I feel I’m detecting some faint stirrings of triumphalism amongst my fellow immigration restrictionists.
My boss Peter Brimelow is smiling over at X about an exit ballot from the February twenty fourth South Carolina main. Immigration led as “Most necessary situation” with 41 p.c of these polled. Peter: “VDARE has waited a very long time for this.”
1/2 Immigation overwhelmingly crucial situation in SC, regardless of Regime Media/ GOP Institution suppression. VDARE has waited a very long time for this https://t.co/6A1zjOIy4K
— Peter Brimelow (@peterbrimelow) February 26, 2024
Numbers like which can be good to see, I agree. As VDARE.com’s designated pessimist, although, I really feel certain to supply some phrases of warning. With all correct respect to the boss, triumphalism could also be untimely.
The impulse to mass immigration among the many elites of Western nations is a mighty and relentless pressure, by no means to be underestimated. For ballot numbers like these South Carolina ones to translate into nationwide coverage, you want a Ruling Class that really likes the individuals it guidelines, or at a minimal doesn’t hate them. We don’t at present have a Ruling Class like that.
I’m certain Peter remembers, as I do, the good surge of well-liked assist for British politician Enoch Powell following his “Rivers of Blood” speech on April twentieth 1968. That was the speech during which Powell warned in opposition to the downsides of mass Third World immigration. There’s a good account of the speech and its penalties in Chapter 11 of Simon Heffer’s biography of Powell.
Britain’s political Institution was shocked by the widespread public assist for Powell. Heffer offers us a quote from Richard Crossman, then chief of the Labour Social gathering-controlled Home of Commons, later to develop into editor of the Institution-Leftist weekly New Statesman:
Crossman, summing up the whirlwind of the previous week in his diary for 27 Apri l, famous that Powell had “stirred up the closest factor to a mass motion because the Nineteen Thirties … Enoch is stimulating the actual revolt of the plenty … he has modified the entire form of politics in a single day … it has been the actual Labour core, the illiterate industrial proletariat who’ve turned up in energy and revolted in opposition to the literate.”
(That diary entry of Crossman’s deserves pleasure of place in a catalog of educated progressives (Crossman was the son of a choose, educated at Winchester Faculty) expressing their worry and disgust on the revealed preferences of filthy dimwitted gap-toothed Bible-thumping homophobic commoners, ought to anybody compile such a catalog.)
The polling on Powell’s nice speech? From that identical biography:
On the finish of April, Gallup had undertaken a survey that confirmed past query that Powell had spoken for Britain. Of these questioned, 74 p.c agreed with what he had mentioned and solely 15 p.c disagreed … Earlier than the Birmingham speech just one p.c of these questioned had felt Powell can be the proper man to switch [Tory Party leader Edward] Heath had been there a emptiness … Now Powell, with 24 p.c, was the clear favorite …
On Might ninth, simply three weeks after Powell’s speech, there have been native elections. Heffer tells us that:
Formally, the principle events steered away from immigration. Unofficially, it dominated the marketing campaign. Conservative [Party] candidates and their helpers encountered mass assist for Powell, and located it serving to their trigger.
Hoo-ee! With these nice ballot numbers and that “mass assist” for an immigration-restrictionist politician, immigration will need to have been dramatically reduce in following years, proper? At this time, 56 years on from Powell’s speech, the demography of Britain ought to be little or no modified from what it was in 1968, proper?
Flawed! and mistaken! The online migration numbers (immigration minus emigration) truly crept up a bit in 1969, the 12 months following Powell’s speech. Then they took off by the Seventies and soared like a rocket by the Nineties and 2000s.
They’re nonetheless method greater than in 1968. The online charge for this 12 months is working at two and 1 / 4 per thousand of Britain’s inhabitants. The speed in 1968 was damaging zero level three per thousand—that’s, a web e-migration.
The quantity for unlawful immigration in its most blatant kind—I imply, crossing the English Channel in boats versus simply overstaying a visa—was thirty thousand final 12 months, and it’s on the identical observe to this point this 12 months.
In the meantime these 56 years of null-P—that’s, of ignoring Enoch Powell’s logic and its large base of public assist—have labored their demographic magic. Politicians, educators, and opinion leaders in Britain at present cower of their properties and places of work fearing assaults by Islamic radicals, primarily immigrants or descendants thereof.
