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The idea that the Hispanic vote cost Romney the election, and that therefore the GOP needs to support amnesty to survive, has been repeatedly debunked on VDARE.com. But facts and argument have no effect the Main Stream Media or its GOP Establishment poodle.
As expected, most of the usual pro-amnesty hacks, many of whom predicted that the GOP would win this election, are now saying the GOP needs amnesty to survive. Thus Senator Marco Rubio (R-Cuba) wrote on his Facebook page:
The conservative movement should have particular appeal to people in minority and immigrant communities who are trying to make it, and Republicans need to work harder than ever to communicate our beliefs to them.”
[After Romney loss, GOP soul searching begins, CBS News, November 7, 2012]
Besides presumably nominating him for president, Rubio did not give exact specifics. But neocon pundit Charles Krauthammer filled them in:
The principal reason they go Democratic is the issue of illegal immigrants. In securing the Republican nomination, Mitt Romney made the strategic error of (unnecessarily) going to the right of Rick Perry. Romney could never successfully tack back.
For the party in general, however, the problem is hardly structural. It requires but a single policy change: Border fence plus amnesty. Yes, amnesty. Use the word. Shock and awe—full legal normalization (just short of citizenship) in return for full border enforcement...Imagine Marco Rubio advancing such a policy on the road to 2016. It would transform the landscape. He’d win the Hispanic vote. Yes, win it. A problem fixable with a single policy initiative is not structural. It is solvable.”
[The way forward, Washington Post, November 8, 2012]
That Charles Krauthammer and Marco Rubio would use the election results to spin for amnesty is no surprise. As Peter Brimelow noted before the election, they would have done exactly the same if Romney won. (And Romney, as no-one remembers, said he’d get an amnesty done in the “first year.”)
What is troubling, however, is that many high-profile conservatives and Republicans who, while never trusted allies to immigration patriots, have largely opposed amnesty for the last several years are now indicating they would support amnesty.
Of course, Obama's Administrative Amnesty notwithstanding, any major “comprehensive immigration reform” bill will need to go through the House of Representatives. And Republicans still control the House by a large margin.
Unfortunately, John Boehner has indicated he will support amnesty. He told ABC News,
“It’s an important issue that I think oughta be dealt with. There's– this issue has been around far too long. And while– I'm– believe it’s important
Before I knew the election results, the demographic breakdowns, or read any of the spin from the Mainstream Media, I had a pretty good idea of how I would write up the election if Romney lost.
I would just Google “Hispanic vote” and find a bunch of MSM articles quoting Republican strategists and politicians about how poorly Romney had done among Hispanics. I knew they would bring up the phony 44% Bush supposedly won in 2004 and how Romney alienated Hispanics with his talk (back in the primaries) about “self-deportation.”
I would then note that Romney had in fact done very little to promote patriotic immigration reform in the general election, much bring up racially-tinged issues such as Affirmative Action which could have won him blue collar voters in Ohio, Michigan, and Pennsylvania—much more important than the alleged Hispanic swing vote.
And of course, the MSM did not disappoint. Article after article made trite talk about the Hispanic vote, filled with quotes from GOP hacks urging that the party find some magical way to appeal to this demographic. A few examples:
- Some analysts and Republican strategists argued that the party could not win while alienating the growing Hispanic vote with its tough stance on immigration…“But there is also a hole in the Republican electorate,” [Fred Barnes] continued. “There aren’t enough Hispanics. As long as two-thirds of the growing Hispanic voting bloc lines up with Democrats, it will be increasingly difficult (though hardly impossible) for Republicans to win national elections. When George W. Bush won a narrow re-election in 2004, he got 44 percent of the Hispanic vote. If Romney had managed that, he would have come closer to winning. He might even have won.”
[G.O.P. Factions Grapple Over Meaning of Loss, by Michael Cooper, New York Times, November 7, 2012]
- [P]arty leaders should [rethink] how to appeal to Hispanics and other demographic groups who supported Obama’s re-election, [Newt] Gingrich said. “Unless we do that we’re going to be a minority party”
[Republicans Stung by Loss Begin Debate Over Future, Mike Dorning and John McCormick, Bloomberg, November, 7 2012]
- But make no mistake: What happened last night was a demographic time bomb that had been ticking and that blew up in GOP faces…So the Republicans are maximizing their share with white voters; they just aren't getting the rest....the most significant event of this presidential contest might very well have been the 2010 census.
