Alternative media outlets of the Left and Right have become a crucial supplement to our knowledge of the world, providing those perspectives usually ignored by our mainstream media. This small webzine will aim to provide convenient access to at least a fraction of those voices and topics.
MastheadEditor-in-Chief and Publisher: Ron Unz
National Security Editor: Philip Giraldi
Mission StatementFor decades I have spent a couple of hours every morning carefully reading The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, and several other major newspapers. But although such a detailed study of the American mainstream media is a necessary condition for remaining informed about our world, it is not sufficient. With the rise of the Internet and the alternative media, every thinking individual has increasingly recognized that there exist enormous lacunae in what our media tells us and disturbing patterns in what is regularly ignored or concealed.
In April 2013 I published “Our American Pravda,” a major article highlighting some of the most disturbing omissions of our national media in issues of the greatest national importance. The considerable attention it attracted from The Atlantic, Forbes, and a New York Times economics columnist demonstrated that the mainstream journalists themselves were often all too aware of these problems, but perhaps found them too difficult to address within the confining structure of large media organizations. This reinforced my belief in the reality of the serious condition I had diagnosed.
In an attempt to partially remedy this disturbing situation I will be regularly publishing on this website a selection of the sort of interesting, important, and controversial perspectives that rarely if ever reach the pages of our major newspapers or the pixels of our television sets. The handful of columnists and bloggers whose work I am herein providing represent merely the smallest slice of the enormous range of unconventional ideas that lie just a mouse-click or a Google search away from each of us, and my particular selection is certainly not intended to be comprehensive. But over the years I have regularly read the writings of all these individuals and found their ideas stimulating and useful, and I believe that many others might have the same reaction.
This is not to say that I personally agree with all or even most of what these writers believe or claim. However, sometimes the most valuable insights are obtained by reading opinions sharply divergent from one’s own. Facing a sharp intellectual or ideological challenge forces us to more effectively frame our arguments and buttress the weaknesses in our logic and evidence that had previously remained unnoticed. Taking the measure of an effective critic is always more valuable than listening to a mindless echo. And I would always prefer reading something disturbing than something dull.
Ron Unz, Editor-in-Chief and Publisher
The Unz Review: An Alternative Media Selection
Can I republish the articles on this website?
The articles and columns that appear here are under legal copyright and the authors or their representatives have merely granted The Unz Review the right to publish them. The underlying copyrights are still controlled by the existing holders, and only they can authorize republication elsewhere.
Does The Unz Review stand behind all the controversial claims made in the articles it publishes?
Absolutely not! In any event, that would be a logical impossibility, since so many of the writers and their arguments directly contradict one another. Each reader must carefully weigh the logic and evidence backing the viewpoint of each author and decide for himself how much—or how little—of the material to accept. Thinking for yourself is difficult but necessary. However, as publisher of The Unz Review, I do fully stand behind my own past writings, and over the years the corpus of my work has grown to include numerous major articles across a wide range of topics presenting ideas at least as controversial as almost anything else published on this website. Here’s a lengthy list of these highly contentious articles, which certainly offer any angry critics as “target-rich” an environment as they could possibly desire:
- How to Grab the Immigration Issue, The Wall Street Journal, May 1994, 1,000 words
- Immigration or the Welfare State?, Policy Review, September 1994, 4,200 words
- Educational Nonsense and Vouchers, The Sacramento Bee, January 1999, 1,700 words
- The Right Kind of Outreach for the GOP, The Weekly Standard, March 1999, 2,600 words
- Voucher Veto, The Nation, May 1999, 1,100 words
- Federalism vs. Roe vs. Wade, The Wall Street Journal, June 16, 1999, 800 words
- California and the End of White America, Commentary, October 1999, 8,700 words
- Gay Marriages Today, Polygamy Tomorrow?, The San Francisco Chronicle, October 8, 1999, 700 words
- The Right Way for Republicans to Handle Ethnicity in Politics, The American Enterprise, April 2000, 3,200 words
- How the Republicans Lost California, The Wall Street Journal, August 2000, 1,300 words
