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The Wasp Question Paperback – June 30, 2011
| Andrew Fraser (Author) Find all the books, read about the author, and more. See search results for this author |
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- Print length422 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherArktos Media Ltd
- Publication dateJune 30, 2011
- Dimensions5.5 x 0.94 x 8.5 inches
- ISBN-101907166297
- ISBN-13978-1907166297
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Product details
- Publisher : Arktos Media Ltd; First Edition (Stated) (June 30, 2011)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 422 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1907166297
- ISBN-13 : 978-1907166297
- Item Weight : 1.18 pounds
- Dimensions : 5.5 x 0.94 x 8.5 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #140,368 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #70 in Nationalism (Books)
- #373 in Political Conservatism & Liberalism
- #394 in Cultural Anthropology (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Andrew Fraser studied law and history in both Canada and the United States before moving to Australia where he taught law for many years at Macquarie University. He is the author of 'The WASP Question' (London: Arktos, 2011) and 'Dissident Dispatches' (London: Arktos, 2017).
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Fraser's book is primarily a historical survey of what makes WASPS tick- both in England, as well as in 'New' England (i.e., America, and Oz/NZ to a lesser degree). He begins with prehistory, and the arrival of what were to become the "Anglo-Saxon" hordes that displaced (by and large) the native Britons, early on. He then goes through the history of Christendom, from the arrival of Augustine of Canterbury, to Henry VIII, Elizabeth and James, on to the early 19th Century, before changing his focus to the American Experiment, '... for us and for our Posterity.' Along the way, studies of ethnobioligical, and cultural, and religious insights are used to point out the things that once we knew intuitively about ourselves, that actually WERE 'innate' racial/national/ethnobiological characteristics, that should not- and now cannot- be ignored any longer.
Like Avdeyev's "Raciology" this book is one of immense importance to the minds awakening from the "Matrix" of Bolshevik/Alinskyite-like [foreign] racial thoughtmemes, that all but suffocated the real Americans of historic lineage, going back to our country's founding. Not that Fraser seeks to delineate or destroy the Marxist/Talmudic mindset, that has suffused all Administrations since at least Clinton, and even earlier. He doesn't need to. He assumes such a mindset to be antithetical to the WASP's best self-interests, and then proceeds to corroborate the WASP p.o.v as NORMATIVE for the West.
And therein lies the power of this book. While other authors pretend that religion's influence is either unwanted or immaterial, Fraser is a true 'Englishman' who knows that the "Ecclesia Anglicanae" is an absolutely VITAL part of any ethnobiological restoration. He steers a very gracious 'via media' between science, history, and the faith that is the 'glue' that holds it all together. And, from time to time, sentences that clearly implicate those to blame, astound one with their subtlety, while yet lacking no measure of blame, 'to whom blame belongs.'
The book is indexed, extensively footnoted (for minds closed to truth, this is an absolutely essential feature), and laid out very nicely. The book has a sold heft, yet is one that can be read on trains, at coffee shops, and in classrooms. Which it should be. It is not overdone, it is not incendiary (well, maybe to those anarchists I mentioned earlier!) and a very 'British' feel is present throughout, without making it 'untranslatable' to the American audience. But, I warn you. This is not a book for your average Joe six-pack or Suzie soccermom. Seminal books at the end of political/cultural eras never are (think of Augustine's City of God, written at the end of another era of Western societal collapse). But that does not make a book such as this unnecessary. Indeed, this book is ABSOLUTELY NECESSARY for the fight that is already here... the battle for Middle Earth, and the lands of Christendom.
The idea of a "patriot king", taken from the Jacobite Bolingbroke, I find questionable though. Bolingbroke also created the idea of a loyal opposition and hence developed the idea of representative democracy and this served Britain and British descended communities well for many years. Fraser objects that it has made England into a virtual hotel with the native English sidelined as gatekeepers or receptionists. Had he looked north he might have found more congenial patriotic writing in the Scottish republican tradition of George Buchanan and Andrew Fletcher. He also sees Christianity as a solution, but has problems reconciling its patriotic mission and universal moral commitments. He rejects recent instrumentalist and reductionist evolutionary views of religion, but I think he does not quite solve T.S. Eliot's dilemma:
"The last temptation is the greatest treason
To do the right thing for the wrong reason."
But please, do not be put off by my carping criticisms or the stuffed jacket on the cover. Replace the latter in your mind with an image of St George brandishing the flag of St George on St George's day in Middle England, telling some disgruntled lefties that he is no Egyptian deity but a descendant of King Alfred and reader of D.H Lawrence and that they should buck up their ideas and you will have some idea of what is in store. There are also abundant anecdotes about the English in Canada, the USA and Australia. This is an inspirational book: don't miss it!
Top reviews from other countries

The idea of a "patriot king", taken from the Jacobite Bolingbroke, I find questionable though. Bolingbroke also created the idea of a loyal opposition and hence developed the idea of representative democracy and this served Britain and British descended communities well for many years. Fraser objects that it has made England into a virtual hotel with the native English sidelined as gatekeepers or receptionists. Had he looked north he might have found more congenial patriotic writing in the Scottish republican tradition of George Buchanan and Andrew Fletcher. He also sees Christianity as a solution, but has problems reconciling its patriotic mission and universal moral commitments. He rejects recent instrumentalist and reductionist evolutionary views of religion, but I think he does not quite solve T.S. Eliot's dilemma:
"The last temptation is the greatest treason
To do the right thing for the wrong reason."
But please, do not be put off by my carping criticisms or the stuffed jacket on the cover. Replace the latter in your mind with an image of St George brandishing the flag of St George on St George's day in Middle England, telling some disgruntled lefties that he is no Egyptian deity but a descendant of King Alfred and reader of D.H Lawrence and that they should buck up their ideas and you will have some idea of what is in store. There are also abundant anecdotes about the English in Canada, the USA and Australia. This is an inspirational book: don't miss it!
