Jump to content

American Renaissance (magazine)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 24.90.201.232 (talk) at 00:13, 20 July 2008 (Removed POV language, OR.). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

For the magazine about renaissance faires, see Renaissance Magazine

American Renaissance (abbreviated AR or AmRen) is a monthly racial realist magazine published by the New Century Foundation.[1]

The magazine and foundation were founded by Jared Taylor, and the first issue was published in November 1990. A main theme of the magazine is a claim that non-white minorities pose a demographic threat to the United States and other Western nations. The magazine argues that the United States' major social problems are due to racial diversity and a weakening of the country's white racial heritage by increased non-white immigration.

The magazine's founder Jared Taylor has been called a white separatist by the Southern Poverty Law Center, a controversial civil rights group.[2]. According to a second controversial civil rights group, the [Anti-Defamation League], in its early years the publication was able to maintain credibility by expressing racism only through a coded, academic veil. By the mid to late 1990s, however, the ADL charged that closer scrutiny, as well as greater candor on behalf of Taylor on his views, widely discredited the magazine's content as far-right and racist in the eyes of most mainstream sources.[original research?]

The magazine's arguments are usually explained using social science and genetics, but one issue of AR featured theological arguments, maintaining that interracial and inter-cultural marriage are racial suicide and an unequal yoking, and that such unions "go against the very community which marriage is designed to establish."[3] The magazine and foundation promote the view that differences in educational outcomes and per capita incomes between racial populations can be attributed at least in part to differences in intelligence between races.

American Renaissance and the New Century Foundation are alleged to have had links with controversial organizations and individuals such as: the Council of Conservative Citizens, the Pioneer Fund, the British National Party, Don Black and David Duke.[4][5]

The organization has held bi-annual conferences that are open to the public and that attract 200 - 300 people. Critics say that some of those who attend are neo-Nazis, white nationalists, white separatists, Ku Klux Klan members, Holocaust deniers and eugenicists (as well as numerous protestors).[6] Taylor has written that the magazine welcomes Jews as writers and conference speakers.[7] Contributors to the magazine and conferences have included Stephen Webster, Michael Levin, Nick Griffin, Bruno Gollnisch, J. Philippe Rushton, Ian Jobling, Glenn Spencer, Lawrence Auster, Richard Lynn, Sam Dickson and Samuel Francis. It is, nevertheless, sometimes conceded [weasel words] that these movements can attract and rouse an unhelpful following that voices subtly antisemitic sentiments, some of which the magazine publishes. For instance:

"Sir — I read with interest Jared Taylor’s article, “Jews and American Renaissance,” in the May 2006 issue. I understand and respect his point of view, but it does not take a “blasted Nazi” to know what certain Jews and groups of Jews, using their enormous influence and power, have done to this country over the last 100 years. They played leading roles in the civil rights movement of the 1950s and ’60s, and they were in the forefront of efforts to pass the Immigration Act of 1965 — the nightmarish demographic results of which we are now experiencing... I would oppose a blanket condemnation of all Jews, but we must be knowledgeable, alert and careful with regard to these people." - John W. Altman (Vol. 17, No. 7, July 2006)

According to the Anti-Defamation League, [8] "The New Century Foundation - known primarily by the name of its publication, American Renaissance -- promotes 'genteel' racism: pseudoscientific, questionably researched and argued articles that validate the genetic and moral inferiority of nonwhites and the need for racial 'purity.' Generally avoiding overt bigotry and stereotyping, many of North America's leading intellectual racists have written for the journal or have addressed the biannual American Renaissance conferences."

The cover story of American Renaissance’s July 2008 issue, “Wikipedia on Race,” [9] charges that a clique of leftwing editors systematically censors Wikipedia articles on race-related topics, removing true statements, inserting false ones, engaging in rampant POV editing and harassment of editors who do not share their politics.

The article charges that Wikipedia’s article on Martin Luther King Jr. lies about King’s many documented marital infidelities and Communist associations. (King’s Wikipedia biography has since been corrected.) The author also maintains that he found errors, censorship, and ideological distortion in 27 other race-related Wikipedia articles, including Brown v. Board of Education, Racism, Civil rights movement, Civil Rights Act of 1964, Racial profiling, Race and crime, Rodney King, 12th Street riot, Los Angeles riots of 1992, 2001 Cincinnati riots, Redlining, De-policing, Duke rape, the Wichita Massacre, the Murder of Channon Christian and Christopher Newsom, Kirkwood City Council shooting, Highlander Folk School, Zimbabwe, South Africa, white nationalism, Leonard Jeffries, Kamau Kambon, Frances Cress Welsing, National Policy Institute, New Century Foundation, American Renaissance and Jared Taylor. The article charges further that Wikipedia editors have worked on the American Renaissance article who clearly have never read the magazine, or who cite as “reliable sources” opinion pieces by journalists who have themselves read only one issue, and mailings by organizations such as the SPLC and ADL that are no more than alarmist fundraising letters.


Notable contributors and speakers

See also

Notes

Further reading

  • "A Convocation of Bigots: The 1998 American Renaissance Conference", The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education (21): 120–124, Autumn, 1998, retrieved 2008-05-22 {{citation}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)CS1 maint: date and year (link). (JSTOR subscription required for online access.)