One Member of Parliament has already been assassinated by a descendant of Somali immigrants; and that was earlier than the passions unleashed by the Hamas assault on Israel and Israel’s response.
So: A smile and a chuckle over these South Carolina ballot numbers? Certain, I’m smiling too. Triumphalism? Not but.
Chatting with like-minded pals, I feel an extra spur to optimism has been the frequency with which the phrase “mass deportations” has been displaying up currently in information stories from each right here and Europe.
I’m effective with mass deportation as an concept, completed humanely in fact; however there are critical obstacles to it ever being completed.
What if the nation of origin gained’t settle for repatriated settlers? China is already “unco-operative” about repatriations. Venezuela appears to be following China’s instance. Little doubt different nations are too, or quickly will. I suppose we may bribe them; however when you begin doing that it turns into a enterprise mannequin for the bribe recipient.
And what if nation of origin is just not identified? A significant drawback for Europe and Britain is that illegals dump their identification paperwork within the Mediterranean or the English Channel exactly to hide their nationality and thus forestall deportation.
To guage from TV protection at our southern border, illegals coming in to the usA. appear to not thoughts naming their dwelling nation to inquirers; however this might simply change on directions from the smugglers.
Certain, Dwight Eisenhower carried out mass deportations in 1954. That was solely of Mexicans, although; and Ike’s U.S.A. was a lot much less lawyered-up than we’re at present, its citizenry a lot much less addled with pathological altruism.
As my colleague “Former Agent” famous final November:
It has at all times been a calculation of the Left that after an individual is right here, it is rather laborious and costly to deport them. Issues get tied up in courtroom. The aliens have youngsters in the USA, get married and so forth. Plus, typically their dwelling nations don’t need them again, not to mention the logistical drawback of flying somebody to Uganda, Uzbekistan, Afghanistan, or another armpit of the world.
I imagine that if we persevere we will cease mass immigration; however I critically doubt we will ever deport the thousands and thousands (tens of thousands and thousands?) of unlawful settler-colonists already right here.
The damaged ankle is mending OK, many because of readers who’ve requested.
As forecast in my February 2nd Radio Derb I had a date with the orthopedic surgeon February fifth. He gave me excessive marks and graduated me from two crutches to 1, and from that vast surgical boot to a nifty ankle brace.
He additionally gave me a prescription for bodily remedy that I can fill at any one in all plenty of native institutions. Three weeks later, I’ve not but completed so.
A part of that could be a lifelong skepticism about something with “remedy” in its identify. I don’t see the purpose. Psychotherapy? Been there, completed that.
I’ve a house health club the place I can do lifting and stretching workout routines. Is a bodily therapist going to inform me something I can’t work out for myself, or be taught from YouTube?
My reluctance has generated home discord, although. My girl thinks I ought to join bodily remedy. She’s been nagging me relentlessly about it. I do know from expertise that she will be able to, if she persists, finally break my will.
Am I being foolishly cussed? I’d respect readers’ opinions.
Hate e mail isn’t a lot of a factor these days—not as a lot of a factor because it was once when the web was younger.
I nonetheless sometimes get ’em, although. In my February twenty third podcast I handed some feedback a few city corridor assembly held by New York Metropolis Mayor Eric Adams in January. (The VDAREcom editors distilled them into a put up on the web site.) Extract:
The principle level of the assembly was for Mayor Adams guilty his dismal displaying in opinions polls on racism. In assist of that he requested 5 of his Deputy Mayors to face and present themselves.Each one was a feminine. One was a light-skinned Indian girl. The opposite 4 had been light-skinned blacks—mulattos or quadroons, two bearing Hispanic names.
Mayor Adams’ punch line, obtained with a lot applause: “Have you ever ever seen this a lot chocolate main town of New York?”
That bought me the next quick e mail blast.
Moron utilizing phrases like quadroon. The one race is human. F*** vdare.
(My asterisks; the emailer’s orthography and grammar.)
The emailer is mistaken, in fact. “Human” is the identify of a species. Like each different species with populations lengthy distant from one another, every inhabitants principally inbreeding for hundreds of generations, ours has developed races that differ statistically from one another in heritable traits. Pygmies quick, Europeans tall—see?
That’s not good, or dangerous, or a justification for cruelty, or loopy or shameful to speak about: it’s simply biology 101.
