“The Immigration Encyclopedia” Needs Your Support
By
Nicholas Stix
[Peter Brimelow writes: New
York journalist Nicholas Stix has once again very kindly
supported our Christmas appeal with this unsolicited article on
his blog, Nicholas Stix, Uncensored. His energy and
effectiveness amazes me—and I just recently edited his
definitive account of the black-on-white murders Stix calls the
“Knoxville Horror”. Scroll to end, BELOW TO DONATE LINK,
to get to tonight’s postings—Joe Guzzardi on The Immigration
Year In Review (it was a good one) and on Frank Sinatra; Today’s
Letter; blogging.]
Bewildered former Arkansas governor and GOP
presidential candidate,
Mike Huckabee, recently told the
New Yorker’s Ryan Lizza that
everywhere he goes, voters’ number one concern is immigration.
It does
appear to be the issue out here wherever we are. Nobody’s asked
about Iraq—doesn’t ever come up. The first question out of the
box, everywhere I go—Iowa, New Hampshire, South Carolina,
Florida, Texas, it doesn’t matter—is immigration. It’s just red
hot, and I don’t fully understand it.
Welcome to America, Mike!
Here’s the problem. With the help of the MSM, Huckabee has
conned millions of voters into thinking that he supports
enforcing America’s immigration laws, when in fact he is a
confirmed supporter of abolishing America through open borders.
What if I told you that there is an online encyclopedia – though
its editor/publisher doesn’t use that term – devoted (though not
limited) to immigration, which is vastly superior in factual
reliability (unlike the New York Times, it has its own
house fact-checker) to any daily newspaper, but which at the
same time has more scholarly rigor than you’ll find from tenured
professors? (With the notable exception of immigration economist
George Borjas.) And what if I told you it has an archive of
eight years’ worth of thousands of such articles? And what if I
told you it’s free?
Readers of The Immigration Encyclopedia know all about
Mike Huckabee’s chameleon routine, because TIE’s dogged
researcher-writers have scrutinized the Governor every step of
the way.
Keeping track of presidential aspirants’ flip-flops is just one
of the many services that TIE provides on a daily basis
through its articles and blogs.
And while it costs nothing to read TIE, it does cost
money to produce and maintain it. Not just due to Web servers
and bandwidth, but because TIE pays its writers and its
fact-checker, which is how it can provide you such top-notch
reporting, scholarship, and commentary. (Full disclosure: I am
proud to say that
I am one of those writers.)
The site isn’t actually known as The Immigration Encyclopedia.
I gave it that title, because it is the most encyclopedic source
on legal and illegal immigration into America on the Web, and to
mock a certain pretend Web encyclopedia that has just collected
so many millions of dollars in donations that it is embarrassed
to even cite the figures. The pretend encyclopedia pays
contributors nothing, and nothing is what it provides—but at a
cost of millions! By contrast, The Immigration Encyclopedia
is a priceless resource that is run for mere tens of thousands
of dollars per year in tax-deductible donations. But that
relatively small sum is essential.
TIE’s official name is
VDARE.com. The reason I didn’t name it
earlier was to be coy, to stress what I believe is VDARE’s
true character, and to fool Google. Since this is my
third fundraising post this month, had I stated its purpose at
the top, Google’s blogsearch would have seen this as a
repetitious post, and not listed it.
Please hit
this link to support VDARE with a
tax-deductible donation. (Did I mention that your contribution
is tax-deductible?)
Thank you.
With best holiday wishes,
Nicholas Stix
Readers report that PayPal is now making TWO confusing efforts
to get you to sign up for its proprietary system option when you
just want to make a one-time credit card payment to VDARE.com.
When you click on the "credit card" link below (HINT!),
you go to our donation page. If you click on "make a
donation" in the credit card section, you see the PayPal
login stuff on the right - and the Don't Have PayPal
account?/credit card option in very small print on the bottom
left.
If you click on "continue" there, basically the same page
comes up EXCEPT THAT you can enter a payment amount, top right.
If you do that and then again click on "continue", bottom
left, it gives up trying to get you to sign up for PayPal and
takes you to a page where you can enter your credit card
information.
PayPal is a great system, but its marketing people
are aggressive - like those annoying ads on newspaper websites,
something I really want to avoid on VDARE.COM. (HINT! HINT)