Except for a few individuals with a “bad guy” complex (the same people who derive some sort of pleasure from being labeled intolerant, xenophobic, and homophobic), generally speaking, no one in Western societies likes to be accused of being discriminatory. Discrimination is regarded as something negative, and no one wants to be accused of something negative. (more…)
Tag: discrimination
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It is the norm in America to ascribe racial disparities to discrimination. However, this is a shallow argument that collapses under scrutiny. If racism were the primary force impeding the success of blacks, we would expect clear, consistent evidence of its impact across different areas of life. (more…)
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Harry Richardson & Frank Salter
Anglophobia: The Unrecognised Hatred
Social Technologies, 2023White advocacy in literature can take many forms, both implicit and explicit. With Anglophobia: The Unrecognised Hatred, authors Harry Richardson and Frank Salter choose the explicit — as the book’s title would suggest. Unlike other works in the dissident Right canon, however, this excellent volume catalogues and itemizes anti-white hatred into a consistent, durable, and easily-understood notion. (more…)
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J. K. Rowling, the beloved author of the Harry Potter series of young adult novels, has come under considerable social scorn for her anti-trans stance. She’s had to return awards, has caused firestorms on Twitter, has been threatened by trans women, and has even been cancelled by the Harry Potter franchise that she created. (more…)
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2,468 words
To understand the term “institutional racism” as a political device, one needs to distinguish its natural from its anti-racist meaning. For most people it denotes pervasive racial discrimination in an institution, but in its anti-racist meaning it denotes the opposite: namely, an institution’s practice of treating all the same without regard to race. How can this be? (more…)
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At last Congress is stepping up to deal with the real problem plaguing America: the need to protect black people who keep their hair in dreadlocks.
1,729 words
There’s been a lot going on in the world. The last few years have been a very bumpy ride, and with no signs of abating. Lately, the illegitimate occupant of the White House rapidly undid three and a half decades of progress toward détente with Russia and reignited the Cold War. We have lots of other fine messes, of course: inflation the highest since the Carter Quarters days, turbulence in the stock market, soaring fuel prices, and so forth. A food shortage may possibly be the next engineered crisis. None of that is going to matter much if the mentally incompetent Resident Bidet gets the bright idea to push the Big Red Button, however. (more…)




