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Among the various reasons to turn to Nationalism, one of the most fundamental is a feeling of reverence for the blood of your people and the ground beneath your feet. At the most basic level, a nation is a shared people, in a shared land, with a perceived sense of continuity: a sense that “we are the same people across time, the same as we have been and as we will be.”
We discuss the idea of blood and soil in American Nationalism, what it means to be the American people, and briefly defend the idea of American soil.
Intro Song: Dvorak String Quartet No. 12 in F Major, Op. 96, American - I. Allegro
Recorded, produced, and released to the public by: The Musopen Kickstarter Project
Downloaded through Classicals.De
Creative Commons - Public Domain Mark 1.0 Universal
By Joshua BianchiAmong the various reasons to turn to Nationalism, one of the most fundamental is a feeling of reverence for the blood of your people and the ground beneath your feet. At the most basic level, a nation is a shared people, in a shared land, with a perceived sense of continuity: a sense that “we are the same people across time, the same as we have been and as we will be.”
We discuss the idea of blood and soil in American Nationalism, what it means to be the American people, and briefly defend the idea of American soil.
Intro Song: Dvorak String Quartet No. 12 in F Major, Op. 96, American - I. Allegro
Recorded, produced, and released to the public by: The Musopen Kickstarter Project
Downloaded through Classicals.De
Creative Commons - Public Domain Mark 1.0 Universal