[First Thoughts: Obama's demographic edge, Chuck Todd, Mark Murray, Domenico Montanaro, and Brooke Brower, NBC News, November 7, 2012]
And, of course, much of this conventional wisdom does not hold up to
After its second defeat at the hands of Barack Obama, under whom unemployment has never been lower than the day George W. Bush left office, the Republican Party has at last awakened to its existential crisis.
Eighteen states have voted Democratic in six straight elections. Among the six are four of our most populous: New York, Pennsylvania, Illinois and California. And Obama has now won two of the three remaining mega-states, Ohio and Florida, twice.
Only Texas remains secure—for now.
At the presidential level, the Republican Party is at death's door.
Yet one already sees the same physicians writing prescriptions for the same drugs that have been killing the GOP since W's dad got the smallest share of the vote by a Republican candidate since William Howard Taft in 1912.
In ascertaining the cause of the GOP's critical condition, let us use Occam's razor—the principle that the simplest explanation is often the right one.
Would the GOP wipeout in those heavily Catholic, ethnic, socially conservative, blue-collar bastions of Pennsylvania, Michigan, Ohio and Illinois, which Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan swept, have anything to do with the fact that the United States since 2000 has lost 6 million manufacturing jobs and 55,000 factories?
Where did all those jobs and factories go? We know where.
They were outsourced. And in the deindustrialization of America, the Republican Party has been a culpable co-conspirator.
Unlike family patriarch Sen. Prescott Bush, who voted with Barry Goldwater and Strom Thurmond against JFK's free-trade deal, Bush I and II pumped for NAFTA, GATT, the WTO and opening America's borders to all goods made by our new friends in the People's Republic of China.
Swiftly, U.S. multinationals shut factories here, laid off workers, outsourced production to Asia and China, and brought their finished goods back, tax-free, to sell in the U.S.A.
Profits soared, as did the salaries of the outsourcing executives.
And their former workers? They headed for the service sector, along with their wives, to keep up on the mortgage payment, keep the kids in Catholic school and pay for the health insurance the family had lost.
Tuesday, these ex-Reagan Democrats came out to vote against some guy from Bain Capital they had been told in ads all summer was a big-time outsourcer who wrote in 2008, "Let Detroit Go Bankrupt!"
Yes, the simplest explanation is often the right one.
Republicans are also falling all over one another to express a love of Hispanics, after Mitt won only 27 percent of a Hispanic vote that is now 10 percent of the national vote.
We face demographic disaster, they are wailing. We must win a larger share of the Hispanic vote or we are doomed.
And what is the proposed solution to the GOP's Hispanic problem, coming even from those supposedly on the realistic right?
Amnesty for the illegals! Stop talking
Tuesday, 6:30 pm. Friend DK came round to watch the election results. Power’s still out from Hurricane Sandy in his neck of the woods.
DK has recently been traveling abroad, brought a bottle of duty-free Glenfiddich with him. We toasted confusion to the President’s party and settled in front of Fox News.
There was very little happening at this point, most of the polling places still open. Bret Baier and Megyn Kelly earned their salaries, filling dead air very professionally.
With no real news to think about, my mind drifted into regrettable frivolities—mainly the appearance of the two Fox presenters. For the first time I noticed how odd-looking Baier is: Hobbit-like, with strange ears and hair that, from a certain angle, looks like it’s been painted on. Kelly has that terrifying man-jaw that is supposed to signify an excess of testosterone in the female metabolism . . . Oh, I know, I know, I’m no oil painting, and I should concentrate on the important things about to happen. Concentrate, concentrate.
7:00 pm. Still nothing to look at but man-jaw and Hobbit ears. Bored, we set out for a neighborhood restaurant.
They’re doing good business for a Tuesday night. There’s a TV in the bar—Fox News again—but hardly anyone watching. DK cheerful, thinks Romney will pull it off.
Scarfed down escargots (it’s a French restaurant), sole meunière, profiteroles, two glasses of wine, coffee. Discussed Tom Wolfe’s new book, which I don’t yet have but DK is reading.
