For A Positive Critique
For A Positive Critique
For A Positive Critique
DOMINIQUE VENNER
CONCEPTUAL DEFECTS
The nationals who use the word revolution, without knowing its meaning,
believe in a spontaneous national awakening! They also believe that the army
will move. Trusting in these two unrealisable dreams, considered as the miracle
cures, they do not conceive of the necessity of educating partisans by means of a
sound doctrine that explains the causes of Western decadence, proposes a
solution, and serves as a rudder for thought and action. This is why they wallow
in a series of political maladies that are responsible for their failures.
Ideological Confusion
The nationals attack the effects of the evil, not its roots. They are anticommunists, but forget that capitalism and the liberal rgimes are the principal
agents of the propagation of communism. They were hostile to the Algerian
policy of the government, but forgot that this policy was the product of a rgime,
of its ideology, of its interests, of its real financial masters and technocrats, as
well as of its political and economic structures. They wanted to save French
Algeria against the rgime, but they carried into their calculations its principles
and its myths. Can you imagine the early Christians worshipping the pagan idols
and the communists singing the praises of capitalism?
Conformism
All the nationals have their good Gaullist, their good technocrat, their good
minister. Yielding to an old bourgeois reflex, they dread the adventure and
chaos. As soon as a man of thergime waves the flag, they give him their
confidence. They prefer the comfort of blindness to lucidity. Sentimentalism and
parochialism always prevail over political reasoning. In the vain hope of
satisfying everybody, they refuse to take a side and satisfy nobody.
Archaism
For lack of imagination, the nationals continue to blow the bugle
of Droulde, which does not bring out many people. Programs and slogans are
fixed to the pre-war tricolour flag. From the army in power to negative anticommunism, through to the counter-revolution and corporatism, the national
formulas repel more than they charm. This political arsenal dates from half a
century. It has no hold on our people.
ORGANISATIONAL DEFECTS
The reasons that cause the nationals to deny the necessity of ideas in the
political combat also cause them to deny the necessity of organisation. Their
action is vitiated by flaws that explain all their collapses.
Opportunism
The national notables, members of parliament and others, military and
civilian, are opportunists through personal ambition. The pretext generally
invoked to camouflage their ambition is that of ability. It is in the name of
ability that the nationals have supported the referendum of 1958 and the
enterprises of politicians ever since then. Behind each of these positions, there is
the prospect of a medal, a sinecure, or an election. They can feel the wind and
can become violent, even seditious, when this appears to be profitable. Their
violent speeches do not frighten anybody. They attack a man, a government, but
are careful not to attack the principal, which is the rgime itself. Algeria was a
good springboard and an occasion to make a fortune from the subsidies
generously dispensed, whilst the militants had to fight with their bare hands. If
the wind turns, they do not hesitate to betray their flag and their comrades. The
seat in parliament is not a means but an end in itself: it must be kept at all costs.
The simple partisans are opportunists through lack of doctrine and formation.
They give their trust to the smooth talker and to superficial impressions rather
than to the political analysis of ideas and of facts, they are dedicated to being
duped.
Mythomania
The reading of espionage novels, the memories of the Resistance and other
special services, the stories of plotters, Gaullists and others, plunge the
nationals into an atmosphere of permanent dreams. A game of bridge with a
retired general, a member of parliament, or a sergeant from the army reserve
becomes a dark and powerful conspiracy. If they recruit as few as ten high
school students, they think themselves Mussolini. If they boast that they
command a group of five thousand organised men, it means they merely have a
ragtag mob of several hundred. If, by chance, they receive a letter from a
military institution, they display the envelope with the air of conspirators, sighs,
and silences ominous with implications. They are partisans for unity and have
only bitter reproaches against the sectarianism of militants who refuse to take
them seriously. The same nationals, in a period of genuine clandestineness, are
arrested with lists of addresses and documents, and begin to talk as soon as the
police raise their voice.
Terrorism
The faulty analysis of a situation, the absence of doctrine and formation that
push some towards opportunism, throw others into counterproductive violence
and terrorism. The poor digestion of primitive studies, devoted to certain aspects
of the communist subversion of the FLN, has increased this tendency. The
detonators set under the concierges windows did not bring a single partisan to
the cause of French Algeria. Blind terrorism is the best means to cut oneself off
from the population. It is a desperate act. As much as clandestine action and the
calculated use of force can be indispensable when a nation has no other means of
defending itself, in which case the action aims at making the people participate
in the struggle, terrorism places those using it outside the popular community
and is condemned to failure.
