitler as a pawn in their vast, megalomaniacal chessboard.5. The Current Thing is Modernity's Religion - This characteristically compelling article by
contends that, in the absence of traditional religious convictions, fleeting, media-driven preoccupations are being offered—and eagerly accepted—as shallow substitutes, Carl Jung’s notion of individuation offering the only meaningful path out of this collective hysteria.Some Shameless Self-Promotion
1. LATEST ARTCLE: Is The Noticing Being Astroturfed? - It can hardly have escaped the reader’s attention that the movement commonly known as "The Noticing"—a Twitter-driven awareness of the Jewish influence behind global catastrophes and societal blights—is rapidly working its way on mainstream consciousness. In my most recent piece, I examine whether this is a truly organic phenomenon or if, as with so much of the modern information landscape, it represents just another vehicle through which humanity’s controllers can manipulate and exploit public perception.
2. FROM THE ARCHIVE: The Transgender Endgame - As we enter yet another euphemistically titled “Pride Month,” I thought it a good opportunity to resurrect an article from several years ago in which I adopt George Orwell’s famously nonsensical declaration that “two plus two equals five” as a springboard to explore the state-sanctioned delusions of transgenderism, and specifically how these have been leveraged to decouple society from observable, knowable truth.
3. VIDEO: Prophet, Propagandist or Whistleblower?: Orwell's Troubling Ties to the Fabian Society - Continuing this Orwellian theme, this video constitutes my attempt to decipher the author’s curious and ostensibly paradoxical ties to the secretive socialist think tank, the Fabian Society. In it, I lay out the evidence that, far from a product of literary brilliance, Orwell’s most famous novel, 1984 was in fact born of his inside knowledge of the group’s insidious political agenda—an agenda which is becoming increasingly palpable around us.
Awesome compilation, Carson, thank you!!
Many thanks for the mention Carson. Good compilation, there's plenty in there for me to discover.