Very attractive waitress, name of Grace—same as Calvin Coolidge’s wife, but our Grace is blonde. We talk about Silent Cal. Is Amity Shlaes’ book out yet? [Added later: no, not yet.] Recalled my one conversation with John Coolidge twenty years ago. He: “If my father ran for office today, he’d just be laughed at.”
9:00 pm. Starting to get some numbers, but nothing definite yet. Still, so far as the numbers mean anything, they don’t look good. Something’s in the air . . . DK senses it too: he’s no longer taking ice with his Glenfiddich, drinking it neat.
9:30 pm. Fox calls Wisconsin for Obama. This is not good. We are glum. Glenfiddich going down fast.
10:00 pm. DK is doing electoral-college arithmetic. Virginia, North Carolina, Florida, Ohio. Any three? Ohio and any two? I can’t follow his argument. Damn single malt has fuddled my brain. Note to self: Stick with bourbon on Election Nights.
For a dissident conservative, there is some small satisfaction in seeing the discomfiture of the neocons. These nitwits have all been predicting a sure Romney victory: Peggy Noonan, Fred Barnes, Rove, Krauthammer . . . Suck it down, hacks. (What, me, bitter?)
DK is on the same track, cursing Dick Morris. “I knew we were in trouble when Dick Morris predicted a landslide. That [expletive] toe-sucker.”
JD: “Was he actually the sucker? Wasn’t he in fact the suckee?”
DK: “Bah! Not only was he the sucker, he paid to suck! Thousands of dollars! To suck a hooker’s toes!”
10:30 pm. Karl Rove is spinning the numbers for Ohio. “With 58.3 percent in, Romney’s down by 3.7 percent; but see, when another 0.5 percent have come in, he’s only down 3 percent . . .” He’s really hard to follow. Quick mental flash of the duckspeak scene in Nineteen Eighty-Four.
Some different talking head (I was concentrating for a while there, but now it’s getting difficult again): “You’ll notice that southeast corner of the map is a blue patch . . .”
When there was a patch of blue in a cloudy sky, my mother, the optimist in the family, used to say: “Enough to make a sailor a pair of trousers.” It’s looking as though this blue patch will make Barack Obama a pair of trousers.
10:56 pm. There’s a ghoul on the TV screen: face lifted to the rafters, bizarre blonde cheerleader wig, frog voice. Is this the Zombie Apocalypse? No, it’s Susan Estrich. Bring back Megyn Kelly, please. I’m sorry I mocked her jaw, sorry sorry.
“It’s a fun election,” croaks Estrich. Oh yeah. As Burt Reynolds says in White Lightning: “more fun than going to an all-night dentist.” Have we really drunk that much Glenfiddich?
11:00 pm. Fox calls Ohio for Obama. It’s over. DK declares intention to go home & slit wrists. He leaves with utility blade and remains of Glenfiddich.
Things are getting fuzzy. That damn single malt. Nothing a shot of bourbon won’t cure, though. Hair of the dog. Lurch over to liquor cabinet.
11:35 pm. That’s better, I can concentrate again. Fox seems to have been having a lot of protests come in about their having called Ohio.
Megyn goes walkabout through studio to the back office number-crunchers at the “Decision Desk.” Nice legs, but she’s wearing what in my 1950s childhood was called a pencil skirt and hasn’t got the wiggle right. Some items of apparel need practice, Megyn.
She asks the geeks if they’re comfortable
Only one metric really matters in the close 2012 Presidential race: according to CNN's exit polling (scroll down), Mitt Romey's share of the white a.k.a. American vote was just 59%, for a twenty-point lead over Obama among whites. That's at the high end of the mediocre post-Reagan range, and four points above the hapless John McCain in 2008, but just not enough—as VDARE.com repeatedly remarked during the campaign as we prised white share data out of relectant MSM polls. (Counting is not complete as I write this, and the Pacific Coast results may reduce Romney's white share and some other details).
In comparison, the Congressional GOP got a 60% white share in 2010. Ronald Reagan got a 64% white share in 1984. George W. Bush won, narrowly, with a 58% white share in 2004, but
I can't believe I'm losing to this guy.” This Presidential election has the Republican Party feeling like Michael Dukakis contemplating George H.W. Bush in the famous Saturday Night Live skit.
