Monday, June 10, 2019
While the Jihad against Patriots (Including Me) Rages on, I Keep Pounding Away
I just read that someone named Lauren Southern has “retired.” Miss Southern made the announcement approximately two weeks before her 24th birthday.
Southern had a “career” as a podcaster, published a pamphlet, and presently has 757,000 hits on Google, over 13 times as many as yours truly.
I can’t judge the lady’s podcasts. I generally avoid podcasts as tending to go on for too long, and providing too little in the way of information.
Most podcasters are in the opinion business. I don’t need help formulating my opinions; I need information!
I just learned that Southern tended to go to totalitarians’ demonstrations, which entailed putting herself in harm’s way, and for that I salute her.
However, for a little perspective, I had my first article published in my school paper at SUNY Stony Brook in May, 1980, back when Lauren Southern’s mama was probably a little girl. And I have just begun to fight!
That first essay was about a feminist friend’s betrayal. We’d co-founded SB’s first Socialist-Feminist Discussion Group—I’d done all the legwork, traveling to Manhattan to buy the books—but she ultimately stole the group. Unbeknownst to me, it had been “Moira’s” plan all along, to use the group to recruit boots on the ground, for a sit-in in the administration building, to issue a long list of absolute demands, to be fulfilled immediately (e.g., immediate, 50% parity of tenured feminist professors).
I had to harass the editors at the school newspaper, before they’d publish it.
Although when I brought the mss. to the opinion editor in the middle of the night, she’d said, “This will certainly cause controversy,” it soon became clear that they again intended to waste my time.
I’d already seen that movie.
When I’d made an earlier submission, on the theft of all student term papers, including mine, from the Women’s History Senior Seminar, one male editor had assured me my piece would be published in the order in which it had been received. In fact, he immediately tossed it in the “circular file,” and later claimed it had been “lost.” He suggested I resubmit it, and of course he then tossed it again. But those mooks constantly ran all sorts of garbage from their friends.
So, when I submitted the second manuscript (on the feminist sit-in), and saw what the editors were up to, I bombarded them with phone calls, and even sent friends who lived in dorms near the paper’s office with notes. Finally, the opinion editor girl sent a note asking me to stop, assuring me that my ms. would be considered for publication.
What they didn’t know was that I was planning on going to their office, and punching everyone in the nose. (How was I going to do that, considering there were a lot more of them than me, and the boys were all taller? I never got beyond the punching-everyone-in-the-nose part of my plan.)
They ran my piece in the centerfold of the last issue of the school year, with a couple of large photos. I’m sure they would never have run me, if I hadn’t terrorized them.
Some ominous lesson, eh?
If you lack connections, but are convinced that you have something to say, and won’t take no for an answer, you’d better be aggressive.
Five million words later, I’m still at it.
Circa January 2008, Amazon blocked all references to me. Checking my name under books used to turn up 18 results, two of which were false positives. Now, you won’t even find a book where I’m co-author (with Peter Brimelow and John Derbyshire), the 2012 VDARE Anthology. The cover lists me as a co-author, and the description cites “‘Hate Crimes’: Washington’s War Against White Working Class Dissent, by Nicholas Stix.”
If you know where to go, a “Look Inside” search turns up references to me inside many books sold at Amazon. The problem is, you need to know the answer to the question of where I’m cited, before you can ask it.
In case you don’t want to go through the entire following list of credits, please go to the PayPal “Donate” link at the top of the page, and make a generous donation.
I thank you, and your posterity will, too.
Sincerely,
Nicholas Stix
1995 Poet’s Market: Where & How to Publish Your Poetry, edited by Christine Martin (Cincinnati, OH: Writer’s Digest Books), 1994.
The Affirmative Action Hoax: Diversity, the Importance of Character and Other Lies, by Steven Farron (Seven Locks Press, 2005). (Cited as Robert Berman.)
The Alt-Right: A Reference for the Far-Right Political Movement, by Corey Tillerson. (Lulu.com: Morrisville, NC, 2017).
The American Directory of Certified Uncle Toms, by James B. Lowe (Bensenville, IL: Lushena Books), 2002.
America's Half-Blood Prince: Barack Obama’s “Story of Race and Inheritance,” by Steve Sailer. (VDare Foundation: Litchfield, CT, January 22, 2009). (Cited as http://nicholasstixuncensored.blogspot.com/2008/02/barack‐obama‐race‐man.html)
Analyzing the Anthrax Attacks: The First Three Years, by Edward G. Lake (Edward G. Lake), 2005.
