![]() ![]() Most of the race-talk to which we are incessantly subjected consists of attempts to manipulate us intellectually or emotionally. If more of our ostrich-like journalists had read these, they would not have been so stunned by Donald Trump's upset presidential victory. Jared Taylor's fine collection of essays from the last quarter-century tells the side of the story that the New York Times leaves out. ![]() Paul Gottfried, former professor of humanities at Elizabethtown College and author of Multiculturalism and the Politics of Guilt Reading Jared Taylor's anthology has made me aware once again of his remarkably graceful prose and of how strenuously he argues against our cultural decadence and the "cancer of egalitarianism." A tribute that he bestowed on Sam Francis would apply to him equally: Like our deceased friend, he has become invaluable in the way he "lays bare the lies and hypocrisies of our time." The collection includes such classic essays as "The Ways of Our People" and "Africa in Our Midst," as well as personal observations on literature, sports, the South, and leading figures from the racial dissident movement. Taylor outlines the basic truths of race realism and brilliantly dissects today's racial orthodoxies. ![]() The culmination of 25 years of white advocacy, If We Do Nothing is a collection of Jared Taylor's best essays and reviews. ![]()
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