I wrote two pieces about my time canvassing for Republican Brian Kemp’s gubernatorial candidacy in Georgia. (See Red, Blue, and (Ultimately) White: What I Found When Canvassing For Brian Kemp In Atlanta and The Canvasser’s Tale: Kavanaugh May Be Helping GOP.) The CultMarx vigilante group Media Matters point-and-spluttered about the fact that a real racist was working on the Kemp campaign, and then Michelle Goldberg [Email her] emitted a New York Times column—literally titled “We Can Replace Them”—deploring my civic engagement. Having just finished a final push to reach 150 homes this last weekend, I’ll take the time to say a few things to my detractors, and comment on the election more broadly as well.
First off, the Georgia’s governor’s race is close. As I write, Real Clear Politics’ poll average puts Kemp ahead by 1.1 percent. While Kemp has consistently polled ahead of his black rival Stacey Abrams, he has consistently polled ahead of her by very little.
If I had to guess, I would say Kemp will win, but I am not sure. If I were sure, I would have dedicated my last few weekends to pursuits more leisurely and enjoyable than canvassing. This weekend, conversations between myself and Kemp supporters focused entirely over whether or not he will win—basically no policy matter was discussed, everyone is just nervous that he might not make it.
On to my detractors. The one sentence I wrote that both Media Matters and The New York Times’ Goldberg both quoted, with ostentatious disgust, was my rationale for wanting to keep Democrat Stacey Abrams out of office: “I know everything I need to know about what happens when blacks are in charge from Detroit, Haiti, South Africa, etc.”
I wrote two pieces about my time canvassing for Republican Brian Kemp’s gubernatorial candidacy in Georgia. (See Red, Blue, and (Ultimately) White: What I Found When Canvassing For Brian Kemp In Atlanta and The Canvasser’s Tale: Kavanaugh May Be Helping GOP.) The CultMarx vigilante group Media Matters point-and-spluttered about the fact that a real racist was working on the Kemp campaign, and then Michelle Goldberg [Email her] emitted a New York Times column—literally titled “We Can Replace Them”—deploring my civic engagement. Having just finished a final push to reach 150 homes this last weekend, I’ll take the time to say a few things to my detractors, and comment on the election more broadly as well.
First off, the Georgia’s governor’s race is close. As I write, Real Clear Politics’ poll average puts Kemp ahead by 1.1 percent. While Kemp has consistently polled ahead of his black rival Stacey Abrams, he has consistently polled ahead of her by very little.
If I had to guess, I would say Kemp will win, but I am not sure. If I were sure, I would have dedicated my last few weekends to pursuits more leisurely and enjoyable than canvassing. This weekend, conversations between myself and Kemp supporters focused entirely over whether or not he will win—basically no policy matter was discussed, everyone is just nervous that he might not make it.
On to my detractors. The one sentence I wrote that both Media Matters and The New York Times’ Goldberg both quoted, with ostentatious disgust, was my rationale for wanting to keep Democrat Stacey Abrams out of office: “I know everything I need to know about what happens when blacks are in charge from Detroit, Haiti, South Africa, etc.”
America is so divided, even the political clichés don’t work anymore. In professional wrestling, it’s called a “cheap pop”—an unnecessary reference to the home town designed to get the audience to give an automatic cheer. Politicians do the same by praising the history of whatever state or community they are in. But in post-America, the quickest path to popularity among the Left is to bash your own state—and receive the praise of the Main Stream Media for your courage.
The latest Democrat campaign caught trashing its own state: Florida gubernatorial candidate Andrew Gillum. James O’Keefe’s Project Veritas captured one Omar Smith, “who says he went to college with Gillum,” complaining that “Florida is a cracker state” and that the “poor, the middle income” must be whipped “into a frenzy” to drive out the white Republicans. [Gillum makes promises he can’t keep, “that’s not for [voters[ to know, says campaign staff in undercover video, October 31, 2018] Similarly, the staffer notes that you “have to appeal to white guilt” to get Gillum elected. [Caught on video: Gillum staffer makes racist statements and admits campaign is lying to voters, by Chris Pandolfo, Conservative Review, November 1, 2018]
The Gillum campaign has since severed ties with Smith, who indeed attended Florida A&M at the same time as the candidate. [Gillum campaign cuts ties with aide caught in Veritas video saying candidate fooling voters, by Petr Svab, The Epoch Times, November 1, 2018] Yet Smith was essentially telling the truth. After all, Gillum himself cut his political teeth serving as Director of Youth Leadership Programs of “Young People For” (YP4), a progressive training group. The “issues” section of the organization essentially denies America’s right to exist, as it is illegitimately occupying Indian lands.
