If you haven’t subscribed to American Renaissance, here’s
what you’re missing in the July 2008 issue:
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Wikipedia on Race: Journalist Nicholas Stix returns with a critique of the most popular online encyclopedia, noted for its everyone-is-an-editor model. Mr. Stix reveals that this model breaks down where issues of controversy are concerned—especially when the issues pertain to race. Whether the topic is race and genetics, race and crime, or individuals such as Martin Luther King, Jr., or Jared Taylor and American Renaissance, a highly selective censorship and outright misrepresentations cloud this avenue of cyberspace.
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In European Nationalism on the March, conservative activist Gregory Hood contributes an encouraging report on the progress of the Vlaams Belang (Flemish Interest) in Belgium, and an informative analysis on the reasons for their phenomenal political gains—and the lessons American whites should learn from their methods.
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BNP Candidate Wins Seat on London Assembly: British National Party member Roberta Woods reports on the election of Richard Barnbrook to the London Assembly in May of this year, and recounts the tumultuous campaign that led to his victory, described as “a historic breakthrough for British nationalism.”
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Plus, more colleges and universities make the SAT exam “optional,” a UN racism investigator from Senegal descends on America, Bishop Tutu lectures Americans on race relations, a proposal to save a tribe in Dominica—by banning intermarriage, and more!
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