Anarchism
veritable political armies. In October 1922, the army of the Black Shirts was
the stronger and so took over the State. Today, the liberal rgimes of the West
are characterised by a large privileged caste, agents of financial groups, who
control all the political, administrative, and economic levers, and are united by
their close complicity. They can rely on a gigantic administrative apparatus that
rigorously manages the population, especially through the social services. They
hold a monopoly of political power and economic power. They control most of
the media and are the masters of thought. They are defended with the favour of
vast police forces. They have transformed the citizens into docile sheep. Only
fictitious oppositions are tolerated.
At the end of the First World War, communist revolution was an immediate
menace for all of Europe. The danger always determines a movement of
defence: the fascist movements took advantage of it. The only force capable of
opposing the violence of the Reds, fascism received powerful support and the
adherence of a large number of partisans. Today, the factory Soviets,
the Chekas, belong to the past. The communists of the West have become
bourgeois, they are part of the scenery, they are the firmest defenders of
the rgime. The man with a knife between his teeth is no longer the communist
but the activist. As for Russia, the capitalists see a new market there.
Contrary to the first half of the twentieth century, the satisfaction of elementary
material needs is within the reach of all. The soup kitchens, the wildcat strikes,
are forgotten. Save for some threatened minorities, the great mass of wageearners are convinced that they have more to lose than to gain by violently
taking what peaceful demands and time will ineluctably give to them. The yoke
of social laws and the blackmail of credit make the rest withdraw all
combativeness.
Public spirit, civic and political courage, is today limited to a small minority,
whose legal means of expression have been systematically reduced. This takes
us far away from Italy in the 1920s. The personal genius of Mussolini was
sufficient to gather and mobilise a passionate mass and to conquer a State
incapable of defending itself. Such is no longer the situation in Europe and
in France. As power belongs to the adversary, a superior stratagem is needed. As
the great man (besides being nonexistent) is depreciated too much, one must
rely on the team. Quality of combatants, methodical and reasoned combat,
collegial direction demands education, doctrine.
Since 1947, the French army fought to defend overseas territories, was
victorious in the field, and forced into successive capitulations by the group of
political and economic forces that constitute the rgime. It was necessary to wait
until the month of April 1961, fourteen years, for a tiny number of cadres to
discern their true enemies. An enemy who was not so much in the field, under
the guise of a Viet or of a fellagha, but rather in France itself, in the boards of
directors, the banks, the editorial offices, the assemblies, and the ministerial
offices. This hostile sentiment was against a mythical decadent Metropolitan
France rather than the reality of the rgime. This limited realisation was shortlived.
To conquer, it is necessary to comprehend what the rgime is, to discover its
methods, to flush out its accomplices, those who are camouflaged as patriots. It
is necessary to determine the positive solutions that will allow the construction
of the society of tomorrow. This necessitates a thorough self-scrutiny, a
thorough review of accepted verities, a revolutionary consciousness.
A REVOLUTIONARY CONSCIOUSNESS
Nothing is less spontaneous than the revolutionary consciousness. The
revolutionary is wholly conscious of the struggle engaged between Nationalism,
bearer of the creative and spiritual values of the West, and Materialism under its
liberal or Marxist forms. He is free from the prejudices, from the falsehoods, and
from the conditioned reflexes with which the rgime defends itself. The political
education that permits one to be free of these is obtained by personal experience,
of course, but especially through the learning that only study can bring. Without
this education, the most courageous and most audacious man is only a puppet
manipulated by the rgime. According to circumstances, the rgime pulls the
strings that regulate his behaviour: patriotism, blind anti-communism, the fascist
menace, legalism, the unity of the army, etc. Through a permanent one-way
propaganda, to which everybody is subjected to from childhood, thergime, in
its many aspects, has progressively intoxicated the French people. All the
nations under democratic rule are at this point. Any critical intelligence, any
personal thinking is destroyed. It is sufficient for the keywords to be pronounced
to trigger the conditioned reflexes and suppress any reasoning.
Spontaneity allows the conditioned reflexes to remain. It leads only to revolts, so
easy to defuse or to divert with a few superficial concessions, a few bones to
chew on, or a few changes of scenery. And so it was many times with the French
Algerians, the army, and the nationals.