Barry Barack Hussein Soetoro Obama: Identity and Racial Hypocrisy in America Double Standards, Double Speak, and Double Binds, by Peter J. McCusker (Bloomington, IN: iUniverse), 2011.
Basic Writing, by G. Otte, R. Mlynarczyk, Colorado State University, 2010. (Cited as Robert Berman.)
Battleground: Criminal Justice: Volume 1: A-L, by Gregg Barak (Santa Barbara, CA: Greenwood Press), 2007.
Biological warfare: opposing viewpoints, edited by William Dudley (Farmington Hills, MI: Greenhaven Press), 2004.
Black Mecca Down: The Collapse of the City too Busy to Hate, paperback, by Paul Kersey (Charleston, SC: CreateSpace), 2012.
Boxing is My Sanctuary: A Collection of Essays, by Theodore Roland Sares (Bloomington, IN: iUniverse), 2007.
Breve Antología Poética, by Luís Benítez (Jaén, Spain: Publicatus Libros), 2006.
Clear Moral Objectives: Perspectives of a Texas Talk Host, by Lynn Woolley (Austin, TX: Eakin Press), 2003.
Composition and Cornel West: Notes toward a Deep Democracy. By Keith Gilyard (Carbondale & Edwardsville, IL: Southern Illinois University Press), 2008.
The Conscience of a Nation: Clinton, Sex and Politics Around the World, by Victor Mbakpuo (Charleston, SC: BookSurge), 2005.
Criminal Justice, by Jay S. Albanese (Upper Saddle River, NJ: Allyn & Bacon), brief edition, 2000.
Detroit: The Unauthorized Autopsy of America's Bankrupt Black Metropolis, by Paul Kersey (CreateSpace: Scotts Valley, CA, 2015).
The Directory of Small Magazine Press Editors & Publishers, 1993-1994, by Len Fulton (Paradise, CA: Dustbooks), 1993.
The Directory of Small Press & Magazine Editors & Publishers, by Len Fulton (Paradise, CA: Dustbooks), 1992.
The Directory of Small Magazine Press Editors & Publishers, 1991-1992, by Len Fulton (Paradise, CA: Dustbooks), 1991.
“Ebonics als Fremdsprache oder pädagogisches Problem: Die Diskussion nach der Oakland Resolution von 1996,” MT Shareghi-Boroujeni - 2013 - books.google.com
Ebonics: the urban education debate, edited by J. David Ramirez, Terrence G. Wiley, Gerda de Klerk, Enid Lee and Wayne E. Wright (Clevedon, England: Multilingual Matters; 2nd edition, 2005).
Education: opposing viewpoints, edited by Mary E. Williams (San Diego: Greenhaven Press), 2000.
Erectus Walks Amongst Us, by Richard D. Fuerle (New York: Spooner Press), 2008.
Exquisite Corpse, Issues 39-44 (Baltimore, MD: Culture Shock Foundation), 1992.
The Five Percenters: Islam, hip hop and the gods of New York, by Michael Muhammad Knight (Oxford, England: Oneworld Publications), 2008.
From the Dissident Right, by John Derbyshire. (VDARE: Litchfield, CT, 2013).
From the Dissident Right II, by John Derbyshire. (VDARE: Litchfield, CT, 2015).
Geolinguistics, Volumes 23-24 (New York: American Society of Geolinguistics), 1997. (Cited as Nick Stix.)
The Greenwood Encyclopedia of African American Literature, [Five Vols.], by Hans Ostrom and J. David Macey, editors, (Santa Barbara, CA: Greenwood Press), 2005.
The Greenwood Encyclopedia of African American Literature: O-T.
U. Miami L. Rev. 1025 (2013-2014) “He's a Black Male - Something Is Wrong with Him: The Role of Race in the Stand Your Ground Debate”; Jones, D. Marvin.
Index to Jewish periodicals, Volume 41, 2003.
Intelligence report: a project of the Southern Poverty Law Center, Issues 117-120 (Montgomery, AL: Klanwatch), 2005.
International Directory of Little Magazines and Small Presses, by Len Fulton (Paradise, CA: Dustbooks), 1991.