And if it’s not shameful to speak about race, we want a vocabulary to speak about it with. The mass neurosis about race that has fogged up the Western world this previous few many years has badly depleted this vocabulary.
Take that “light-skinned Indian girl,” for instance. (Meera C. Joshi, proper)Till the Seventies British individuals and English-speaking Indians would have referred to her as “Eurasian,” a phrase left over from British India. I used to know an aged Eurasian couple in London, each the difficulty of white-nonwhite unions of their native Ceylon. Londoners of their very own era routinely referred to them as “Eurasian,” with no implied negativity that I can recall.
Most likely the usage of that time period would increase eyebrows in London these days. Within the USA I feel individuals can be baffled by it.
Exterior the West, in Singapore for instance, the phrase “Eurasian” continues to be utilized in that easygoing simply-descriptive method.
That “exterior the West” truly wants some qualification. Brazil is within the West, isn’t it? Wikipedia:
Two … surveys made greater than 20 years aside, the 1976 Nationwide Family Pattern Survey (PNAD) and the July 1998 Month-to-month Employment Survey (PME), have been analyzed to evaluate how Brazilians consider themselves in racial phrases … The 1976 PNAD discovered that individuals responded with a complete of 136 totally different phrases to the query about race; the July 1998 PME discovered 143. Nonetheless, most of those phrases are utilized by small numbers of individuals.
Small numbers, OK; however that’s nonetheless a formidable amount of racial identities.
So having mentioned “light-skinned blacks” in reference to Eric Adams’ Deputy Mayors I believed I’d add one thing clarifying for listeners who had been questioning how light-skinned the women had been, so I added “mulattos or quadroons,” extending a imprecise expression to one thing a tad extra exact. How is that mistaken? Isn’t it what language is for?
My descriptors had been no less than extra exact than Eric Adams’ “chocolate.” Not one of the women he marketed had a pores and skin colour something remotely like chocolate.
Caramel, maybe …
The extra phrases there can be found in our language, the extra exact could be our descriptions of actuality. If you recognize the phrase “quadroon” and might tolerate a stern warning from the Woke Police any time you utilize it, you’re higher outfitted to explain the looks of your fellow women and men.
Alternatively the extra phrases there can be found in our language, the extra of our valuable time we have now to surrender to studying phrases. That’s a chore; so whereas new phrases for brand new issues are continuously being taken in, some corresponding variety of outdated phrases fall out of use altogether.
Your go-to man right here is Anglicist Mark Forsyth. (And sure: “Anglicist” with the which means “an skilled within the English language” appears to be one of many casualties I simply referred to, judging from the phrase frequency indicators in Collins English Dictionary.)
In 2013 Forsyth printed a ebook titled Horologicon: A Day’s Jaunt By the Misplaced Phrases of the English Language. In it he organized a wide variety of these misplaced phrases in keeping with what hour of the day you may want them. That’s the “Horo-,” see? From the Greek and Latin hora, “the time of day.”
As a phrase lover myself, I want I may inform you I purchased Horologicon the day it got here out in 2013 and browse it proper by at one sitting. In some way, although, I missed it completely. I’d by no means heard of Mark Forsyth till I adopted a hyperlink in Ed West’s column. Be not idle…, Flawed Aspect Of Historical past SubStack, January 30, 2024
That hyperlink truly involved one explicit phrase from Forsyth’s ebook: uhtceare. It’s an Outdated English phrase that refers to anxiousness skilled simply earlier than daybreak. It describes that second once you get up too early and might’t get again to sleep, irrespective of how drained you’re, since you’re apprehensive in regards to the day to return.
“Uhtceare” is pronounced both “oot-chay-ah-ray” or “oot-kay-ah-ray,” relying on whether or not you imagine Wikipedia or YouTube. In both case there’s a main stress on the primary syllable, a minor stress on the third.
There’s something to be mentioned for both pronunciation. I favor the primary, as tutorial readers of Outdated English most frequently render “cea” as “chay-ah” or “cheh-ah,”
I suppose a declare could be made for the second on grounds of consonantal constancy, because the “ceare” a part of “uhtceare” finally grew to become the trendy English phrase “care.” Consonantal constancy, nevertheless, is on no account a rule in language evolution. If it had been, “Jacob” would by no means have morphed into “James.”