- Sharonism vs. Building a Wall, The Sacramento Bee, April 2002, 1,600 words
- Taking Stock, The Los Angeles Times, August 2002, 900 words
- The Life and Legacy of Lt. Gen. William Odom, The American Conservative, September 2008, 2,400 words
- The Myth of Hispanic Crime, The American Conservative, January 2010, 5,600 words
- Was Rambo Right?, The American Conservative, May 2010, 1,300 words
- Immigration, Republicans, and the End of the White America, The American Conservative, September 2011. 12,200 words
- China’s Rise, America’s Fall, The American Conservative, April 2012, 7,000 words
- Chinese Melamine and American Vioxx: A Comparison, The American Conservative, April 2012, 1,800 words
- Race, IQ, and Wealth, The American Conservative, July 2012, 7,600 words
- Two Cheers for Heresy on Global Warming, The American Conservative, September 2012, 1,100 words
- Raising American Wages…by Raising American Wages, The New America Foundation, November 2012, 3,100 words
- The Myth of American Meritocracy, The American Conservative, December 2012, 22,300 words
- Paying Tuition to a Giant Hedge Fund, The American Conservative, December 2012, 1,300 words
- Asian-American Quotas in the Ivy League?, The New York Times, December 2012, 700 words
- Racial Quotas, Harvard, and the Legacy of Bakke, National Review Online, February 2013, 800 words
- How Social Darwinism Made Modern China, The American Conservative, March 2013, 6,800 words
- Our American Pravda, The American Conservative, April 2013, 4,500 words
- No Immigration Amnesty Without a Minimum Wage Hike, Salon, May 2013, 700 words
- Race and Crime in America, The Unz Review, July 2013, 7,300 words
- Raise the Minimum Wage to $12 an Hour, The New York Times, December 2013, 600 words
- What’s Good for America is Good for Wal-Mart, and Vice-Versa, Forbes, February 2014, 1,100 words
- American Pravda: When “Tokyo Rose” Ran for President, The Unz Review, March 2015, 4,100 words
Is The Unz Review “rightwing” or “leftwing”?
Neither and both. Many of the writers we publish are commonly regarded as having a very clear position on the political spectrum and often an extreme one. However, that is largely due to the misconception that ideological perspectives may usefully be measured along a simple, linear axis, and this is obviously false, with the space of such ideas actually having very high dimensionality. Furthermore, although mindless political automatons—or syndicated political hacks— may indeed often possess views that constitute an indivisible political package, received from some external media outlet, the thoughtful and courageous individuals we tend to publish often immune from such failings. They come to their own conclusions, and those conclusions rarely fall into a single, discrete political camp.
Who is Ron Unz?
I’m a theoretical physicist by training, with undergraduate and graduate degrees from Harvard University, Cambridge University, and Stanford University. In the late 1980s, I entered the financial services software industry, and soon founded Wall Street Analytics, Inc., a small but successful company in that field. A few years later, I became strongly involved in politics and public policy writing, and I have subsequently oscillated between software and public policy activities. Below are links to several major media profiles from the late 1990s, chronicling my activities to that point. I also served as publisher of The American Conservative, a small opinion magazine, from 2006 to 2013. Most recently, in late 2013 I launched an initiative campaign to raise the minimum wage to $12.00 per hour in California and the rest of the country, based on ideas I had previously published on the subject, and this is discussed in the linked New York Times article. Unfortunately, my campaign was unsuccessful, with more of the details available here.
- This Man Controls California
The New Republic, Monday, July 19, 1999, COVER STORY - The California Entrepreneur who Beat Bilingual Teaching
The New York Times, Sunday, June 14, 1998, FRONT PAGE - Hooked on Politics
The Los Angeles Times, Thursday, July 16, 1998 - Ron Unz, swim instructor
The Economist, Saturday, May 2, 1998 - Conservative Leads Effort to Raise Minimum Wage in California
The New York Times, Tuesday, November 26, 2013
The Unz Review intends to moderate comments with a relatively light hand, believing that knowledge is best obtained through the open clash of conflicting ideas. However, comments and commentators that focus on topics unrelated to the article in question, who substantially indulge in profanities or personal attacks, who advocate illegal activity, or whose grammar or spelling constitutes an embarrassment will not be tolerated. Individuals should also avoid cluttering up threads with repetitious or completely non-substantive remarks; craft your comments carefully. Please avoid multiple, successive remarks on a given thread. Spending a bit more time and thought in order to produce a single, more comprehensive comment is much better for everyone.
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