Yes, all the recent polls are within the margin of error and anything could happen. And, yes, some pundits have bravely predicted a Mitt Romney victory—with Michael Barone [Going out on a limb: Romney beats Obama, handily] perhaps the most surprising, no doubt because he has finally counted up America’s still-dominant white voting bloc.
But the GOP presidential contender should not be in this mess. Take the forecasting model from the University of Colorado. In contrast to many other polls, it stresses state-level economic data. It has accurately predicted the winner of every Presidential election since it was first developed in 1980. It projects over 330 electoral votes for the Republican challenger.
There's also unemployment. Only Franklin D. Roosevelt was able to be re-elected with unemployment this high. Republicans have repeatedly argued that the jobs crisis alone should guarantee Obama's defeat.
Finally, it's a truism of that if an incumbent cannot crack a 50% favorable rating in the polls close to an election, he’s sunk. In poll after poll, even in the battleground states, Obama fails to obtain a favorable majority.
What is actually happening: the decades’ long effort to elect a new people is finally coming to fruition. The old rules no longer apply. Barack Obama can afford to lose a few swing states, whereas Romney has no room for error. Even his Southern flank is weak, with states like Florida and Virginia still very much in play. Even a full-scale surrender on immigration issues won't save
"Are the good times really over for good?" asked Merle Haggard in his 1982 lament.
Then, the good times weren't over. In fact, they were coming back, with the Reagan recovery, the renewal of the American spirit and the end of a Cold War that had consumed so much of our lives.
Yet whoever wins today, it is hard to be sanguine about the future.
The demographic and economic realities do
New Jersey Governor Chris Christie, a Republican, appeared on many TV channels October 30th, the day after Hurricane Sandy passed through his state.
Early in his lengthy statement, he reported
When the “Anti-Racist” witch hunters attack VDARE.com Editor Peter Brimelow by point’n’sputtering at some of his politically incorrect statements, they often mention his line that “race is destiny in American politics.”
Brimelow was using the word destiny in its literal sense—that is a “predetermined course of events.” No rational observer would deny that, if a Congressional district that is 90% black or 90% non-Cuban Hispanic, you can predict in advance that the winner of any election will be a Black or Hispanic Democrat. Pointing out this fact should not be objectionable even to a liberal.
Still, I suspect what made Brimelow’s statement more controversial was the mythical connotations attached to the word “destiny.” Two lovers will often say they were destined to be together, suggesting the hand of fate guided their relationship. The concept of Manifest Destiny was related to the belief that it was God’s providence that Americans conquer the North American continent.
Thus by claiming Brimelow’s innocuous quote is scandalous, the Left is hoping the words “race” and “destiny” used in the same sentence evokes memories of the racial views of Houston Stewart Chamberlain and Alfred Rosenberg.
With this background, consider Obama’s demographic gamble by Alexander Burns (POLITICO, Nov. 3, 2012).
According to Burns, “Obama is likely to get blown out among white voters on Election Day” but may still win by turning out the black and Hispanics vote (as well as young voters and single women). Burns continues:
Obama’s campaign message reflects its faith in demographic and social destiny: the president has campaigned hard on immigration reform and national surveys show him leading Romney by 40 to 50 points among Latinos.
Of course, this is a reporter summarizing the Obama strategy rather than anyone in the campaign. But throughout the article, Burns quotes Obama official after Obama official salivating over this demographic destiny. Thus according to Obama National Field Director Jeremy Bird [Twitter]
The Romney campaign believes
The 2012 presidential election is almost here. But there’s another election we should keep our eyes on: the Puerto Rico status referendum, also scheduled for November 6th.
Puerto Rico is a Caribbean island which has been a U.S. territory since 1898. In English its official designation is the “Commonwealth of Puerto Rico”. But in Spanish, its official designation isn’t a translation of “commonwealth”—it’s Estado Libre Associado de Puerto Rico, literally translated “Associated Free State of Puerto Rico.” I’d guess this is a sop to Puerto Rican pride.
