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Yockey and believed
As Russia switched to supporting the Arabs against Israel, Yockey believed an alliance between Soviet Communism and the extreme Right could ( and should ) be advanced to weaken the strategic position of the United States, which he believed was controlled by Zionist Jews.
Like Spengler, he rejected the strict biological view of race, instead preferring a spiritual conception of race married with Karl Haushofer's idea of geopolitics ; but unlike Spengler, who regarded the Nazis as too bourgeois, Yockey believed in German National Socialism, and supported various Fascist and neo-Fascist causes for the remainder of his life, including anti-Semitism.
) Yockey believed that Stalinism had purged Soviet Communism of Jewish influence.

Yockey and USSR
Some speculate that Yockey made clandestine trips during the 1950s into East Germany, and possibly even into the USSR itself, attempting to cultivate Communist ties.

Yockey and had
Drawing from Spengler ’ s thesis, Yockey maintains that in the long run it would have been better for Europe if World War II had gone the other way.
As a university student in the late 1930s, Yockey had his first political essay published in Social Justice, a periodical distributed by Fr.
The American Nazi Party of George Lincoln Rockwell, for example, rejected Yockey on the basis of his anti-American attitude, as well as his willingness to work with anti-Zionist Communist governments and movements, as the ANP adhered solely to the ideals of absolute anti-Bolshevist National Socialism, as had been advocated by Hitler.
( Yockey, however, seems to have remained unaware of Rockwell, as he told Willis Carto that he had never heard of the ANP when Carto visited him in prison in 1960.
Another early member was Francis Parker Yockey, who had come to England to seek Mosley's help with publishing his written work.

Yockey and anti-Zionist
Yockey also met Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser, and wrote anti-Zionist propaganda on behalf of the Egyptian government, seeing Arab nationalism as another ally to challenge " the Jewish-American power.
Yockey also met Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser and wrote anti-Zionist propaganda for the Egyptian government, seeing Arab nationalism as another ally to challenge " the Jewish-American power ".

Yockey and under
Francis Parker Yockey ( September 18, 1917 – June 16, 1960 ) was an American political thinker and polemicist best known for his neo-Spenglerian book Imperium: The Philosophy of History and Politics, published under the pen name Ulick Varange in 1948.
Yockey was soon after found dead with an empty cyanide capsule nearby while in a jail cell in San Francisco under FBI supervision, leaving a note in which he claimed that he was committing suicide in order to protect the anonymity of his political contacts.
Yockey, writing under the pseudonym of Ulick Varange, wrote a book entitled < cite > Imperium: The Philosophy of History and Politics </ cite >, which Willis Carto adopted as his own guiding ideology.

Yockey and its
Yockey became embittered with Sir Oswald Mosley after the latter refused to publish or review Imperium upon its completion, after having promised to do so.
Yockey felt that American universalism, democracy and consumer culture, which was by then spreading into western Europe and much of the rest of the world, as well as its alliance with Zionism, was far more corrosive and deadly to the true spirit of the West than was the Soviet Union.
:* Francis Parker Yockey, an influential post-war neo-Nazi ideologist-who argues ( based on Spengler's thesis ) that Western History " took the wrong course " when Germany lost World War II ; in other words, Nazi Germany ( despite all its horrors ) would eventually have paved the way for the transition to " Caesarism ".
Liberty Lobby described itself as a conservative political organization, but its founder, Willis Carto, was known to hold strongly antisemitic views, and to be a devotee of the writings of Francis Parker Yockey, who was one of a handful of esoteric post-World War II writers who revered Adolf Hitler.

Yockey and European
Along with former Mosleyites Guy Chesham and John Gannon, Yockey formed the European Liberation Front ( ELF ) in 1948-49.
Yockey briefly headed up the UM European Contact Section, although he was gone fairly quickly after a fall-out with Mosley.

Yockey and more
After the defeat of the Axis in the Second World War, Yockey became even more active in neo-Fascist causes.
Unfazed by the defeat of the Axis in the Second World War, Yockey actually became even more active in neo-Fascist causes after 1945.

Yockey and be
Many biographical facts about Yockey cannot be known with absolute certainty.
* Kevin Coogan, Dreamer of the Day: Francis Parker Yockey and the Postwar Fascist International Brooklyn, NY: Autonomedia, 1998 ISBN 1-57027-039-2 ( publisher's blurb, Table of contents )-The only biography of Yockey ever written, Coogan's work on Yockey's life is definitive, but the ' facts ' he presents regarding other figures should be regarded with caution.
Willis Carto was known to be a devotee of the writings of Francis Parker Yockey, who was one of a handful of neo-Nazi esoteric writers during the post-World War II era who revered Adolf Hitler.

Yockey and orientation
The first replaced the old Randolph Room ( a center for business, banquets, award recognitions, and orientation activities ) with the modernized Yockey Room.

Yockey and over
Without notes, Yockey wrote his first book, Imperium: The Philosophy of History and Politics, in Brittas Bay, Ireland over the winter and early spring of 1948.
Yockey was continuously pursued by the Federal Bureau of Investigation ( FBI ) for over a decade, which he avoided by adopting numerous aliases.

Yockey and time
Over time, Yockey contacted or worked with many of the far-Right figures and organizations of his day.

Yockey and was
* Francis Parker Yockey claimed Spengler was a pivotal influence on him and wrote Imperium as a sequel to The Decline of the West.
Yockey was one of a handful of neo-Nazi esoteric writers during the post-World War II era.
Yockey was active with many far right causes around the world and remains one of the seminal influences in many extremist right political and racial / nationalist movements.
Although he was a devotee of Oswald Spengler ( who was critical of the Nazis ), Yockey was a passionate proponent of the most severe criticism of Jews, and expressed a reverence for German National Socialism, and a general affinity for fascist causes.
Yockey was born in Chicago, Illinois, but his family returned to their original homestead in Ludington, Michigan during the Great Depression.
Yockey claimed that his ideas about race were initially the result of a car accident, wherein he was assaulted by several African Americans.
Yockey was also approached by the group around the anti-Communist Senator Joseph McCarthy in 1951.
Yockey, called " Ulrich Clarence " in the book, was described by Bardèche as a " lunatic.
Yockey was rather unique among thinkers of the far right wing post-Second World War.

Yockey and United
In early 1946, Yockey began working for the United States War Department as a post-trial review attorney for the Nuremberg Trials in Germany.
* Yockey, Indiana, a small town in the United States

Yockey and .
* Yockey, H. P.
Yockey called Spengler " The Philosopher of the Twentieth Century.
* 1917 – Francis Parker Yockey, American author ( d. 1960 )
Yockey contacted or worked with the Nazi aligned German-American Bund and the National German-American Alliance.
The majority comes from the accounts of those who knew him and from FBI efforts to gain intelligence in regard to his activities, as recorded by his biographer Kevin Coogan in his book Dreamer of the Day: Francis Parker Yockey and the Postwar Fascist International.
His parents were anglophiles who raised Yockey to appreciate Europe and high culture.
Yockey attended at least seven universities.

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