H’mmm Horowitz! An Open Letter To Sam Francis
By
Brian Dunaway
Bravo,
Mr. Francis, on your VDARE.COM article regarding
David Horowitz
Phony Immigration Reform conference.
I don't understand why David Horowitz is not more
roundly criticized for his carelessness, not only in his
analysis of issues, but in his injudicious attacks on
persons. Perhaps it is because, as you say, "… to his
great credit has written and spoken out courageously
against anti-white racism when most on the right were
afraid to do so."
His website,
Frontpagemag.com, seems to be a quality site,
and it's a tribute to him that often his editorial
latitude seems to be significant. However, sometimes his
attacks against those with whom he ostensibly shares
ideological foxholes makes me think he has not yet
outgrown his red diapers.
I was recently invited to read an article on the
site, so I did a little perusing. What I found there
made me physically ill. In response, I posted the
following letter to his website:
I started following your
work soon after your "conversion" and subsequent rapid
emergence as a formidable force in conservative
politics. I read
Destructive Generation and
Radical Son as soon as they were released. Aside
from being real page-turners, I felt they truly captured
the essence of Leftism's fatal flaw, which might be
called "the idolatry of ideas." You also seemed to have
a remarkable capacity for self-examination.
However, in the section titled "Neo-Nazi
Traitors," though you rightly identify Nazis
as leftists, I was astonished to discover two articles
to which you linked.
One by Jim Nesbitt
of the Newhouse News Service refers to a "fractious
network of neo-Nazis, skinheads, Klansmen, Christian
patriots, neo-Confederates and white separatists." You
have to admit, that's a pretty broad brush – and Nesbitt
makes little attempt to distinguish among these
radically different groups. He's obviously attempting
guilt by association.
In fact, after a few
paragraphs, I was beginning to recognize the smell. Then
there it was in black and white: the
Southern Poverty Law Center. I should have known.
You also linked to a
New Republic
article by Michelle Cottle titled "White Hope,"
which also quotes the SPLC.
As
The Rockford Institute
stated in
their released statement on "the Lies of the SPLC":
[The SPLC]
squandered their new-found credibility in their false
and defamatory attack on so-called neo-confederate
organizations – a varied group that supposedly includes
the United Daughters of
the Confederacy
(a group of polite women who preserve Civil
War monuments), the
Ludwig von Mises Institute (devoted to free market
economics), the
League
of the South (a Southern advocacy group that
repudiates racism), and
The Rockford Institute,
a leading voice of American conservative principles
that has repeatedly attacked bigotry and racism in every
form.
It's apparent the SPLC
has a motive – they didn't appreciate a
Chronicles article by Samuel Francis, entitled "The
Strange Career of Morris Dees" (SPLC founder). Among
other things, the article reports that "Dees was one of
the first to make capital out of the supposed rash of
church burnings: 'Those [black] churches that have
been burned in the South were certainly burned by
racists.' In fact, as subsequent investigations by
the Associated Press, USA Today, and other mainstream
newspapers showed, there was no wave of church arsons at
black churches by white racists. "
Latitude of editorial content is one thing, but these
people make Al Sharpton look sincere. You've been
falsely tagged with the racist label as much as anyone –
isn't the SPLC the exact kind of organization you would
normally revile and expose?
What gives?
I received no reply.
And if you want to read a
really swell (not!) review of Buchanan's book,
The Death of the West, read the Jamie Glazov
bilge on
FrontPage. The Glazov review triggered a flood of
mail to the site, as well as a Glazov
follow-up response to the mail.
But to Horowitz's credit,
a quite favorable review by John Zmirak appears as
well. (More evidence of Horowitz’ good taste is that he
uses VDARE.com's own
Alan Wall.)
You wrote that "Americans today are frightened and
angry – and rightly so – over the mass bloodshed that
uncontrolled immigration has already helped spill in New
York and Washington and at what it
might cause in the future." [Emphasis added.]
No need for uncertainty: I heard Mr. Rumsfeld on the
radio recently
reassuring America that not only are future
terrorist attacks a certainty, but that they will be far
more catastrophic.
Since it seems evident that Horowitz and friends care
little for America aside from its existence as a
corporation-state, I can understand their snickering at
the "racists" who engage in sincere immigration control
discourse.
But as they scoff while they watch the fall of a
great nation, I hope no one they love is harmed by the
terror-state they have helped to create.
February 6, 2002