In the face of mortal danger, it is possible to set up a defensive front. The
Resistance at the end of the last war and the OAS are examples. The issue of the
fight was a question of life or death; the physical struggle against the physical
force of the visible adversary can be total, without pity. Supposing that the revolt
triumphs, as soon as the peril is averted, the front explodes into multiple clans,
and the mass of partisans, having no more reason to fight, returns to its familiar
tasks, demobilises, and entrusts the city that had been saved to those who had
lost it in the first place.
France and Europe must accomplish their nationalist revolution in order to
survive. Superficial changes will not strike what is evil. Nothing will be done
until the germs of the rgime are extirpated to the last root. For this, it is
necessary to destroy its political organisation, overthrow its idols and its
dogmas, eliminate its official and secret masters, show the people how much it
had been deceived, exploited, soiled. Then, reconstruction. Not on paper
constructions, but on a young and revolutionary lite, imbued with a new
conception of the world. Can the action that must impose this revolution be
conceived without the direction of a revolutionary doctrine? Certainly not. How
can you oppose an adversary that is armed with a well-tested dialectic, rich with
long experience, powerfully organised, without ideology, without method?
others are Integrists, and all these categories contain many variants. Their only
unity is negative: anti-communism, anti-Gaullism. They do not understand each
other. The words that they userevolution, counter-revolution,
nationalism, Europe, etc.have different, indeed opposite meanings. How can
they not oppose each other? How can they have the same ideology?
Revolutionary unity is impossible without unity of doctrine.
The works of Marx are immense, unreadable, and obscure. A Lenin was needed
to extract a clear body of doctrine and to transform this enormous hotchpotch
into an effective weapon of political war. Nationalism has behind it its collective
Marx, just as obscure and unsuitable as the companion of Engels could be for
the Russia of 1903. It is imperative to create a collective Lenin.
Nationalism is the heir to an infinitely rich body of thought, but it is too diverse,
incomplete, and vitiated with archaism. The time has come to make a synthesis
and to add the attributes, the qualifying statements, imposed by the arrival of
new problems. For example, a documented study on High Finance, or on the
Doctrines of Nationalism, would constitute excellent approaches to answering
this need.
The causes that precipitated, at the end of the nineteenth century, the birth of
Nationalism as a political ideology (and not simply the awakening of the
national consciousness in a narrow sense) have not varied much from that time.
Nationalism was born from the critique of the liberal society of the nineteenth
century. Later on, it was opposed to Marxism, the illegitimate child of
liberalism.
Coming after the counter-Encyclopdistes, after the Positivists, after Taine and
Renan, of whose teaching a part remains in
Nationalism, Drumont and Barrs have outlined the permanent characters of this
ideology, to which Charles Maurras, Jos Antonio Primo de Rivera,
Robert Brasillach, Alexis Carrel, and many others in Europe gave the
collaboration of their own genius. Founded on a heroic conception of life,
Nationalism, which is a return to the sources of popular community, intends to
create new social relationships on a community base and to build a political
order on the hierarchy of merit and value. Stripped from the narrow envelope
imposed by an era, Nationalism has become a new political philosophy.
European in its conceptions and its perspectives, it brings a universal solution to
the problems posed to mankind by the technical revolution.
NATIONALIST PERSPECTIVES
The passivity of public opinion and the cowardice of traditional lites in the face
of the events of Algeria have opened the eyes of all the men capable of
reflection. Often at the price of painful revisions, of rupture with their past
convictions, they regroup around a new definition of Nationalism. This is not the
place to attempt a doctrinal test. Studies and confrontations will be necessary. It
is, however, possible to outline the fundamental propositions.
A VIRILE HUMANISM
The European peoples have built a unique civilisation in history. Its creative
power, despite the millennia, has not diminished. Those who are its declared
A LIVING ORDER
The legitimacy of a power cannot be summarised as the observation of
eminently variable written laws or to the consent of the masses obtained by the
psychological pressure of propaganda. A power is legitimate which observes the
rights of the Nation, its unwritten laws revealed by history.
A power is illegitimate which departs from the national destiny and destroys the
national realities. Then legitimacy belongs to those who struggle to restore the
rights of the Nation. A lucid minority, they form the revolutionary lite on which
the future rests.