I’ve repeatedly argued on VDARE.com that Puerto Rico is a distinct society and ought to be independent. See
Joe Guzzardi, who spent his youth in Puerto Rico, agrees—and quite rightly argues that Americans should be asked whether they want Puerto Rico, and its debts, in their Union.
On November 6, Puerto Rico is also electing its governor, its Resident Commissioner (the territory’s non-voting representative in Congress) and other offices.
There are six candidates for governor. The two front-runners:
The other four parties running gubernatorial candidates: the Puerto Rican Independence Party, (pro-independence) the Movimiento Unión Soberanista, (pro-independence) the Puerto Ricans for Puerto Rico Party (no position on political status) and the Working People’s Party (no position on political status).
In the Resident Commissioner contest, incumbent Pedro Pierluisi, also of incumbent governor Fortuno’s PNP, is pitted against five challengers.
Governor Fortuno (who is white, like most of the Latin American elite) is also a Republican and a Romney supporter. [Pictured right]
Interestingly, there are both Republicans and Democrats in the PNP. Thus Fortuno and Resident Commissioner Pierluisi belong to the PNP, but Fortuno is a Republican and Pierluisi is a Democrat. They both support Puerto Rican statehood.
The status referendum has been criticized, even by members of the PNP party which set it up, for its incoherence.
The ballot consists of two parts (here—the entire text will be given in both Spanish and English).
The first question:
Do you agree that Puerto Rico should continue to have its present form of territorial status?
To which the voter answers
Sí /Yes No /No
Then the voter goes to the next segment, where he must choose between three options:
Wait, isn’t Puerto Rico already, in its Spanish-language designation, an “Associated Free State”?
Well, according to the ballot
Puerto Rico should adopt a status outside of the Territory Clause of the Constitution of the United States that recognizes the sovereignty of the People of Puerto Rico. The Sovereign Free Associated State would be based on a free and voluntary political association, the specific terms of which shall be agreed upon between the United States and Puerto Rico as sovereign nations. Such agreement would provide the scope of the jurisdictional powers that the People of Puerto Rico agree to confer to the United States and retain all other jurisdictional powers and authorities.
That’s still somewhat, probably intentionally, vague. But it appears to be less than
The last pre-election employment report showed an uptick in the unemployment rate—to 7.9% from 7.8%. America’s employers did add 171,000 positions in October, but the labor force grew faster.
The real news: this month, as throughout the Obama Administration, immigrant job growth outpaced job growth among native-born Americans.
This displacement issue finally made it into Drudge via the Washington Times yesterday—but it’s utterly absent from the Presidential campaign. Mitt Romney has thrown the issue away by going the full Chamber of Commerce on skilled immigration.
The white unemployment rate was unchanged, at 7.0%. Hispanic unemployment rose slightly, to 10.0% from 9.9%. Black unemployment rocketed to 14.3% in October from 13.4% in September. This pattern is consistent with the displacement of minority workers by low skilled immigrants—perhaps the biggest story never told during this election cycle.
Legal immigration is running at about 90,000 per month, so more than half of October’s payroll employment growth may have been required just to absorb new arrivals. The total labor force rose by 578,000 last month, fueled mainly by an increase in job hunters among people who had been too discouraged to look for work the prior month.
The “other” employment survey, of households rather than employers, found 410,000 more people working in October than in September. Our analysis shows immigrants gained jobs at twice the rate of native-born Americans. In October:
Overall, the Obama years have been disastrous for native-born workers. The deterioration in native-born employment in both absolute terms and, more dramatically, relative to foreign-born employment, is highlighted in the New VDARE.com American Worker Displacement Index (NVDAWDI):
Native employment growth is the black line, immigrant employment growth is in pink, and NVAWDI—the ratio of immigrant to native job growth—is yellow.
From January 2009 to October 2012:
Since Obama took office native-born job losses are nearly one-third the immigrant job gains. Put differently, during the Obama era one native-born worker has been displaced per
I just DON’T KNOW whether Governor Mitt Romney [R] or President Barack Obama [D] will win the November 6 2012 election—and neither does anyone else.
This has one comforting consequence: the great bulk of Main Stream Media horse-race commentary can safely be ignored.
They will wake us (alas) when it’s over.
