Nature and the Nation

By: Dylan John
  • Summary

  • Nature and the Nation explores politics, philosophy, psychology, sociology and economics from a naturalistic, paleoconservative perspective, using the format of a book review. I examine books published in a wide array of time periods, with a special emphasis on the early to middle 20th century, the ancient Greeks, and of course the present.
    Copyright Dylan John
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Episodes
  • Review: Industrial Policy for the United States by Marc Fasteau and Ian Fletcher
    Feb 23 2025
    In this episode I cover Marc Fasteau and Ian Fletcher's new, massive, authoritative tome on industrial policy, Industrial Policy for the United States. I look particularly at the qualities of advantageous industries, England's initiation of industrial policy under Henry VII, and Sematech's creation and development.
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    1 hr and 16 mins
  • Review: The Death of the West by Pat Buchanan
    Feb 20 2025
    In this episode I look at how birthrates and population prompt replacement migration, and how it all ties to feminism as described in another Pat Buchanan masterpiece, The Death of the West.
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    1 hr and 18 mins
  • Review: Men Among the Ruins by Julius Evola
    Feb 8 2025
    In this episode I examine Evola's impression of the nation and it's constrast to the state, as well as his discussion of population and birth rates, as described in his primary political work, Men Among the Ruins.
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    1 hr and 19 mins

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