Resources
Defending Liberty & the South requires knowledge & effort!
Educational Resources
In order to be useful in the Cause of Liberty and the South, a person needs knowledge. Visit our Educational Resources page to find it.
Activist Resources
Put your knowledge, talents, and inspiration to work through a variety of ways. Our Activist Resources page can help.
The most recent articles written by our authors are shown below.
Was (Is) Public Education Subversive?
In his book The Nature of the American System the late Rev. R. J. Rushdoony observed, way back in 1965, that: “The ‘public school’ movement, or statist education, did not exist until the 1830s. Statist education began as a subversive movement, and its bitter, savage...
Revolution As Religion
Since all things are inescapably religious, it seems to reason that revolution is also religious. And by the term “religious” I don’t necessarily mean Christian. Revolution is the complete overturning of an old order and replacing it with something supposedly entirely...
We’re Short of Oil So Biden Sends It to China
Many of us have contended that Biden’s unofficial policy has been China first America last ever since he got into office. That has seemed to be his objective from day one and I have seen nothing to contradict that opinion. He may prattle on about protecting the middle...
Was Secession Treason? No, It Wasn’t.
Back when he was still alive, I used to enjoy reading Joseph Sobran’s columns. He had sort of a humorous way of cutting through much of the contemporary bovine fertilizer and giving people the truth. Revised History - Was Secession Treason? No, It Wasn’t. PDF Follow...
If You Couldn’t Leave Then Who Would Join?
Professor Tom DiLorenzo had a couple short paragraphs about secession on Lew Rockwell’s website on July 9th. They should still be there. Revised History - If You Couldn’t Leave Then Who Would Join? PDF Follow Revised HistoryProfessor Tom DiLorenzo had a couple short...
What Did the Founders Think of Secession?
It is a fact of history that most people, especially in the South, viewed the Constitution as a compact, by which the sovereign states gathered and delegated (but did not surrender) a portion of their power to a federal governing body. The federal government was, in a...