Excerpt: All That Is Sacred Is Profaned
Read an excerpt of Rhyd Wildermuth’s new book here
Don’t Call Me a Witch
I will shake my hips and the ground will quake. I will open my wings and the wind will come.
Greenish-White Paganism
“we can keep on using electricity and the internet for as long as it lasts but at the same time untying our satisfaction from transactions and possessions and our religion from teachers and prophets from far away and our ethics from facebook memes.”
Many Gods, No Masters
We’re done with ruling and with those who rule, with what they built and all their useless tools.
ANGIE SPEAKS 16: The Pagan & Anti-capitalist history of May Day
“Spring is an Insurrection”
Beltane Musings: The Beauty of Trees
I am an animist, and trees most definitely have spirits. If you spend time outside, you’d do well to spend at least some of it beneath a tree.
Workers Elegy
We swallow antibiotics as indiscriminate as our pesticides
And vote which color to paint our bombs.
Trending Topics Don't Matter
We went through this phase where we thought social media could be the cradle of a revolution, but now that this idea had time to mature we can see it for the passing phase it is, can’t we?
The Wizard & the Prophet ... and the Microbiologist?: 3 Visions of Our Future
Norman Borlaug and William Vogt are, respectively, the Wizard and the Prophet in the title of Charles Mann’s 2018 book, The Wizard and the Prophet: Two Remarkable Scientists and Their Dueling Visions to Shape Tomorrow’s World. Mann presents Borlaug and Vogt as archetypes, representatives of two different visions of humankind’s relationship with the natural world: the one viewing nature as a something to be bent to the will of humankind, the other viewing nature as something to which humankind must bend.
Interview With Yezidi activist and scholar Nallein Sowilo
The Yazidi are an ancient indigenous community, whose ties to the lands in Northern Iraq stretch back to Mesopotamia.
THE PAGAN MUSIC LIST #4
Week #4: The Moon & The Nightspirit, Hedningarna, Seiðlæti, Luc Arbogast
The Importance of Folklore
The Anansi stories hold a special place in my heart, what with my family, or at least the paternal side, hailing from the Caribbean. But there’s another important aspect to not only the Anansi stories, but most folk stories, generally speaking of course. Many of them come from the common people. These stories are born from the shared struggle against the harshness of life.
The Return of the Wrach?
As global warming produces conditions favourable for the breeding of mosquitoes and the spread of malaria (or ague as it was once known), this essay looks at the lore associating it with hags and witches, who paradoxically were believed to cause and cure it.
EMPIRES CRUMBLE, EPISODE 12: HERESY!
Hannah Arendt, bell hooks, Slavoj Zizek...just a few names on an ever-growing list of philosophers that good leftists aren't “allowed" to read anymore because of something “problematic" they said.
In this episode, Alley and Rhyd discuss the “canceling" of artists, philosophers, and other creators and trace the roots of our obsession with right belief to the Christian wars against heresy and the Calvinist obsession with faith over works.
No, That’s Not What Fascism Is
Gods & Radicals is an easy target for a left that lacks a critical space. It talks about paganism, civilization, romanticism, all things running counter to the narrow space that even the radical left exists in Europe and the U.S., and that is where it is at its best.
Hold Steady
“We must survive the night - and all the other nights. We must survive the flood. We must not just survive but thrive in mud.”
Know Your Enemy: A Green Anarchist Response to the Christchurch Shooter's Manifesto (Part 2 and 3)
Part 2: Response
Part 3: COUNTER-ATTACK