But this can be predicted with absolute certainty:
And on immigration, Romney has indeed quietly signaled to those with eyes to see that he will try for some form of illegal immigration amnesty; and also go the full Chamber of Commerce pigout on skilled immigration.
It can also be predicted with absolute certainty that Romney, obviously a deeply conventional man, will believe either/ both.
As an immigrant, I always find it touching how earnestly Americans deliberate over their presidential vote. The brutal fact: in most states, it just doesn’t matter—the presidential contest is simply not that close.
But this is liberating. You can act as a single-issue voter to Send Them a Message (in the immortal words of George Wallace—whose American Party candidacy in 1968 did send a message that the South, and the white working class, were fed up with the Democratic Party). You do this by voting for a minor party that has a key position at odds with the bipartisan majority-party consensus.
The bland jellyfish who run the generic, content-free major-party campaigns don’t have beliefs. But as marketing professionals, they know a market niche when they see one. One recent heroic example: the right-to-life movement, which—regardless of what you think of its issue, on which VDARE.com takes no position—has terrified the GOP munchkins that it is absolutely prepared to bolt if not paid at least lip-service.
(Of course, getting more than lip-service is another story. But lip-service is a start.)
Our position at VDARE.com: the most important single issue facing the U.S. is its post-1965 immigration disaster, both legal and illegal. The bipartisan Permanent Government is literally Electing A New People. Among other problems caused by this utterly selfish and irresponsible policy—immiseration of the working class, cultural dispossession, linguistic balkanization, increased crime, overpopulation, etc. —there is the amazing fact that within 30 years, the U.S. will be majority non-white. The U.S., as it has been known to history, will simply cease to exist within the lives of children now born (including my own).
My own very blue state of Connecticut is part of the Portland-ME-to-Portland-OR Greater New England that the GOP (or a GAP—“Generic American Party”) ought to be carrying easily, but isn’t, basically because it isn’t appealing to the white working class. It appears that Obama will carry
Arthur Jensen, who died on October 22 at the age of 89, was ranked in a respected survey as 47th out of the top 100 psychologists in the twentieth-century [Review of General Psychology, June 2002]. But none of his peers matched the stir he caused with his 123-page paper in the Harvard Educational Review, How Much Can We Boost IQ and Scholastic Achievement? [Winter 1969]. Jensen once told me that--ironic in view of the subsequent furor—the paper was actually solicited by the editor of the Review.
Jared Taylor well described last night Jensen’s extraordinary essay, which basically reasserted the significance of intelligence and its systematically differing average distribution by race—and the even more extraordinary reaction to it, which might be taken to mark the start of a Reign of Terror now ten times longer, and vastly more serious, than the much-mythologized McCarthy Era.
Jensen’s essay is now one of the most cited in the history of the Science Citation Index (SCI) and Social Sciences Citation Index (SSCI) and has been listed as a “citation classic”. Google Scholar says it has been cited by 3,403 other papers. (In total, Jensen had four “citation classics” to his name!)
But, paradoxically, it has had virtually no effect on public discourse or on the Education Establishment, which has continued to pursue one fad after another in the extreme egalitarian belief that “The Gap” can be closed with more teachers, smaller classes, charter schools, Ebonics, integrated classrooms etc.
The human cost has been enormous. It’s worth contrasting with Jensen’s wise and humane conclusion to his essay 43 years ago:
If diversity of mental abilities, as of most other human characteristics, is a basic fact of nature, as the evidence indicates, and if the ideal of universal education is to be successfully pursued, it seems a reasonable conclusion that schools and society must provide a range and diversity of educational methods, programs, and goals, and of occupational opportunities, just as wide as the range of human abilities. Accordingly, the ideal of equality of educational opportunity should not be interpreted as uniformity of facilities, instructional techniques, and educational aims for all children. Diversity rather than uniformity of approaches and aims would seem to be the key to making education rewarding for children of different patterns of ability. The reality of individual differences thus need not mean educational rewards for some children and frustration and defeat for others.
Jensen received enormous Main Stream Media coverage. It irritated him that the MSM would typically portray the “IQ controversy”, as Newsweek put it in March 1969 as a “debate”—“Is intelligence inherited or determined by the environment?” [Born Dumb?” Newsweek, March 31, 1969] It was as if the question was never settled and a consensus never reached. In fact both nature and nurture, in varying degrees, are accepted in the field as influential factors.
