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Realism
and Fairness About Race
Derek
Turner interviews Jared Taylor, author and editor of American
Renaissance
Right
Now, August-September 2004
Can you tell us when and
why American Renaissance was founded, and the subsequent
history of the magazine?
I started AR in 1990
for what many would consider radical or even dangerous purposes:
to encourage whites to think of their interests in explicitly
racial terms, to recognize that every other race in the United
States does so instinctively, and to understand that if whites
alone fail to act as a group, they jeopardize their long-term
survival as a distinct people with a distinct culture and
way of life.
Needless to say, this is not
a message welcomed by the establishment. However, ordinary
Americans increasingly understand the crisis our country faces.
AR has now been publishing monthly for nearly 14 years,
and our readership continues to grow. Five years ago, we began
distributing an electronic version of AR over the Internet,
and this has greatly increased our overseas readership.
My association with the magazine
has resulted in a certain notoriety and many radio and television
appearances. I believe that the logical and moral force of
the AR position is increasingly winning recognition
despite ingrained and intense hostility to any form of racial
consciousness on the part of whites.
Can you summarise your/ARs
credo?
I would like to think that the
AR credo is realism and fairness: realism in the sense
that race is a central element in individual and group identity
and must not be ignored; fairness in that there must be no
double standards in racial or ethnic matters.
A number of policy conclusions
derive from these positions. A realistic evaluation of race
leads to the conclusion that race and culture are inseparable.
Some individuals can fully embrace a culture established by
people of a different race but most cannot. This is why race
is the most volatile social fault line in any country and
why the current dramas of tolerance, multiculturalism,
inclusion, etc, are almost always about race.
The United States is a good
example of the significance of race. Whites from many countries
have largely assimilatedwith some frictionto a
majority Anglo-Saxon culture, but non-whites have not. Europe
is now going through the same process, with one country after
another discovering that when non-whites arrive in large numbers
they congregate in unassimilable enclaves.
This raises the question of
fairness. Whites are repeatedly told that they must make every
effort to accommodate alien newcomers and even, if need be,
see their nations redefined if non-white immigration requires
this. Whites are told to prepare themselves psychologically
to be outnumbered by non-whites, and even though this threatens
to wash away the cultures and nationalities we love, anyone
who resists dispossession is a moral inferior.
Just imagine the reverse process
of whites pouring into Mexico or Pakistan, forcing their practices
upon the natives and even demanding special treatment because
they are minorities bearing the gift of diversity.
Imagine Mexican and Pakistani leaders telling their people
demographic displacement is a good thing, and that new languages,
religions, folkways and crime rates may seem alien but are
precious sources of enrichment.
It is this one-sided advancement
of non-whites into white territories that makes the current
dynamic of race and immigration unacceptable and even dangerous
to whites.
What else does New Century
Foundation do, apart from publish AR every month?
We hold an international conference
on race and immigration every two years, and we publish a
small number of monographs and books. We also maintain a very
active web page at www.amren.com.
What is your own family and
political back-ground?
I am the child of missionaries
to Japan, where I spent the first 16 years of my life. My
parents were conventional liberals and so was I until about
the age of 30.
What first drove you to take
an interest in racial differences and immigration? Which academics,
writers or philosophers have inspired you?
I spent a year travelling in
west Africa, where I discovered that my liberal beliefs in
racial and cultural equivalence were wrong. I also spent two
years in Paris studying history and economics, and gradually
came to the conclusion that the basic tenets of liberalismthat
government can improve our lives, that environment is much
more important than genetics, that all groups have the same
potential, that men and women have similar naturesare
wrong.
I have been much influenced
by the work of James Burnham, Arthur Jensen and Wilmot Robertson,
but conversations over the years with other racially aware
whites have probably influenced me more.
Do you believe hereditarian
ideas are now becoming more widely acceptable?
Yes. The Blank Slate by
Steven Pinker is a good example of this [Editors Note:
See review, RN 41]. The evidence for the influence
of genes is now so overwhelming even liberals can no longer
ignore it. This book, however, is an almost comical attempt
by a liberal to try to reconcile the power of heredity with
liberal positions that are fatally undermined by it. I suspect
that the Watson-Skinner conviction that environment controls
everything first foundered on sex differences. Many people
understand that the failure of liberals and feminists to erase
sex differences must mean there is a biological basis for
them. It is more difficult for people to accept similar reasons
for the clearly different social outcomes for racial and other
groups, but that will come.
