The White or Caucasian race

August 28, 2005

THE White or Caucasian race occupies the western lands of the Old World, north of the Sahara and west of the Ural Mountains. It spills into the Oriental race to the east, to the Australian race towards southern India and to the Negro race across the Sahara desert and the Red Sea.

The Whites have several traits in common, the most important being:

  • Fine, soft hair, straight to lightly curled.
  • Fine textured, pale to light brown skin.
  • Brown to blue eyes; blackish brown to white-blond hair.
  • Projecting, high rooted, and relatively narrow nose.
  • Projecting upper facial skeleton, jutting well in front of the line of the cheekbones, which are -correspondingly- retracted.
  • Hairy body and especially face in the normal adult male.

The White or Caucasian race is also known as Homo europaeus, Homo albus, Caucasia varietas, Caucasoid race, Europid race, Europoid race, Europeoid race. Despite differences in usage, these names are practically synonyms for the White race.

Berbers

Kashmiris

Norwegians

The Four races: their origin and identity

HOMO sapiens is divided into four major races: White, Negro, Oriental, and Australian. There are other races as well, e.g., Negrito or Pygmy, but the Big Four make up 99+% of the species.

The White race has fair skin, fine, soft wavy hair, long beards in its men, prominent faces and noses.

The Negro race has dark skin, woolly black hair, protruding mouths, and flat faces and noses.

The Oriental race has yellowish skin, coarse straight black hair, flat faces with strong cheekbones, flat noses and heavy eyefolds.

The Australian race has brown skin, wavy hair, protruding mouths, angular skulls and a jutting glabella, which is the part of the forehead just above the eyes.

The White race evolved in West Asia and spread into Europe, Central Asia, Northern and Eastern Africa and India.

The Negro race evolved in Sub-Saharan Africa.

The Oriental race evolved in northern China and Siberia and spread throughout Eastern and Southeastern Asia, and in the New World.

The White race is energetic, bellicose, and creative. It has been the most important race in human history, and is responsible for most inventions and scientific achievements.

The Negro race is cheerful and unrestrained. It has been isolated from civisation, and only now begins to contribute to it, mainly in White nations where Negroes were formerly used as slaves.

The Oriental race is restrained and serious. It has been quite civilised, and is responsible for many innovations. It is intelligent but not very creative.

The Australian race resembles the Negro race, but has not made any contributions to civilisation.

An introduction to Alpish racial science

HELLO, my name is Quintus Valerius Priscus. I live in London, England. I study racial science in my spare time. Racial science is the branch of anthropology dealing with the group structure of normal human variation. A racial scientist compares the distribution of traits and abilities in different groups of normal, i.e., non-pathological individuals. He differs from a racist in that he does not believe that any group is superior to any other; he does, however, believe that a group may be superior to another on average with respect to certain traits or abilities. He differs from an egalitarian in that he does not believe that human individuals and groups are equivalent, their differences being accidents of luck or environment with no innate component; he does, however, believe that they should be awarded equal rights and respect.

I believe that humans can be divided into several races, the most important being White, Negro, Oriental, and Australian. The White or Caucasian race can be divided into three major ‘race-circles’: Northern or Nordish, Central or Alpish, and Southern or Sudish. This blog is dedicated to the Alpish race-circle; I believe that Alpish humanity is very important and represents -in more ways than one- what is best in our species. This does not sound politically correct, and it is not meant to be. I aim to convince the reader that my claim is true. You will realise that an objective assessment of the evidence allows no other conclusion. I hope that you will read on, and make up your own mind.