The world does not yield to a system, but to a will. It is not the system that you
must look for, but the will. Of course, the very structure of the State must be
AN ORGANIC ECONOMY
The economy is not an end in itself. It is an element in the life of societies,
among the principal ones, but only one element. It is not the source or the
explanation of the evolution of humanity. It is an agent or a consequence. It is in
the psychology of peoples, their energy, and their political virtues that one finds
the explanation of history.
The economy must be subjected to the political will. Let this disappearas is
characteristic of liberal rgimesand unchecked economic forces drag society
towards anarchy.
Also, the immense problem of the economy is naturally part of the Nationalist
revolution. It would be to revert to the mortal errors of the nationals to deny its
importance or to get rid of it by a miracle word also subject to confusion and to
dispute, such as corporatism, for example.
Capitalism has created an artificial world where mankind is maladjusted. In
other respects, the popular community is exploited by a narrow caste that
monopolises all power and aspires to international supremacy. Finally,
capitalism hides under a debauch of new words an anachronistic conception
where the economy carries all the consequences. These criticisms apply word for
word to communism.
The solution to the maladjustment of mankind in a world that is not made for
him is, as we have seen, a political problem. Technical and economic
development does not find in itself its own justification; this is dependent on its
utilisation. The new State will subject the economy to its designs, to make it a
tool of a new European spring. Creating civilised values, forging the weapons of
the necessary power, elevating the quality of the people, will then be its goals.
It is in a total transformation of the structure of the company (we speak only of
the company that financial capitalism has assimilated, not the small family
company which must be preserved and where there is no problem) and the
general organisation of the economy that the means reside to destroy the
exorbitant power of the technocratic caste, to suppress the exploitation of the
workers, to establish a real justice, to find again true economy and healthy
functioning.
In a capitalist rgime as in a communist rgime, the company is the exclusive
property of the financiers in the former and the State in the latter. For the wage
earners, be they managers or simple workers, the results are the same: they are
robbed, the wealth produced by their work is absorbed by capital.
This privileged position gives to capital all the powers of the company:
direction, management, even when they are external and aim before everything
else to make a financial profit, sometimes to the detriment of production and of
the enterprise itself.
The famous words of Proudhon find their full meaning here: Property Is
Theft! To abolish appropriation is the just solution that will give birth to the
community enterprise. Capital will then take its just place as an element of
production, side by side with work. The one and the other will participate, with a
A YOUNG EUROPE
The American and Soviet victory in 1945 has put an end to the conflicts of
European Nations. The menace of adversaries and the common dangers, an
obvious solidarity of fate in good and bad days, and similar interests have
developed the sentiment of unity.
This sentiment is confirmed by reasoning. Unity is indispensable to the future of
European Nations. They have lost the supremacy of numbers; united, they would
recover that of civilisation, of creative genius, of organising power, and of
economic power. Divided, their territories are doomed to be invaded and their
armies to defeat; united, they would constitute an invincible force.
Isolated, they will become satellites, with the certainty of falling, as some have
already done, under Soviet domination. European civilisation will come under
systematic attack and it will be the final end of the evolution of humanity.
United, they will have, on the contrary, the means of imposing and of ensuring
their civilising mission.
Unity does not mean the continuation of financial and political organisms
instituted after the war. Their purpose is to extend the international power of the
technocracy that controls all its mechanisms, and to preserve the political and
economic privileges that are hidden behind the advertisements of democracy.
These institutions bring today, on a European scale, the vices and the words
generated by the rgime in each Nation, and multiply them. In the name
of Europe, the development of these institutions accelerates its decline.
Unity does not mean levelling. Standardisation and cosmopolitanism would
destroy Europe. Its unity will be built around the national realities that each
people intend to defend: historical community, original culture, attachment to
the soil. To want to limit Europe to either Latin or Germanic influence would be
to maintain its division, even develop a new hostility. But above all, it would
deny the European reality realised by Rome and by the mediaeval era in the
fusion of its two currents, Continental and Mediterranean.
To imagine Europe under the hegemony of one Nation would be to renew a
bloody dream of which history bears recent scars. The diversity of languages
and of origins is not an obstacle. Many States are multilingual and the Roman
Empire, which built up the first European unity with regard to the peoples
assembled and their cultures, had Emperors born in Rome as well as in Gaul,
in Elyria, and in Spain.
Europes boundaries do not stop at the artificial limit of the Iron Curtain
imposed by the victors of 1945. It includes the totality of European nations and
peoples. Thinking of unity is, in the first place, to think of the liberation of all
the captive nations from the Ukraine to Germany. The destiny of Europe is in
the East: breaking the chains, overthrowing the Soviet tyranny, driving back the
Asiatic tide.
