This X post got me to thinking:
https://x.com/majur_56/status/1919130431229964319
In the interest in keeping old knowledge alive in an era where digital records can be altered at will, what books do ya'll have, or have read, that were published pre-Amazon, and are worth getting and keeping in paper form?
I admit that my history collection is thin, but I do have some important books, like Locke and Solzhenitsyn.
Spengler's Decline and Fall of the West
The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle
The Canterbury Tales
I still have the physical collection of Calvin and Hobbes and Far side gallery that will be my kids. I regularly attend used book sales at my local library and have a decent collection of original prints including the Nietzsche books I bought in high school.
Everything by David Irving.
-Tragedy and Hope
-A History of Central Banking and the Enslavement of Mankind
-A King James version New Testament and an additional Bible (probably NKJV) including the apocrypha
-Individual collections of the complete works of the most influential authors of all time, such as Shakespeare, Milton, Plato, Aristotle, etc
-the Edda, and other relevant mythological or historical books pertaining to white origins.
Taking away our history and myths is the first step to completely dominating us. Not only that, Shakespeare has been under assault for decades for a reason: he was the greatest. As long as people can remember his work, he will always stand as a beacon that whites can rally behind.