Steve Sailer has dedicated himself to proving that “race” really exists. Sometimes he will sound quite reasonable in his critiques of political correctness, but his attack on George Will for […]
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Featured writers for The Multiracial Activist and The Abolitionist Examiner.
Steve Sailer has dedicated himself to proving that “race” really exists. Sometimes he will sound quite reasonable in his critiques of political correctness, but his attack on George Will for […]
Read moreTwisted history by Thomas Sowell TownHall.com December 17, 2003 One of the reasons our children do not measure up academically to children in other countries is that so much time […]
Read moreSelling Beauty Queens and Fairness Creams By Priya Lal, PopMatters January 2, 2004 Their huge, glowing faces smile down from billboards on the mere mortal residents of big cities like […]
Read moreApparently some angry one-droppers have taken notice of A Mixed Blog. Can’t please everyone and we aren’t gonna try. The S-Train Canvass will just have to build a bridge and […]
Read moreOur two year old lawsuit against the Department of Justice’s secret detentions got a little press today in The Washington Post: …the court will look at an appeal by the […]
Read moreBlood as a Yardstick, and a Film That Falls Short Newsday November 11, 2003 by Katti Gray Forced or consensual, race-mixing is complicated stuff. The miscasting of Anthony Hopkins, a […]
Read moreKatti Gray, writing for Newsday, on “Blood as a Yardstick, and a Film That Falls Short” (November 11, 2003): Forced or consensual, race-mixing is complicated stuff. The miscasting of Anthony Hopkins, a white actor of […]
Read moreTime Warped American Daily by Jonathan Pait The recent revelation of Essie Mae Washington-Williams that she is the daughter of the late Senator Strom Thrumond of South Carolina has caught […]
Read moreThese writers refer to Essie Mae Washington Williams as “mixed race” as opposed to “black.” It was our movement that gave them a vocabulary to use and permission to use […]
Read moreThis is still the best overall book on Louisiana Creoles. Dominguez is reasonably objective without an ax to grind. She also points out the tremendous psychological pressures that Creoles endure […]
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