Out of the European continental bloc, the peoples and the States that belong to
its civilisation form the West. Europe is its soul. Its complete solidarity will
assert itself, notably with the Western centres of Africa. These positions are the
bases for a new organisation of the African continent, whose fate is tied to that
of Europe.
In the construction of Europe, the underdeveloped peoples will find an example
and solutions to their own difficulties. It is not beggary that they need, but
organisation. Europe possesses an incomparable corps of cadres specialising in
overseas matters. No other power could compete with the organisational talent
of these cadres shouldered by the awakened European dynamism. They will take
these people out of misery and anarchy and bring them back to the West.
It will not be economic treaties that will unify Europe, but the adherence of its
peoples to Nationalism. The obstacles that appear insurmountable are due to the
democratic structures. Once the rgime is swept out, these false problems will
disappear by themselves. It is therefore obvious that without revolution no
European unity is possible.
The success of the revolution in one Nation of Europeand France is the only
one to possess all the necessary conditionswill allow a rapid extension to the
other Nations. The unity of two Nations independent of the rgime will develop
such a force of seduction and dynamism that the old system, the Iron Curtain,
and the frontiers will collapse. The first step of unity will be political and will
create a single collegial State in an evolutionary form. The other steps, military
and economic, will follow. The Nationalist movements of Europe will be the
agents of this unity and the core of the future living European order.
Thus the Young Europe, founded on the same civilisation, the same space, and
the same destiny, will be the active centre of the West and of the world order.
The youth of Europe will have new cathedrals to construct and a new empire to
build.
NOTABLES OR MILITANTS
For a Man or an Idea?
The voter, the simple partisan, follows the heading on posters, a well-known
name, the saviour of the day. The nationals like that facility. Passive herds,
they expect everything from the miracle man. Even the small groups have their
idol. The inevitable disappearance of the great man leaves the nave embittered
and discouraged. The Nationalist does not need followers but militants who are
defined in relation to a doctrine, not in relation to a man. He does not fight for a
pseudo-saviour, for the saviour is found in himself. Those who assume the
direction of the struggle can disappear or make mistakes, the value of the cause
is not tainted by this, they are replaced. The militants sacrifice themselves for
their ideas, not for a man.
The organisation must be a community of militants, not a personal property. It
will be managed by officials who will only be temporary spokesmen for
Nationalism. The officials will direct the action of the militants, as they will
have been proven to be the best qualified to serve the Organisation, without
which they would be nobody.
until May 13, certain members of parliament, certain leaders thereafter, are the
illustrations of the infiltration of the revolt by the rgime.
One of the plotters of May 13, Lon Delbecque, shamelessly explained this
method: I was the organiser of May 13, he declared on July 6, 1958, at the
conference of the Social Republicans. In the offices I occupied, I was solicited
to participate in plots often directed against the Republic and the
republican rgime, plots the police knew of but were unable to stop. I managed
to be at the right place at the right time, to divert towards General de Gaulle the
uprising which was to occur.
The directorate of the OAS was full of such individuals who managed to be at
the right place at the right time to commit the revolt to a dead end. If the Secret
Army could have dethroned de Gaulle, the same ones would have enabled
the rgime to traverse this crisis without mishap, as on May 13.
They are skilful at using the confusion born of apparently similar goals. They
know that the nationals, without political education, succumb to the union
blackmail and have a culpable penchant for the supposedly repentant adversary.
To accept their game would be to fall into their hands. It would be to become
their accomplice to be quiet and not reveal them to the entire people. No union
with the men of the rgime! They must be denounced with the utmost vigour. At
this price, the masses will cease to be misled, the partisans will lose their natural
navet and will become educated militants.
The proof is here that five militants are more valuable than fifty weirdoes. The
quality of combatants is, by far, preferable to their quantity. It is around a small
and effective team that the masses will assemble, not the reverse.
That the revolutionary movements are effective minorities evidently does not
mean that all minority groups are likewise revolutionary. It is a too easy excuse
for the mediocrity of some. The effective minorities are not sterile sects, they are
in direct contact with the people.
Destined to fight, the Nationalist Organisation must be one, monolithic, and
hierarchical. It will be formed by the grouping of all the militants won over to
Nationalism, devoted and disciplined. Their age, no more than their milieu, is of
no importance. Be they students or peasants, workers or technicians, these
militants will be in all milieus the propagandists and the organisers of the
revolution.