What policies should be adopted
to solve or at least mitigate some of Americas current
race problems?
I have always recommended only
two policies: an end to mass immigration, and the abolition
of antidiscrimination laws. The population of the United States
is increasing like that of a Third World country, mostly because
of immigration. 90% of immigrants are unassimilable minorities
who will bring divisiveness and tension. Population increase
will also strain environment and infrastructure. There were
125m Americans in 1945, and no one thought the country under-populated.
There are now about 290m of us, with about half a billion
expected by 2070 or so. Ending immigration would stop this
mad expansion. As for anti-discrimination laws, private citizens
should have the right to choose employees, schoolmates, or
neighbours for good reasons, bad reasons or no reason at alljust
as they choose their spouses.
There is increasing interest
in immigration reform within Republican circles.
What do you think of these various initiatives? And what do
you think of Ralph Naders new-found interest in immigration?
Among Republicans, aside from
the invaluable efforts of Congressman Tom Tancredo of Colorado,
immigration reform amounts to nothing more than
common-sense resistance to President Bushs amnesty plan
for illegal immigrants. Ralph Nader seems to oppose immigration
mainly because it depresses wages for poor blacks. Indeed
it does, and I support all restrictionists, whatever their
reasoning.
AR has, inevitably, been
denounced by the ultra-Left Southern Poverty Law Center as
a hate group. But what is the attitude of American
conservativesnot just towards AR specifically,
but also on race differences more generally?
I dont think it is possible
to give a comprehensive answer. Even among conservatives
(a term sadly in search of a meaning), there is much resistance
to a realistic understanding of race. If they were sure their
words would never be repeated, I suspect perhaps 50% of the
people who vote Republican would either acknowledge racial
differences or, though bothered by the thought, accept them
as a possibility. Of this number, only a handful are willing
to take a public position on race that differs substantially
from that of Democrats.
Has there been a discernible
change in US conservative attitudes on race in recent decades?
What has caused this?
Recent decades is
a stretchy formulation. If it includes the 1950s, National
Review wrote very sensibly on race. Its positions were
little different from those of American Renaissance today.
During the 1960s, 70s, and 80s there was a massive
retreat from commonsense. Since that time there has been a
very slow recovery, but at nothing like the pace of the rout.
Egalitarian dogma rules America, just as it does Britain,
and dissent is still dangerous and disagreeable.
Does modern genetic science
complement traditional conservative or religious thinking
about human nature? If so, how?
I think it complements traditional
conservatism almost across the board. Both traditional conservatives
and (the more outspoken) evolutionary biologists agree on
the following: Men and women differ in temperament and ability.
People are born with distinctive traits not easily changed
by society. Race and race differences are real. People are
tribal, and do not easily feel loyalty to humanity at large.
Even more fundamentally, both
sides agree that there is such a thing as human nature and
it is folly to try to remake man. An acceptance of this premise
would have forestalled not just the calamity of communism
but virtually every liberal project since the French Revolution.
Horror upon horror has been committed in the name of perfecting
man. Conservativesand now students of the power of geneticsaccept
that many of our faults cannot be corrected, and that societies
that accept these faults are far more successful than those
that try to wish them away or forcibly extirpate them.
Selfishness is a good example.
Capitalism recognizes that self-interest is the most powerful
engine of economic progress. Collectivism fails because it
pretends self-interest can be overcome. Some day there will
be equal acceptance of mans tribal nature, and governments
will stop thinking it somehow a virtue to force citizens to
live with people utterly unlike themselves.
When you are not fomenting
intergalactic hate, what are your other interests?
I have two great interests:
my family and music. Fatherhood has been more rewarding to
me than anything elseand I expected it to be a bother
and a pest. European populations are declining, in part because
Europeans are self-centred and think children are too much
trouble. If only for our own survival, we must once again
promote the view that children are one of lifes highest
rewards. I might not have believed that until I had children
of my own, but it is true. As for music, I play clarinet in
a symphony orchestra and a woodwind quintet, and saxophone
in a dance band. Making music is, for me, a joy that purges
the mind of all else. Musicians reportedly live longer than
non-musicians. If that is true, it must be because immense
mental pleasure has physical benefits!
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