#164. A gas station gf for every incel
Welcome to the NRP. We are curating the best of those extremely-online extremists known as the "New Right."
🧵Threads of the Week🧵
> Incels of America, are you impossibly horny, but fed up with the fat hoes in your depressed rurality? Perhaps you will find a homegrown mail-order bride in… a different depressed rurality that’s 1,000 miles away? You’ll never know if you don’t try. According to some guy (who blocked the NRP for literally no reason and therefore should not be trusted), you must become a jobless out-of-town drifter, and find yourself a Gas Station GF. Or for a real adventure, maybe a Cave GF. Impress her with your wild masculine spirit, and impregnate that maiden. I dunno, bros, something about this smacks of a boomer telling his grandson that he just needs to #poundthepavement and show up at workplaces uninvited, resume-in-hand, and give the receptionist a #firmhandshake, #directeyecontact, and ask her when he can start. Remember, road trips ain’t free. Is this good advice for sensitive young men? Or just harebrained boomer romanticism of the open road from too many acid-drenched screenings of Easy Rider?
> If a journoid tries to mess with you, give ‘em the ol’ 1-sentencer.
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cautions against being a messy bitch who lives for drama, a road leading to disillusionment.>
explains that not all head coverings are created equal.> Vat-grown, fluorescent civil servant makes it political and then plays dumb when called on it while accusing her critics of making it political.
breaks it down — they are not sending their best.> Aimee Terese saw the best minds of her generation dragged into retarded bullshit.
> Silicon Valley vibe shift: The tech bros are turning their backs on DEI.
> Scearpo does not like the new conservative cartoon.
> RIP God Emperor Peatler. Pour one out for a real one.
🎥A/V of the Week🎥
NRP Cub Reporter Ace helped out this week with A/V and Reads. Thanks Ace!
> Are we all looking forward to tonight’s debate?
> Milo Yiannopoulos explains why you can’t trust uggos to have good ideas.
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interviews on his product, KEYED, a BASED energy drink.> Tucker Carlson interviews
for a mild, noncontroversial dialogue on those urban Americans.>
interviews Dr. Matthew Meselson, the man who stopped Nixon in his tracks. Their discussion includes a wide range of history between military projects and the effort to stop bioweapon programs.📰Reads of the Week📰
> Can the art right find a home in these trying times for true transgressives? Daniel Miller, Pierre d’Alancaisez, and
from discuss. The balance between politics and art devolved into ‘90s era transgressive. What happens when the left’s worst representatives manage it? All are told to accommodate their standards and they lose their edge. Lehrer lays into the art world and encourages dissidents to find freedom outside its influence. Power to the people, because they need us and not vice-versa.> Micah Meadowcroft in American Reformer describes the long journey that Americans face when becoming self-aware of their status as lost vessels of nature. For a while, national identity kept America afloat with Protestant values, but the secularization of the 20th century and “the displacement of the clergy as the foremost public intellectuals of American life” has left men wandering in the modern world.
> How do people with medical degrees declare babies to be transgender?
details the new standard where gender therapists discern a child’s psyche. The results? Selective identities can be self-absorbed and no other critical investigation is demanded. A child with gender dysmorphia means money and clout for many participants, from the medical establishment to parents yearning for online validation.>
in Christian Science Magazine profiles Pariah The Doll’s recent exploits, taking readers on a journey through some of the recent Dimes Square touchstones. After the lockdowns, the scene flourished with writers and podcasters taking their digital art scene into physical space. With viral content and e-celebs aplenty, Pariah and friends are the latest subculture to make a splash in the big apple. But do they really mean it, with all the Jesus stuff? You decide.> Trump was right about too much winning.
has established the battle line that hangs the DR in an awkward balance. Grifters and e-girls (synonyms?) have found success in this expanding ecosystem. So, who’s who, and can that even be controlled? The most popular champions of the DR did not sweat it out with the anons. Is this our movement or the facelords’? lays out how even the far right can be commercialized, for better or worse.>
responds to ’s critique (last one, we promise) about conservatives’ lack of taste. She cites Carl Schmitt to critique the media of television and film as “structurally progressive." Don’t even bother.> Will your daughter be psyopped to die for old feminists? Phyllis Schlafly tried to wake up women in the 70s, but what about today? Boomer feminism met legislative and cultural goals whereas the fight against the ERA became obscure. The legacy of these ladies allows the Senate Committee on the Armed Forces to believe in egalitarian ideology from the ’60s.
> It’s 2024 and we still don’t know what postmodernism is. Don’t worry,
in UnHerd helps readers differentiate Marxism and other five-dollar words surrounding the legacy of Foucault. Turns out the Cold War talking points don’t define the man who walked away from Stalin. Conservatives: it’s homosexuality and Nietszche you’re trying to talk about, not Marx.> Helen Andrews in American Conservative draws parallels between modern America and the Soviet Union. Everything is fake and insane, and the fertility crisis that seems to stem from liberalism continues apace. It can’t go on like this much longer, can it?
> Nietzsche was many things, but was he an incel?
explains how the German critic found himself as a poet with a lot to say about romance. Gay? No, he’s expressing the nihilism of an artist yearning for imperium. He chudded out and his philosophy represents a diary of this arc. Carter frames his life and influence as one that ended in a century that welcomed architecture and music with parallels to his ideas.🐦Tweets of the Week🐦
There you have it, folks. As always, we are publishing All the Shit that’s Fit to Poast, twice a week. Follow us on Twitter to see our take on who posted the top thread, read and tweet, along with lots of other banter and hijinks between issues that you won’t see on Substack.
Encouraging young men to road trip and see the world for what it really is in all of its highs and lows is not an inherently bad idea, but anyone who genuinely thinks there's this hidden surplus of virginal and virtuous maidens being squirreled away in small town gas stations sprinkled across the country like a scavenger hunt betrays that they've both most likely never actually been to a town of less than 20k people and especially not a gas station in one. That's a task less like searching for a needle in a haystack and more like looking for a grain of salt on a beach.
Something something the release of Easy Rider and its consequences have been a disaster for the American zeitgeist.
No idea why he blocked you, but I don't think the guy really said anything too crazy. Didn't we use to be a society of trust where we didn't assume everyone was a serial killer?