White racism towards African Americans causes black adolescents to become depressed, to underachieve academically, become violent, join gangs and take drugs!—this is the unequivocal message of a new meta-analysis recently published in the top journal American Psychologist, the journal of the American Psychological Association [Racial/Ethnic Discrimination and Well-Being During Adolescence, by Aprile Benner et al., American Psychologist, 2018]. Everything wrong in the lives of African Americans, in other words, is the fault of the White Devil. I say: Bunk!—what about IQ?
It only goes to prove how startlingly ideological US psychology departments have become. This is not some tendentious misreading of the team’s findings by Antifa or some other group composed of the developmentally arrested. It is actually how the researchers themselves interpret their findings that minorities who believe they are the victims of racism as children display these tendencies. Lead author, Dr. Aprile Benner (herself white) actually thinks this is the simplest explanation….or, at least, she pretends to.
“The psychological, behavioral and academic burdens posed by racial and ethnic discrimination during adolescence, coupled with evidence that experiences of discrimination persist across the life course for persons of color, point to discrimination as a clear contributor to the racial and ethnic disparities observed for African-American, Latino and Native American populations compared with their white counterparts,” says Benner, in an official press release about the study. [Racism Can Affect Your Mental Health From As Early As Childhood, By Kimberley Truong, Refinery 29, September 19, 2018]
We should expect a freshman psychology student—who has learnt that correlation does not equal causation and who has heard of Occam’s Razor—to be able to see the gaping flaws in this study’s conclusions. Yet it seems that Aprile Benner [Email her], armed with her University of California PhD, and even those august luminaries at the American Psychological Association, cannot.
Adapted from the latest Radio Derb, available exclusively on VDARE.com
We're coming up to nationwide elections just as elite hatred of white people—including of course by Goodwhite ethnomasochists—is reaching a new level of intensity.
Just in the past few weeks:
Yes, the Establishment's id has been leaking out of its packaging all over. The hate-whitey forces are now so bold and confident, they feel no need to hide their true feelings of seething hatred towards us Deplorables.
Patrick J. Buchanan turns 80 years old on Friday, November 2. The man and his supporters can now look back and reflect on how right he has been—the election of Donald Trump and the continuing transformation of the GOP into a populist-nationalist party are directly connected to Pat Buchanan and his swimming against the Establishment tide decades ago.
Patriotism and a passionate attachment to America—not blind devotion to a party label (recall his leaving the GOP to run as the Reform Party’s candidate in 2000: Buchanan joked that he was “Free at last, free at last!” [Buchanan's Reform Tour Is Snubbed by Ventura, by Francis X. Clines, New York Times, October 29, 1999]) or “true conservatism”—have been Pat’s guiding lights.
Tom Piatak wrote in VDARE.com’s on Pat’s 70th and 75th birthday (at 70 and 75). The headlines telegraphed the story: “He Told You So, You F****ing Fools!” and “Now, More Than Ever, Entitled to Say ‘I Told You So!” The Republican Establishment, playing its familiar and no doubt, comfortable role of “beautiful losers” was quite content to lose, if not throw, elections to President Hope and Change. Thus the late Senator John McCain noted how honored he was to concede the 2008 election to his esteemed colleague Barack Obama, a candidate the “maverick” McCain studiously avoided criticizing. [Transcript Of John McCain's Concession Speech, November 5, 2008]. So went the “Stupid Party” at the peak—or was it at the twilight?—of its conspicuous stupidity, content with its duplicitous niche in the Kabuki theater of Beltway politics.