I recently updated the website by removing three Categories. Those are “Introduction,” “War” and “Technology.” The “Introduction” was made redundant by the The Work-Standard Webpage, while “War” and “Technology” have both become their own Sections as part of the same… Read More ›
National Bolshevism
Update (25 October 2021)
Currently, my plan for today is to work on a new addition to “The Third Place.” It is a series of Blog posts related to the conceptualizations of the Socialist Student Economy, the Reciprocal-Reserve Banking System, and the World State… Read More ›
On Hamiltonian Federalism and Friedrich Nietzsche (Pt. II of III)
“Is [Scientific Socialism] merely a mistake of [Utopian Socialism]? Or [Utopian Socialism] merely a mistake of [Scientific Socialism]?” -Friedrich Nietzsche, Twilight of the Idols, or, How to Philosophize with a Hammer, ca. 1889 What did Nietzsche really mean when he… Read More ›
Compendium: Taxation and the Work-Standard (Pt. III of III)
The past two parts of this SMP Compendium should be obvious by now. Taxation under the Work-Standard is going to operate according to a different set of parameters than how they are normally conducted under Liberal Capitalism. The purpose of… Read More ›
Compendium: Devaluation and Revaluation (Pt. I of II)
There may be moments where the Price of a Currency pegged to the Work-Standard may be underpriced or overpriced. Put another way, their Price may not reflect the true Value of Arbeit. A similar problem may occur where the Quality… Read More ›
Compendium: How the State receives Revenue and allocates the Budget
The Vocational Civil Service (VCS) Economy model does not rely on the conventional taxation policies found in Liberal Capitalism. The State receives the Revenue for its Budget from the same national economy that it predominantly owns and controls. All Geld… Read More ›
Ernst Jünger’s Der Arbeiter (Pt. V of VII)
When one thinks of “Prussia,” does one conjure images of Prussian militarism? Where one thinks of “Bolshevism” (or if one wishes, “Leninism”) does one conjure images of the Soviet Union? Or, as Ernst Jünger dared to claim, are Prussianism and… Read More ›
Oswald Spengler’s Prussianism and Socialism (Part IV of IV)
The Spenglerian association of Prussia with Socialism, as paradoxical as it may seem to most people, does have an historical basis. The history surrounding this association is unfortunately too obscure, even though a Prussian origin can be discerned in the… Read More ›
Oswald Spengler’s Prussianism and Socialism (Part III of IV)
A large portion of Prussianism and Socialism was devoted to the “English instinct,” the term Spengler chose to describe Liberal Capitalism. Spengler specifically chose this term, just as he had also identified Socialism as being the “Prussian instinct,” because he… Read More ›
Oswald Spengler’s Prussianism and Socialism (Part II of IV)
Prussia, as a political entity in the world, was dissolved by the Allied Powers in the opening stages of the Cold War. Its territorial claims by West Germany ceased in what can only be described as the Faustian bargain. Prussia… Read More ›
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