Hello,
Julius Evola wrote in "Orientamenti":
"Our true fatherland must be recognized in the idea. Not being of the same land or language, but being of the same idea is the only thing counting today".
Years before he spoke differently, putting the very Man at the centre. After he returned to the idea. Did the Man disappoint Evola? Probably.
Note also the word race is lacking here. Resignation of a warrior in the age of the wolf? But nobody could deny that Evola was a racist, even if my friend Rowan would prefer to apply a more neutral word; but the self-censorship of the language is not a censorship of the consciousness?
Again in "Orientamenti", Evola added "we will belong to that country that by no enemy would ever be occupied nor destroyed". Obviously he was not speaking of Europe, where we undervalued the mice in the hold of the ship; and you know the mice are quite prolific.
Fulvio