Alliance does not mean love, any more than war means hate.
Meaning of the quote
The quote means that just because two groups or countries work together, it does not mean they truly care for each other. Similarly, just because two groups or countries are fighting, it does not mean they hate each other. Alliances and wars can happen for many reasons, not just because of love or hate.
About Francis Parker Yockey
Francis Parker Yockey was an American fascist and pan-Europeanist ideologue who wrote the controversial book “Imperium” under the pen name Ulick Varange. He was a known antisemite, supporter of German Nazism, and early Holocaust denier who worked with various far-right groups during his lifetime.
More quotes from Francis Parker Yockey
As a world view, Darwinism cannot of course be refuted, since Faith is, always has been, and always will be, stronger than facts.
American writer (1917-1960)
Rationalism, which is the feeling that everything is subject to and completely explicable by Reason, consequently rejects everything not visible and calculable.
American writer (1917-1960)
To the fantastic mental illness of Rationalism, hard facts are regrettable things, and to talk about them is to create them.
American writer (1917-1960)
Alliance does not mean love, any more than war means hate.
American writer (1917-1960)
If pessimism is despair, optimism is cowardice and stupidity. Is there any need to choose between them?
American writer (1917-1960)
Man as a pure animal does not exist.
American writer (1917-1960)
Pessimism only describes an attitude, and not facts, and hence is entirely subjective.
American writer (1917-1960)
The State becomes society or humanity on the ethical side, a production and trade system on the economic side.
American writer (1917-1960)
The way politics divides the world is into friend and enemy.
American writer (1917-1960)
A moment’s reflection shows that Liberalism is entirely negative. It is not a formative force, but always and only a disintegrating force.
American writer (1917-1960)
The purest expression of the doctrine of Liberalism was probably that of Benjamin Constant.
American writer (1917-1960)
Leftist ideas are a part of the very atmosphere which American youth breathes.
American writer (1917-1960)
The independence of the economic sphere was a tenet of faith with Liberalism.
American writer (1917-1960)
Liberalism is a most important by-product of Rationalism, and its origins and ideology must be clearly shown.
American writer (1917-1960)
Liberalism can only be defined negatively. It is a mere critique, not a living idea.
American writer (1917-1960)
A political theory seeks to find from history the limits of the politically possible.
American writer (1917-1960)
Every science is a profane restatement of the preceding dogmas of the religious period.
American writer (1917-1960)
Every non-political human grouping of whatever kind, legal, social, religious, economic or other becomes at last political if it creates an opposition deep enough to range men against one another as enemies.
American writer (1917-1960)
Hatred is not contained in political thinking. Any hatred worked up against the public enemy is non-political, and always shows some weakness in the internal political situation.
American writer (1917-1960)
No section of the American populace has been more completely deceived by the forces interested in keeping the truth from the people than America’s youth.
American writer (1917-1960)
Liberalism is Rationalism in politics.
American writer (1917-1960)
The early American arrived at a land of which he knew nothing.
American writer (1917-1960)
Capitalism is not an economic system, but a world-outlook, or rather, a part of a whole world-outlook.
American writer (1917-1960)
The 19th century was the age of Individualism; the 20th and 21st are the ages of Socialism.
American writer (1917-1960)
The important part of Marxism was its demand for active, constant, practical, class-war.
American writer (1917-1960)
Politics is activity in relation to power.
American writer (1917-1960)
To an intellectual who is adrift in politics, a theory is an aim; to a true politician his theory is a boundary.
American writer (1917-1960)