The MSM also obsessed on the racial aspects of the “controversy,” even though only eight pages of Jensen’s 123-page paper cover race differences. (Exactly the same happened with The Bell Curve 25 years later—two chapters sparked most of the book’s controversy).
One Newsweek article reported that Jensen favored integration, noting, “I think it can have social benefits. But I also believe in looking at all the relevant variables in conducting a study.” It also noted that Jensen voted for LBJ in 1964, for Eugene McCarthy in the 1968 primary, then for Richard Nixon in the general election; and quoted him as saying that he refused to think in “liberal or conservative terms”. [The New Rage at Berkeley, June 2, 1969]
However, this proof of moderation did Jensen no good: for his conclusion that genetics accounts for 50 percent of racial differences in intelligence, he was treated as a pariah.
In 1970, Jensen testified before Congress on pending school aid legislation. He was one of seven IQ experts, including Nobel Prize recipient William Shockley, who offered criticism of selected provisions of the Emergency School Aid Act of 1970. The experts offered testimony that various studies showed integrated classrooms had virtually no effect in closing the black-white IQ gap.
Jensen’s 1980 book, Bias in Mental Testing, which debunked the idea that IQ tests were inherently biased against minority groups, generated another round of publicity, with stories in the New York Times and Time magazine. Jensen once told me that the campus bookstore at his own University of California at Berkeley refused to stock the book, even though his publisher, The Free Press, had hosted a book launch event there.
Then, four years after the publication of the mega-bestselling The Bell Curve, the Free Press rejected Jensen’s 1998 magnum opus, The g Factor. Thereafter, some 50 publishers turned down
There are few ways to test the health of your community better then by seeing how well a holiday is celebrated by your neighbors. Last year, we asked if you if your city could pass the Trick-or-Treating test for Halloween, knowing that only parents living in an actual community—one replete with high social capital—would feel comfortable sending their children out into the night to ask neighbors for candy.
Remember, Harvard sociologist Robert Putnam found that the
cities with the highest percentage of social capital/trust were those that were the least “diverse—i.e. the most homogenous.
Now imagine you live in a city that, presumably, should have high social capital—90 percent of the inhabitants are of the same race. But instead, that city’s government has to issue “emergency temporary ordinance that requires anyone attempting to buy gasoline in cans to provide identification, and a 6 p.m. curfew for youths younger than 18,” from October 29- Halloween night (Oct. 31). [Detroit Angels' Night patrols ready to go, UPI, 10-26-12]. The minors’ parent or guardian will also be issued a parent responsibility violation ticket. [Detroit's Devil's Night curfew, gas ordinance to stay enforced during storm conditions, By Eric Lacy, Mlive.com , October 30, 2012]
Yes, we’re taking about 90 percent black Detroit. On “Devil’s Night” (October 30), the good citizens of Detroit have taken to torching abandoned buildings and long-idle commercial real estate.
Ze’ev Chafets wrote the still-definitive account of the terror that strikes the Motor City every Halloween eve in his 1991 book Devil’s Night: And Other True Tales of Detroit:
I vaguely remembered Devil’s Night. When I was a kid growing up in Pontiac, a grimy industrial clone of Detroit ten miles north of the city, it had been a time of harmless pranks—window soaping, doorbell ringing and rolls of toilet paper in the neighbor’s trees. But it had been twenty years since I lived there, and a lot of things had changed. One of them was Devil’s Night.
Three years earlier, in 1983, for reasons no-one understands, America’s sixth largest city suddenly erupted into flame. Houses, abandoned buildings, even unused factories burned to the ground in an orgy of arson that lasted for seventy-two hours. When it was over the papers reported more than 800 fires. Smoke hung over the city for weeks.
Even my friend’s dramatic description did not prepare me for what I saw
In June, a diffident and self-deluded President Obama claimed that "the private sector is doing fine." Last week, the private sector responded: Speak for yourself, buster. Who needs an "October Surprise" when the business headlines are broadcasting the imminent layoff bomb in neon lights?