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George McDaniel - A Race Against Time - Racial Heresies for the 21st Century(2003) PDF

493 Pages·2003·2.563 MB·English
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A Race Against Time Racial Heresies for the 21st Century Edited by George McDaniel Foreword by Jared Taylor New Century Foundation Other titles from New Century Books: Jared Taylor, Ed., The Real American Dilemma: Race, Immigration, and the Future of America, 1998 Michael Levin, Why Race Matters: Race Differences and What They Mean, 2005 Carleton Putnam, Race and Reason: A Yankee View, 2006 Samuel T. Francis, Essential Writings on Race, 2007 Steven Farron, The Affirmative Action Hoax: Diversity, the Importance of Character, and Other Lies (Second Edition), 2010 Jared Taylor, White Identity: Racial Consciousness in the 21st Century, 2011 Jared Taylor, Paved With Good Intentions: The Failure of Race Relations in Contemporary America (20th Anniversary Kindle Edition, 2014, based on First Carroll & Graf Edition, 1992) Published daily on the Internet: American Renaissance www.amren.com Copyright © 2014 by New Century Foundation All rights reserved. This Kindle edition is based on the First New Century Books Edition, Copyright © 2003 by New Century Foundation. New Century Books Box 527 Oakton, Virginia 22124-0527 Tel. (703) 716-0900 Fax (703) 716-0932 Cover: Callanish Stones on the Scottish island of Lewis in the Hebrides. The megaliths were erected 5,000 years ago to form a circle and several avenues. The tallest is just over 15 feet high. The stones were abandoned around 800 , and had nearly disappeared beneath the BC peat when they were excavated in the mid-19th century. Photo by Charles Tait Kindle edition prepared by John Vawter To Glayde Whitney 1939 – 2002 Contents Kindle Notes Foreword Preface Current Events The Racial Revolution The Religion of Anti-Racism Multiculturalism and the War Against White America Race, Crime, and Violence Hell on Wheels White Man in a Texas Prison The Myth of Diversity Life Along the Fault Line White Might, Black Fright Pushing Out Whitey The Past Race, Nation and the Soldier The War with Mexico Forgotten Black Voices The “Reparations” Hoax Madison Grant and the Racialist Movement Multiculturalism and Marxism The Decline of National Review Undue Process Sowing the Seeds of Destruction Integration … Disintegration Selma to Montgomery, 30 Years Later The Doctor in Spite of Himself Science The Descent of Man A New Theory of Racial Differences Race and Psychopathic Personality The Definitive Word on Intelligence Why Race Matters Philosophy Why Race Matters The Morality of Survival Race and the American Identity The Evolution of Racial Differences in Morality Is There a Superior Race? The Future If We Do Nothing Fairest Things Have Fleetest Endings Closed Minds Are an Open Book Towards Renewal and Renaissance A Certain Trumpet Twelve Years of American Renaissance Notes on the Kindle Edition This text is based on the First New Century Books Edition, Copyright © 2003 by New Century Foundation. It includes minor corrections and is current as of July 10, 2014. The print edition contains a few page footnotes, some of which include content as well as any citations. These notes have been collected and placed at the end of each chapter. Tables present a problem on e-readers. The tables in this book have been formatted to be as narrow as possible for maximum compatibility, but if a table appears truncated on the right margin or if it’s distorted by line wraps, please reduce the font size to compensate. Each table contains a link that moves the table to the top of the current page, so that a maximum amount of data is visible on a single page. This is intended to prevent a table from spanning two pages. Foreword by Jared Taylor O n March 10, 2003, two policemen died in a shootout at the Stapleton Houses in New York City. Grace Watkins, who lives in the virtually all-black housing project, explained that when people learned of the killings they said the policemen got what they deserved. “I think a lot of people out here weren’t worried about [the shootings],” she explained, “because they thought they were white cops, but when they heard the cops were black, their attitude changed totally, and they started expressing concern for the police officers’ families.”1 Grace Watkins is 18 years old, which means she was born 20 years after the landmark civil rights legislation of the 1960s. Since well before the 1980s, every pillar of American society has passionately supported the goal of eliminating racial prejudice. For her entire life, people of Miss Watkins’ race have not only been legally protected from discrimination but have benefited from the preference programs we call “affirmative action.” Our country has invested more moral energy in the fight against “racism” than in any national undertaking since the Second World War. And yet, nearly 40 years after the crowning achievements of the civil rights struggle, Miss Watkins calmly tells a reporter that her black friends and acquaintances were unconcerned by the deaths of two men they assumed were white. The policemen became human beings in their minds only when they turned out to be black. Miss Watkins’ comments were just a touch of atmosphere to liven up a routine crime story. No doubt most readers soon forgot about her. But what Grace Watkins said—and the silence that greeted it—are symbols of the almost complete failure of the colossal effort our country has made to transform race relations. Grace Watkins does not

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