Also, what pieces of media and what personalities do you guys like? Joel Davis, I Hypocrite, and Devon Stack all seem pretty good. Lotus Eaters occasionally leans into respectable white nationalist opinions. My favorite though is Murdoch Murdoch. They lay out a solid foundation for being a white nationalist without being a fucking insufferable retard.
It is not a modern writer, by any means, but Thomas Carlyle is really one of the best writers I have ever seen. His views, although often hidden amongst his prolific works, are essentially what I have always felt instinctively. Even reading his most famous quotes, you can tell that what he says holds so much value, particularly these days, where so much of what he says is completely novel, even if it was sort of commonplace in his day. I think many of his views are similar to those of many leading Nazis, except without dirt and poisoning heaped upon it by modern media, and so he inherently seems more sympathetic and moral. He was friendly with a lot of other people of similar views, but less overtly political, like John Ruskin, Lord Tennyson, Charles Dickens and Charles Kingsley, all of whom were members of the Governor Eyre Defence and Aid Committee (a committee to defend the governor of British Jamaica for crushing black rebels, which was ultimately successful in an era of more sense) alongside him. They are all worth reading or reading about as they were men with great values who were interested in the preservation of civilisation and society.
Similarly, a lot of random Victorian politicians like John Macdonald, the first Prime Minister of Canada, express a lot of racial views that we can learn from. In the US too, things like eugenics and racial beliefs (such as Anglo-Saxonism) were very common anywhere from ugly laws, to the City Beautiful Movement, to Ulysses S. Grant expelling Jews for being unscrupulous merchants during the Civil War (countermanded by Lincoln, of course), to George Wallace's famous speech mentioning the 'Anglo-Saxon Southlands', to even communist, feminist, disability activists like Helen Keller (obviously not a right-wing figure, but just to show how far times have changed) expressing support for eugenics (and even skirting rhetoric like 'life unworthy of life'). Really, as was mentioned in such a tangential place as the
American Krogan review of Red Dead Redemption 2 (sort of a useful exposee of commonly accepted propaganda, in itself), it does nobody any favours to accept the liberal dogma about racial beliefs being some insane, fringe, cultist thing, unless they truly do not care about the truth and accurate history.
Pat Buchanan is very interesting to me, and has some very interesting opinions in regards to the World Wars, particularly exposing the fraudulent hero cult built up around Churchill. He is much too respectable and mainstream to be openly anti-semitic or racist, but he does defend the Confederacy, and takes a very nuanced look at Nazi Germany. I would say he is a very
sensible man, overall (much like Richard Nixon, with whom he worked, and who really did have some
interesting and subtle—not all as aggressive as the Jew count—views on many people, including the Jews).
Madison Grant is an interesting writer, and, although well known, his books are still useful and interesting. It is also good to read about his life, and how he was a succesful and respected conservationist outside of his political/eugenic activism: it helps to rid oneself of the delusion that many leftists attempt to instill now, that all right-wing, 'racist' people are strange, delusional, unstable freaks.
As for more modern people, I have seen a decent video by the YouTuber Zoomer Historian, but I'm not sure how good he is outside of that. I vaguely recall him making a silly argument on X/Twitter once that didn't seem like something a 'historian' should be saying, but he could've known something I didn't.