I took a liking to this phrase “uhtceare” and puzzled whether or not I may discover some strategy to inflict it on my household. “Sorry to maintain yawning, Honey. I had uhtceare from interested by at present’s Zoom assembly …”
Whereas I used to be pondering technique, nevertheless, one thing else floated up from the depths of reminiscence; one thing that bought me speculating that maybe uhtceare—the factor, not the phrase—might need deep origins in human prehistory.
What had floated up was the recollection of getting learn, years in the past, some anthropologist’s account of warfare in primitive hunter-gatherer societies.
One of many commonest kinds of warfare, the creator had informed me, was raiding; and the primary gentle of day, when individuals of the enemy village had been simply stirring from their beds, was a preferred time to assault.
A frequent method of loss of life for hunter-gatherer males was—and I suppose nonetheless is within the depths of the Amazon basin or the New Guinea highlands—to be speared whereas rising from one’s hut to take the day’s first leak.
The place did I learn that? Presumably in Lawrence Keeley’s Battle Earlier than Civilization. Keeley says in Chapter 10 that the Auyana of New Guinea “declared that life was a lot better after pacification as a result of now they might exit to urinate within the morning with out worry of ambush” (That bit about getting offed when trying ahead to the day’s first bladder reduction is difficult to overlook, particularly at my age when … by no means thoughts.)
Keeley writes:
The commonest type of fight employed in primitive warfare however little utilized in formal civilized warfare has been small raids or ambushes. These have often concerned having a handful of males sneak into enemy territory to kill one or a number of individuals on an encounter foundation or by way of some extra elaborate ambush. Ladies and kids have generally been killed in such raids …One widespread raiding approach (favored by teams as numerous because the Bering Straits Eskimo and the Mae Enga of New Guinea) consisted of quietly surrounding enemy homes simply earlier than daybreak and killing the occupants by thrusting spears by the flimsy partitions, capturing arrows by doorways and smoke holes, or firing because the victims emerged after the construction had been set afire. [War Before Civilization by Lawrence H. Keeley, Chapter 4.]
Who can be extra prone to survive in such a daybreak raid on his village? A doable reply: Villagers with a genetic predisposition (if there may be one) to uhtceare. So maybe pure choice is in play, making uhtceare steadily extra widespread by prehistory.
Another query: Did the Hamas leaders who deliberate the October seventh raid know the way prehistoric their technique was?
This month I attended a personal discuss given by Francis Menton, proprietor of the “Manhattan Contrarian” weblog. Menton’s matter was local weather change, about which he’s, like me, deeply skeptical.
He poured a lot scorn on the notion that wind- and sunlight-generated vitality, with surplus capability saved in batteries for sunless and windless situations, may fulfill demand. He has studied the numbers and I discovered his arguments persuasive even discounting, as greatest one ever can in such conditions, my predisposed inclination to agree with him.
It occurred that I had that afternoon been shopping the achievements of El Salvador President Nayib Bukele. As I informed listeners to my February ninth podcast:
That is the man who, since taking workplace 5 years in the past, has remodeled El Salvador from essentially the most violent state on the planet to the most secure in all the Americas.How did he do it? By massively increasing jail capability then incarcerating anybody cops tagged as a gang member. Quote from the New York Instances, February eighth: “Since March 2022, when Mr. Bukele declared a state of emergency that suspended primary civil liberties, safety forces have locked up roughly 75,000 individuals. A staggering one in 45 adults is now in jail.”
In the middle of my shopping I got here throughout a number of photos of these gangbangers squatting or kneeling in infinite ranks and information, carrying nothing however shorts, fingers secured behind their backs, heads bowed, in these super new prisons Bukele has constructed.
These photos had been nonetheless hovering on the edges of my thoughts as I listened to Francis Menton discuss vitality era. Instantly I had an inspiration—a stroke of genius which I now provide to the world freed from cost. You’re welcome!
My inspiration: Why not use these tens of hundreds of convicts for vitality era? Working treadmills or pumps for twelve or fourteen hours a day, absolutely 75,000 match younger males may produce sufficient watts—kilowatts, megawatts, no matter—to make a critical dent in El Salvador’s vitality necessities.
