October 8, 2009

Peter Brimelow On The Mike Mcconnell Show Tomorrow Morning At 9:00 a.m. ET.

Peter Brimelow will be interviewed on The Mike McConnell Show  at 9:00 a.m. ET. He will discuss his VDARE.com article "Yes It Is About Race. Quite Right, Too." The program airs in Cincinnati and can be streamed here.

One Of These Things Is Not Like The Other

From a Canadian report on how immigration is good for small rural communities:

There is no cookie cutter model for success, but the report's case studies illustrate strategies small communities can capitalize on:

WINKLER

The Word Immigrant Doesn't Appear In This Story

The word "immigrant" doesn't appear in this story. Neither, even more obviously, do the words African-American.

Misguided San Jose Mercury News Column On Immigration And The Nobel Prize

Dr. Norm Matloff writes about the Nobel Prizes that Steve Sailer has been discussing:

A High School Coaching Job, Like Insanity, Is Hereditary: You Get It From Your Kids.

Something I noticed in researching my Taki's Magazine column on running backs is what a high percentage of star white high school athletes have their dads coaching them.

Stanford coach Jim Harbaugh, a former NFL QB who played for his dad in high school, likes having players, such as his NCAA-leading running back Toby Gerhart, whose fathers were their high school coaches:

Obama wants illegal immigration

The move by the Obama administration to cripple the anti-illegal alien activity of patriot Sheriff Joe Arpaio has rightly caught the imagination of many.

My Taki Article On White Running Backs

From my Wednesday column in Taki's Magazine:

Let’s celebrate diversity! In Division 1-A college football, 19 of the top 20 players in rushing yards are—as sports fans expect—black. Yet, the #1 rusher is a white guy.

Toby Gerhart, Stanford’s 235-pound tailback, has piled up 650 yards on the ground to power lowly Stanford to a 4-1 overall record and a Pac-10 leading 3-0 conference mark. ...

First woman to win Chemistry Nobel in 45 years

From the NYT:

Three scientists who showed how the information encoded on strands of DNA is translated into the thousands of proteins that make up living matter will share the 2009 Nobel Prize for Chemistry, the Swedish Academy of Sciences said Wednesday.