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Warp and Woof

AR Articles on Media Bias
What We Are Supposed to Know (Sep. 1999)
All the News that Fits (Feb. 2002)
Search AmRen.com for Media Bias
More news stories on Media Bias
Maria Luisa Tucker, Village Voice, May 30, 2007

In most ways, Michelle Ilse Weyher fit the cliché of an Upper East Sider. The blonde housewife was married to a big-deal lawyer. She had a pet Chihuahua named Mr. Peeper, whom she carried around in a Sherpa bag. She occasionally wrote letters to the editor of The New York Times with advice to fellow dog owners. But Weyher stood out in one very big way. Her charity work was not for the Junior League or the Met, but for New York’s oldest hate group: the Pioneer Fund, a foundation that has supported all manner of racist pseudoscience since 1937.

“Virtually all the people who create white nationalist ideology are funded by them,” says Heidi Beirich, a writer at the Southern Poverty Law Center, which tracks hate groups around the country. The list of Pioneer Fund grantees includes a who’s who of “race science” figures: Richard Lynn, an Irish professor who once said that certain groups of people need to be “phased out”; Michael Levin, an NYU professor who was lauded by white supremacists for his 1997 book Why Race Matters; Arthur Jensen, a Berkeley professor who spent much of his career writing about the black-white IQ gap.

Michelle Ilse Weyher was the Germany-born third wife of the Pioneer Fund’s former president, Harry Weyher. The organization had grown up and grown old in New York City, supported by rich city boys like Weyher. It was originally founded by Nazi sympathizer Wickliffe Draper, a philanthropist who advocated segregation and sending blacks to Africa.

After 44 years as the fund’s president, Harry Weyher died in 2002. The torch was passed to J. Philippe Rushton, a Canadian psychology professor and hero to white nationalists. He is notorious for a 1985 book claiming that penis size is inversely proportional to intelligence, i.e., that black men with large penises are inherently stupider than white men with small penises. (Rushton refutes the idea that the fund is a hate group.) To keep the memory of her husband alive, Rushton invited Michelle Ilse Weyher to sit on the board. Like her board colleagues—professors around the U.S., Canada, and Europe—Michelle Ilse Weyher was also a published author—only her claim to fame was not exactly academic. Last year, Weyher self-published an 86-page book titled Barking for Biscuits under the pen name “Mr. Peeper.” This tale of “a charming Chihuahua snob from NYC’s East Side” was dedicated to her husband, who was also a dog lover.

When she wasn’t writing fiction or cavorting with her four-legged friend, Weyher played a role in the Pioneer Fund’s selection process. She helped to decide which applicants received the few grants the fund gave out each year. Some went to legitimate scientists studying genetics or intelligence, while others went directly into the pockets of big-league white supremacists.

Among the latter was the National Policy Institute, a white-pride organization that recently released a 108-page report, “The State of White America.” Another recent grant recipient was the New Century Foundation*, which publishes American Renaissance, a favorite publication of white supremacists.

{snip}

Correction: In the original version of this story, one of the Pioneer Fund’s grant recipients was listed as “Century Foundation.” However, it was the “New Century Foundation,” publisher of American Renaissance, which actually received the Fund’s money. Century Foundation is a progressive organization located on the Upper East Side, and has no connection with the Pioneer Fund of any kind.

Original article

(Posted on June 6, 2007)

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