What would they be doing in any other case? Breaking rocks? Moping of their cells? Inflicting hassle for the Corrections officers? Buggering one another? Beneath my plan they’d no less than be contributing positively to the final welfare.
After which we in the usA., once we return ultimately to the observe of incarcerating criminals for lengthy stretches of time—as we absolutely should, eventually (please let or not it’s sooner!)—we will be capable of be taught from El Salvador’s expertise and have an entire new clear vitality supply ourselves!
An viewers member who claimed experience within the topic pooh-poohed my suggestion. One individual working a treadmill, he mentioned, may simply barely produce sufficient vitality to maintain a single gentle bulb alight. I feel he was simply grandstanding, although.
Francis Menton smiled indulgently, then moved on to a different matter.
There isn’t any respect for genius these days in America. I relaxation my hopes with President Bukele. Does anybody know the way I can get in contact with him?
Our Tutsi elites, together with their sub-elite of media professionals, are stunningly blind to how we Hutus—regular individuals dwelling amongst regular individuals—suppose and converse. This was on unusually plain show February sixteenth.
The event right here was Invoice Maher’s HBO present Actual Time. Ann Coulter was one of many friends.
A significant information occasion of that week had been the Kansas Metropolis Tremendous Bowl parade capturing on February 14th that left one lady lifeless and 22 different individuals injured, most of them kids.
Maher noticed that: “I imply … we don’t know who did this capturing, by the best way, the Tremendous Bowl capturing.” Ann’s response generated a lot gasping and swooning among the many Tutsis.
Coulter: “Now we have some concept.”Maher: “What?”
Coulter: “If it had been a white man capturing, we’d know.”
Maher: “Properly, we don’t know. However …”
Coulter: “That’s how we all know it’s not a white man, I can inform you that a lot”
Maher: “Do you suppose they had been oppressing [sic] that reporting?”
Coulter: “They wouldn’t inform us in regards to the transgender lady who shot up the Christian faculty for, what, like … a 12 months? Oh, San Bernardino, out right here. Keep in mind the loopy terrorist Muslims? That’s once I first observed: ‘Hmm, they’re not telling us who it’s. Not a white male!’ The longer they go with out telling you, it’s not a white male.”
[Did Ann mis-speak there? I don’t know about other news outlets, but my New York Post identified the March 2023 Nashville shooter as transgender, with a photograph, the day after the shooting. Possibly Ann had a different event in mind.]
Maher: “OK … Properly, we don’t … For this second … for proper now, as of Friday evening February sixteenth … don’t …”
Coulter: “We all know.”
Maher: “We don’t formally know. OK, you know: you’ve got particular powers.” [Laughter, applause.]
Ann Coulter on Tremendous Bowl Parade capturing suspects: “If it had been a white man capturing, we might know” their identities.
The longer they go with out telling you, it’s not a white male.” pic.twitter.com/YwyR0hOMkP
— Breaking911 (@Breaking911) February 18, 2024
As many commenters have noticed since, the reticence of the Regime Media right here was in all-too-clear distinction with the velocity with which we realized the names and races of Kyle Rittenhouse and Nick Sandmann.
Within the Rittenhouse case it was even put about, falsely, that the individuals shot by this younger white man had been black, so desperately hungry are the media for information tales about whites committing violence in opposition to blacks. In truth white-on-black violence is extraordinarily uncommon in Twenty first-century America; however hey, Emmett Until!
Down among the many Hutus right here the factor that Ann Coulter mentioned has been widespread forex for no less than thirty years, to my sure data. I aired that reality in my 2009 ebook We Are Doomed.
Right here I used to be in Chapter 6 writing about violence in colleges and the reluctance of stories shops to report demographic elements in these and different felony occasions.
In fact they very not often do, believing this stuff greatest left unsaid. The idea is, that if not informed this stuff, the good slack-jawed, dimwitted, unwashed mass of People will make no assumptions of their very own. But actually each American can decode the subtext of stories like: “The robber was described as a tall man in his thirties.” Reporters ought to get out extra.I got here dwelling from work on the Lengthy Island Railroad in the future in December, 1993. My practice was proper behind the one during which Colin Ferguson went berserk and shot 25 individuals. We had been held up for a very long time, and there have been no cell telephones. My poor spouse was at dwelling, watching information of the capturing on TV. For all she knew, I might need been among the many lifeless.
