The Gas Station

E. Michael Jones, editor of Culture Wars magazine, interviewed on The Gas Station. The topics included in this wide ranging discussion include changing demographics in the Catholic Church, rebellion against Logos, migration, social engineering, pornography, economics, libertarianism, segregation, ethnicity, nationalism, automation, cultural identity, racism, and more.

Language, Race, Reason, Economics and More: The Avalon Podcast

E. Michael Jones, editor of Culture Wars magazine, interviewed on the Avalon Podcast. Topics include ethnicity, logos, nature, language, race, reason, economics, Catholics, Jews, and much more. The introductory music is The Neocon Song, written and performed by E. Michael Jones.

The Suncast

The Suncast podcast welcomes guest E. Michael Jones, editor of Culture Wars magazine. Topics include morality, political correctness, political control, modernism, Occupy Wall Street, Operation Rescue, White Nationalism, Catholicism, Jesuits, Americanism, and more.

Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI and Conversion

E. Michael Jones, editor of Culture Wars magazine, addresses emeritus Pope Benedict XVI's article in German in the July/August edition of Internationale Katholische Zeitschrift COMMUNIO ("Mercy and Mission without Regrets") and the resulting controversy, including accusations that Benedict was backtracking from prior statements on the Jews, such as the Vatican II document Nostra Aetate and a talk Pope John Paul II gave in Mainz Germany in 1980.

Anti Neo-Con Report

E. Michael Jones, editor of Culture Wars magazine, interviewed by Ryan Dawson of the Anti-Neocon Report. This wide ranging interview includes discussion of many of his books as well as other matters. Listener Q&A included.

The Public Space - J.F. Garipey interviews E. Michael Jones

E. Michael Jones, editor of Culture Wars magazine, interviewed by Jean-Francois Gariépy, on Logos, and Christian civilization and history. The video includes Q&A from listeners.

Donald Trump and the Russian Mafia

Using insights he got while reviewing the book House of Trump, House of Putin by Craig Unger (see November 2018 issue of Culture Wars magazine), E. Michael Jones, editor of Culture Wars, recently gave a talk in Bavaria, Germany. In this video he discusses that review and that talk.

Ethnos and Logos

Dr. E. Michael Jones, editor of Culture Wars magazine, speaking at the Congeso Internacional Identitario in Mexico on Ethnos and Logos. Dr. Jones discusses this further in his book Ethnos Needs Logos: Why I Spent Three Days in Guadalajara Trying to Persuade David Duke to Become a Catholic.

Ethnos needs Logos, especially if it aspires, as every ethnic group does, to become a nation. Logos, not race, allowed the warring tribes of Europe who plundered the last structures of the Roman Empire to coalesce into the nations that constituted Christian Europe. The necessary preparation for German unity was spiritual, and it took a millennium. In Mexico, unity happened by miracle overnight. Juan Diego's tilma, with its depiction of the Virgin Mary, is the symbol of Mexico, the basis for a Mexican culture that has survived the predations of the richer and more powerful neighbor to the north. Our Lady of Guadalupe appeared as a mestiza, a mixture of European and Native American races. She was the cosmic symbol of the race mixing the English feared since the moment they set foot on the soil of the New World. She was the symbol of Mexican identity. She was the symbol of Catholic race-mixing and the antithesis of England's and later America's and still later Germany's ideology of racial superiority.

Indeed, when it comes to what the KKK would call "race mixing," Mexico is the rule and not the exception. Even the "racially pure" Germans who attended the Nuremberg rallies were a mixture of the Grauthungi and the Suevi and all of the other now forgotten ethnic groups that overran the Roman Empire and disappeared into each other through intermarriage. For the German nation to come into existence, each of those ethnic groups had to undergo what Hegel would have called "Aufhebung," a dialectical process which simultaneously exalted and maintained their identity. In order to remain the same, you have to change.