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Access to the ballot box has always been one of the main goals of the civil rights movement. The 1965 Voting Rights Act was a great victory. It outlawed literacy tests and gave the national government oversight over elections in places where less than 50 percent of the non-white population was registered to vote. Subsequent... Read More
American cities are in a “Doom Loop.” Quality of life collapses, residents flee or stay home, and cities fall into economic decline. As the economy falters, even more locals flee, and the cycle repeats. Cities may stabilize into something like Detroit or St. Louis. Crime is central to the decline, but newspaper headlines and statistics... Read More
Few phenomena outside of the physical sciences follow iron laws, but here’s an exception: whites suffer under black rule. It’s the same, whether in post-colonial sub-Sahara Africa or American cities. The effect may take some time, but it remains an iron law, and unlike arcane scientific laws, the confirming evidence is everywhere. No need to... Read More
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There is a peculiar paradox in contemporary race relations: the more government struggles to achieve equality, the more it fails, and with mounting failures comes yet more coercion to repress those who tell the truth. This makes little logical sense. After all, silencing skeptics and twisting reality might have been necessary in the 1950s and... Read More
Supreme Court. Photo by Mr. Kjetil Ree., CC BY-SA 3.0, via Wikimedia Common
Thanks to the Supreme Court, the policy of racial preferences (affirmative action) is back in the news. Preferences have been around for a half century, so the pro and con arguments are well established. On the pro side, preferences are justified by the alleged advantages of “diversity,” while opponents say they are illegal, unfair, and... Read More
Credit: A Syn via Flickr. CC BY-SA 2.0
Racial politics abounds with riddles, and among the most baffling is why black leaders are soft on crime that victimizes their own voters. What candidate would possibly run on a platform “Vote for me and I’ll ignore neighborhood crime”? It makes no sense to us, but it is a rational strategy both for the office-seeker... Read More
American race relations exhibit a bewildering paradox: The more whites help blacks, the more blacks hate whites. The government has spent trillions to lift up blacks, who grow even more vehement about “toxic whiteness.” Ironically, the greatest beneficiaries, those owing jobs and university admissions to naked racial preference, are the most vocal in denouncing “white... Read More
PastClassics
The Shaping Event of Our Modern World
Analyzing the History of a Controversial Movement
The JFK Assassination and the 9/11 Attacks?