Variety neighbors got here spherical to maintain her firm. Telling me about it afterwards, she remarked: “They stored saying the identical factor: ‘It should be a black man. If it was a white man, they’d have informed us …’”) [We Are Doomed, Chapter 6.]
Wait: There’s nonetheless an “allotment group”?
Apparently so. Headline from the London Each day Mail, February 14th: Contained in the green-fingered fraternity that’s descended into mudslinging. Subheading: “How allotment group has been rocked by allegations of bullying, racism and URINATION amongst plot holders.”
For my American readers I ought to clarify about allotments.
Here’s a close-up from the Ordnance Survey, the U.Ok. equal of the U.S. Geological Survey.
The width of the clip, east to west, is a mile and a half. It exhibits the place within the English East Midlands the place I grew up from ages 3 to 18, because it was in 1950.
Across the heart of the clip you’ll be able to, if you happen to peer carefully, discern the phrase “Allotments” with, slightly below it, a construction labeled “Smallpox Hospital.”
Above the phrase “Allotments,” angled down considerably from west to east, is a protracted straight avenue. My household’s home was on the north aspect of that avenue a few quarter of the best way down. If I crossed my avenue heading south and handed by homes on the south aspect, I used to be in “Allotments.”
I truly did this many lots of of occasions. There was no danger to my well being, I hasten so as to add: the Smallpox Hospital had fallen out of use. In any case we youngsters had been too scared to discover it. Our mother and father had issued stern warnings to remain effectively away from the place because the smallpox germs had been possible nonetheless lurking there.
The allotments had been small patches of town-owned land that residents of the neighborhood may use for rising greens or fruit.
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We lived in public housing, and I imagine title to an allotment was included in the hire we paid to the city.
Really our homes all had ample gardens, so I don’t know why we had been additionally given allotments. Regardless of the cause, the boys of the neighborhood had been glad to have them. This was baby-boom Britain: an allotment was an amazing place to get away for a few hours from a home full of youngsters—one in all my neighbors had twelve (youngsters, not allotments).
Having defined all that, I’m now sunk in nostalgia, within the sights and sounds of childhood, and don’t really feel a lot inclined to observe up that Each day Mail story I linked to. It’s there on the hyperlink if you wish to learn it.
“Bullying, racism and URINATION”?
Contained in the green-fingered fraternity that is descended into mudslinging: How allotment group has been rocked by allegations of bullying, racism and URINATION amongst plot holders
by way of https://t.co/Y7QqGb9LfE https://t.co/viKjIzNMXO— TheSentientRejectRobotArm (@RejectRobotArm) February 14, 2024
There was none of that in our allotments. The one delinquency I bear in mind was occasional raids by gypsies stealing our produce and any instruments we’d carelessly left mendacity round. Not sufficient uhtceare amongst our menfolk, maybe.
I’ll, nevertheless, simply add that if you happen to look to the west aspect of that clip you will note Hunsbury Hill, an outdated Iron Age fort. The locals invariably referred to it as “Danes’ Camp,” from a folks reminiscence of the Vikings having parked there of their ninth-century razzia by jap England. (Some uhtceare among the many locals would actually have come in useful again then.)
And on the east aspect of the clip there may be Queen Eleanor’s Cross, erected by Edward Longshanks a while within the 1290s as a memorial to his Queen, Eleanor of Castile.
That’s the way it was, rising up in England: buildings a millenium or two outdated just some hundred yards to your east and your west. And allotments. I bear in mind, I bear in mind.
The USA Junior Mathematical Olympiad (USAJMO) is held yearly in March for highschool college students in grade 10 or beneath. Right here’s a brainteaser from final 12 months’s competitors.
Brainteaser: Discover all triples of constructive integers (x, y, z) that fulfill the equation2(x + y + z + 2 xyz)² = (2 xy + 2 yz + 2 zx + 1)² + 2023
John Derbyshire [email him] writes an unbelievable quantity on all types of topics for every kind of shops. (This now not contains Nationwide Overview, whose editors had some type of tantrum and fired him.) He’s the creator of We Are Doomed: Reclaiming Conservative Pessimism and a number of other different books. He has had two books printed by VDARE.com com: FROM THE DISSIDENT RIGHT (additionally out there in Kindle) and FROM THE DISSIDENT RIGHT II: ESSAYS 2013.