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Jared Taylor

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Jared Taylor

Samuel Jared Taylor (b. 1951) of Oakton, Virginia, is an American journalist and an advocate of racialist theories to explain the sociological and economic problems associated with non-whites, particularly blacks, in Western countries. [1] Taylor is the editor of American Renaissance, a journal that describes itself as "America's premiere publication of racial-realist thought".[2] He is the president of the parent organization, New Century Foundation, and a former director of the National Policy Institute, a Georgia-based think tank. He is a former member of the advisory board of Occidental Quarterly. Significantly, Taylor's views have drawn accusations of racism from some in the media[3][4][5].

Born to missionary parents in Japan, Taylor lived in that country until he was 16 years old. He graduated from Yale University in 1973 with a BA in Philosophy, and graduated from Institut d'Etudes Politiques de Paris (Sciences Po) in 1978 with a MA in International economics. Taylor speaks fluent English, Japanese and French. In the 1980s, Taylor was West Coast editor of PC Magazine and a consultant before founding the American Renaissance periodical in 1990. Taylor has taught Japanese to summer school students at Harvard University.

Views

Taylor has questioned the capacity of blacks to live successfully in a civilized society. In an article on the chaos in New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina, Taylor wrote "when blacks are left entirely to their own devices, Western Civilization—any kind of civilization—disappears. And in a crisis, civilization disappears overnight." [6]

Taylor insists that he espouses a doctrine of "race realism". In a 2003 interview with Phil Donahue, Taylor claimed that Central Americans are organizing en masse and invading the rest of North America.[7] He has described himself as a "racialist" and a "white separatist".[8]

Taylor has often expressed great personal distaste over the presence of non-whites in Europe and America. On the greater number of non-whites in Holland compared with Denmark, Taylor has commented; "Europeans travel a lot within Europe, and they see dark-skinned bums sleeping on the streets on Rotterdam. In Denmark they don’t see dark-skinned bums sleeping on the streets, and they are not so stupid as to be unable to understand that immigration has something to do with this."[9]

In January 2005, Taylor reviewed a book by Frank Salter, On Genetic Interests: Family, Ethnicity and Humanity in an Age of Mass Migration, and agreed with Salter that, from a genetic point of view, an Englishman would be better off resisting the immigration of two hypothetical Bantu immigrants, than he would be to rescue one of his own children from drowning.[10]

Taylor has argued that American support for Israel is the main reason for the 9-11 terrorist attacks on New York City. Taylor wrote "..they kill us because we support and finance a country they see as having been illegitimately carved out of the very flesh of their Islamic kinsmen."[11]

Praise and criticism

David Duke has described Taylor as a "a man of immense ability and the courage commensurate and necessary for telling the long-suppressed truths of race."[12]

Former associates of Taylor such as former American Renaissance webmaster Ian Jobling and well-known paleoconservative commentator Lawrence Auster (who spoke at the first American Renaissance conference in 1994) have spoken out against Taylor's refusal to condemn anti-semitism. At the February, 2006 American Renaissance conference, many of the attendees applauded enthusiastically when a speaker said that Israel would not survive its first 100 years. In addition to this, David Duke provoked a Jewish participant into walking out of the conference.[13] Auster responded by saying that Taylor was allowing American Renaissance to be "a home to extreme anti-Semites."[14]

Taylor himself sees Jews as full participants in the work of “race realism:” “It should be clear to anyone that Jews have, from the outset, been welcome and equal participants in our efforts.”[15]

Other critics have described Taylor as a racist and an advocate of white supremacy. Mark Potok, editor of the Southern Poverty Law Center's "Intelligence Report", said "Jared Taylor is the cultivated, cosmopolitan face of white supremacy. He is the guy who is providing the intellectual heft, in effect, to modern-day Klansmen."[16]

In response to charges of “white supremacy,” Taylor has written: “There is no scale on which racial differences can all be ranked so as to draw across-the-board conclusions about racial ‘superiority’ or ‘inferiority’ . . . . It is certainly true that in some important traits—intelligence, law-abidingness, sexual restraint, academic performance, resistance to disease—whites can be considered ‘superior’ to blacks. At the same time, in exactly these same traits, North Asians appear to be ‘superior’ to whites.”[17]

Views on interracial marriage

In a speech delivered on 28 May 2005, to a British far right group, Taylor made clear his feelings on the offspring of interracial marriages when he said "I want my grandchildren to look like my grandparents. I don't want them to look like Anwar Sadat or Fu Manchu or Whoopi Goldberg."[18]

Taylor praised the "high average level of attractiveness" of Japanese women, saying few resemble the "waddling colossi one finds among the American lower classes of all races."[19]

On March 8, 2007, Taylor was asked by a Canadian journalist whether he had ever been involved in an interracial relationship. Peter Duffy of the Halifax Chronicle Herald described Taylor's reaction: "That was the only time I saw you rattled; when that TV reporter asked you whether you’d ever had gone out with a person of colour, you were rattled." Taylor said he was merely "annoyed", because he felt that questions about his personal life were beyond the pale.[20]

Bibliography

  • Taylor, Jared (1983). Shadows of the Rising Sun: a critical view of the "Japanese miracle". New York: Morrow. ISBN 0688024556.
  • Taylor, Jared (1984). Shado obu Japan (in Japanese). Tokyo: Kobunsha. ISBN 9784334960063. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  • Taylor, Jared (1992). Paved with good intentions: the failure of race relations in contemporary America. New York: Carroll & Graf. ISBN 0881848662.
  • Taylor, Jared (1998). The real American dilemma: race, immigration, and the future of America. Oakton, Va.: New Century Foundation. ISBN 0965638308.
  • Taylor, Jared (1999). The unspoken truth: race, culture and other taboos. Oakton, Va.: New Century Foundation. ISBN 9780965638319.

Footnotes

See also