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Kinism

 
Wikipedia: Kinism

Kinism is a white nationalist and supremacist movement/ideology held by a group of neo-Confederate, Christian Reconstructionist paleoconservatives.

Kinism is defined as the belief that the ordained social order for man is tribal and ethnic rather than imperial and universal. According to Kinists, mankind was designed by God to live in extended family groups. They believe equality is destructive, is antithetical to liberty, and is ultimately unachievable, and that blood ties are the only natural and workable basis for a healthy society not subject to the ideologies of fallen man.[1]

Kinists believe that when God dispersed mankind at the Tower of Babel, he segregated each race. They all are apologists for Southern slavery and the ante-bellum South, and consider themselves followers of the Presbyterian minister R. L. Dabney, who was a chaplain in the Confederate army. They are strict Sabbatarians and are paleoconservative, only they reject capitalism in favor of "covenantal agrarian" economics. They are fierce opponents of industrialism and modernity. Like the Reconstructionists, the Kinists claim to be indebted to Reformed apologist, Cornelius Van Til, who argued that the Bible contains a self-vindicating system of knowledge.

Kinists are advocates of secession, racial separatism, agrarianism, homeschooling, patriarchy, and theonomy, and are primarily Reformed Christians. Many of them hold to anti-Semitic conspiratorial views. They believe in outlawing interracial marriage, and many are members of the League of the South.[2]

Leaders in this movement include Harry Seabrook, Mark Godfrey, Chad Degenhart, and Scott C. Mooney. Winston Smith, a cohost of The Political Cesspool, is a Kinist.

See also

References


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Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Kinism" Read more