Depending on the circumstances, their action will be apparent or not. Its aspects
will enable them to ensure the generalised penetration of the Nationalist
Organisation, up to and including the mechanisms of the rgime.
During all the time following April 22, 1961, the action in favour of French
Algeria received a permanent and active support from various groups of
Nationalist tendencies in Europe and even the United States. For the first time,
an effective solidarity united Westerners over the frontiers.
The propaganda means of these groups were mobilised in order to support the
action conducted in France. Newspapers, brochures, conferences, meetings,
demonstrations, support committees adopted the same watchword in all
languages.
Several Nations became, in some way, the exterior lungs of the French
resistance, allowing it to regain its breath. Working groups were set up. The
lodging of fugitive partisans was organised. The rgime understood the danger.
It intervened on the diplomatic level to stop support for the French combatants
and to repress acts of solidarity.
New Blood
The entry of the youth into the political combat, the influence of struggles
conducted in France, the new problems, have accelerated the need for a new
definition of Nationalist ideology as a doctrine of the Young Europe. The
numerous contacts, the exchanges of ideas, the joint conferences have displayed
a convergence of the conceptions of all the European militants.
The last few years, which are an incomparable source of education for the
Nationalists of France, appear at the same time as an unparalleled experience
offered to the Nationalists of Europe. Here is forged a method adapted to the
new conditions of struggle. In the positive critique undertaken by the French
militants, the European combatants will find the lessons that will guide their
action.
TO COMMENCE
To commence, it is necessary to create the conditions for a new, popular, and
resolutely legal action. From this perspective, the last after-effects of the OAS,
which from now on is a powerful asset of the rgime, must be eliminated
because they are harmful.
It is important to develop everywhere and at all levels the positive critique of the
previous action, to work collectively for a new definition of Nationalism. It is
necessary to speak, to write, to explain, to request the opening of the national
opposition press for this work. All opportunities must be grasped and personal
works must be inspired by this concern and this need.
The action of propaganda must be pursued so as to maintain the presence and
permanent explanation of Nationalism. Crying over the past or practising a
policy of resentment would be contrary to the goal pursued. The responsibility
for the abandonment of Algeria lies, not with a misled people, but with
the rgime and the politicians (civilian and military) who directed the national
combat.
In the same way, it is necessary to maintain contact with all sincere partisans. To
aid those who have suffered. To be actively present beside our refugee
compatriots from Algeria and not leave the initiative solely to the forces of
the rgime.
This transitional period must be put to good use for a in-depth work so as to
prepare for the time when the militants, formerly dispersed, will get together so
as to set up the Nationalist Organisation, define its program, and begin the fight.
No, the plots do not solve anything, they are harmful. The plotters resemble the
old maids who meet to vent their spleen and their venomous feelings. Salon
plotters or terrorists, they cut themselves off from their compatriots. They take a
misunderstood mentality, become bad-tempered, and resentment dominates
them. They thus move away permanently from Nationalism and victory.
Theatrical Revolutionaries
It is not the means utilised, but the goals that characterise a revolutionary
organisation. The means, by themselves, are dependent on the circumstances.
Thus, the Bolshevik party used illegality and violence, whereas the National
Socialist party, also a revolutionary organisation, used solely legal means to
conquer power.
Extravagance in expression, the promise of Apocalypse, has never made
Nationalism advance by one step, on the contrary. The adversary finds easy
arguments, the people go away from men who appear like dangerous fools, the
partisans are discouraged or become deformed in their turn.
The theatrical revolutionaries, in their remarks, their attitude, and their action,
are enemies of the revolution. In particular, the young elements should be on
their guard. Dressing in a costume called a uniform, confusing sectarianism with
intransigence, displaying gratuitous violence, are infantile practices. Some
would find the exaltation of a morbid romanticism here. The revolution is
neither a fancy dress ball nor an outlet for mythomaniacs. Revolutionary action
is not the occasion for an increase in purism.
his place, when nobody could replace him in his speciality, where his utility
should have appeared obvious.
The overwhelmed organiser, like the unused militant, concur in the same
sentiment of ineffectiveness and disgust. The one and the other are conscious of
working in a vacuum.
The proven militants exist in sufficient numbers for the future Nationalist
Organisation to refuse craft industry work that will result in suffocation.