Harrison Pitt is a contributing editor at The European Conservative magazine. He hosts The Forge, a monthly discussion and debate programme produced by The European Conservative.
Multicultural Malice: A Warning Against Good Faith

Multicultural Malice: A Warning Against Good Faith

Race-baiting activists claim that the story of Britain is nothing but a litany of racist horrors, yet they also argue that black people have been the leading characters of this story from the very beginning. Which is it?

September 17, 2023
Can a Christian Care About Demographics?

Can a Christian Care About Demographics?

Christianity envisions an order of distinct nations and peoples without fetishizing race as a point of dogmatic principle.

September 4, 2023
Liberal Creatures in Tory Clothing

Liberal Creatures in Tory Clothing

This Conservative government will be remembered for locking down its own people while flinging the borders wide open—an asymmetric view of ‘free movement’ if ever there was one.

May 20, 2023
The State of Karl Marx, Part II:  Avoiding Anarchy

The State of Karl Marx, Part II: Avoiding Anarchy

It’s imperative that we strive to understand Marx’s account of history and justice, given that it continues to possess so much of the public debate on who we are and what our future may look like.

May 3, 2023
The State of Karl Marx, Part I: <br>A Conflicted Youth

The State of Karl Marx, Part I: <br>A Conflicted Youth

Why did Marx ditch the Bauerian line of polemical criticism and adopt the more revolutionary belief in direct action with which he is now associated?

April 30, 2023
Anthem for Doomed Youth? How Gen Z Can Survive the Culture War

Anthem for Doomed Youth? How Gen Z Can Survive the Culture War

At least among the young, far more rebellious in today’s climate are those of us who, mixing love of country with an independence of mind, refuse to force everything in our culture through the unforgiving woodchipper of identity politics.

March 2, 2023
Words, Not Deeds: The New Measure of Virtue

Words, Not Deeds: The New Measure of Virtue

Virtue-signalling is not new. But it has enjoyed a special burgeoning in recent decades, not least because modern culture sooner rewards noisy displays of passion than less visible acts of virtue.

February 14, 2023
Hegel: The Revolutionary Afterlife, Part II

Hegel: The Revolutionary Afterlife, Part II

The revolutionary afterlife of Hegel’s political thought is proof of the power of a philosophical system, once seized by less cautious hands, to outpace its original creator.

February 8, 2023
Hegel: The Conservative Spirit, Part I

Hegel: The Conservative Spirit, Part I

Is Hegel’s political thought conservative, progressive, perhaps even revolutionary?

February 1, 2023
Occasional Dialogues: Harrison Pitt interviews <strong>Yoram Hazony</strong>

Occasional Dialogues: Harrison Pitt interviews <strong>Yoram Hazony</strong>

In this episode of our “Occasional Dialogues” series, Harrison Pitt sits down with Yoram Hazony to discuss the state of British politics and whether Hazony’s national conservatism movement might be able to breathe new life into an ailing, directionless Tory Party.

January 18, 2023
Whetting the Appetite for Battle

Whetting the Appetite for Battle

Fighting Back does more than simply hope that the dire state of our culture can be reversed. It offers practical strategies, across every aspect of life, for turning things around and emerging victorious.

January 12, 2023
The Real Problem With Andrew Tate

The Real Problem With Andrew Tate

A truly virtuous masculinity would involve men becoming capable of imitating Andrew Tate and then willingly refusing to do so. For what could be less admirable than a man who publicly makes performative utterances against the villain while living vicariously through his exploits?

December 10, 2022