International Directory of Little Magazines & Small Presses, by Len Fulton (Paradise, CA: Dustbooks), 1992.
International Handbook of Urban Policy: Issues in the developed world, by H. S. Geyer (Cheltenham, Glos, England: Edward Elgar Publishing), 2009.
Into the Cannibal's Pot: Lessons for America from Post-Apartheid South Africa, by Ilana Mercer (Mount Vernon, WA: Bytech Services), 2012.
Itinerarios: conversaciones con el poeta Luis Benítez, Volume 1 (Nueva Generación) 1995.
It's All About Team: Exposing the Black Talented Tenth, by Burgess Owens (Paperless Publishing), 2012.
Kill the Messenger: The War on Standardized Testing, by Richard Phelps (New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Books), 2003.
Kunst Gegen Das Verschwinden: Strategien Der Sichtbarmachung Von AIDS in Nan Goldins Ausstellung, Witnesses: Against Our Vanishing by Sophie Junge. (German Edition) Hardcover (Walter De Gruyter Inc, February 15, 2015)
Liberalism or How to Turn Good Men into Whiners, Weenies and Wimps by Burgess Owens (Post Hill Press: July 19, 2016)
L.V.L. Reeves. “Mina Shaughnessy and Open Admissions at New York's City College.” The NEA Higher Education Journal, 2001 (cited as Robert Berman).
My Country Has Fallen and It Can’t Get Up: What Happened to Accountability?, by Judy Forster (Bloomington, IN: AuthorHouse), 2006.
The Myths That Divide Us: How Lies Have Poisoned American Race Relations, by John Perazzo (World Studies Books), 1998, 2007 (as Robert Berman).
The New Absolutes, by William D. Watkins (Bloomington, MN: Bethany House Publishers), 1996.
Personal Name Index to “The New York Times Index,” 1975-1999 Supplement: Rh-Stj, by Byron A. Falk, Valerie R. Falk (Sparks, NV: Roxbury Data Interface), 2002.
Personal Name Index to “The New York Times Index,” 1975-2001 supplement, Volume 8, by Byron A. Falk, Valerie R. Falk (Sparks, NV: Roxbury Data Interface), 2005.
Poet’s Market 1992, by Judson Jerome (Cincinnati OH: Writer’s Digest Books), 1991.
Poet’s Market, 1994, by Christine Martin (Cincinnati OH: Writer’s Digest Books), 1993.
Power: A Critical Reader, by Daniel Egan and Levon Chorbajian (Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall), 2005.
“Pre-Trial Prejudice 2.0: How Youtube Generated News Coverage is Set to Complicate the Concepts of Pre-Trial Prejudice Doctrine and Endanger Sixth Amendment Fair Trial Rights.” Mastromauro, Matthew, 10 J. High Tech. L. 289 (2009-2010).
Profiling Cop-Killers, by Ann R. Bumbak (Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press), 2014.
Race, Ethnicity, and Crime: Alternate Perspectives, by Dianne Williams (New York: Algora Publishing), 2012.
Racism, Schmacism: How Liberals Use the "R" Word to Push the Obama Agenda, by James Edwards (Charleston, SC: CreateSpace), 2010.
A Rational Approach to Race Relations: A Guide to Talking Straight about Contemporary Race Issues, by Rick Roush (Bloomington, IN: iUniverse, Inc.), 2008.
Reparations: Fleecing America, by James Dobranich (Bloomington, IN: AuthorHouse), 2003.
Rhetoric and Composition as Intellectual Work, by Gary A. Olson (Carbondale & Edwardsville, IL: Southern Illinois University Press), 2002.
Right-Wing Populism in America: Too Close for Comfort, by Chip Berlet and Matthew Nemiroff Lyons (New York: Guilford Press), 2000.
SBPDL: Year One: 365 Days in Black Run America, by Paul Kersey (CreateSpace: Scotts Valley, CA, 2011).
Season of the Witch: Enchantment, Terror and Deliverance in the City of Love, by David Talbot (Free Press, New York City: May 8, 2012). (Cited as www.thezebraproject.blogspot.com.)
Sharpton: A Demagogue’s Rise, by Carl Horowitz (National Legal and Policy Center: Washington, D.C., 2018 Expanded Edition).
Small Press Record of Books in Print: 1994-1995, by Len Fulton (Paradise, CA: Dustbooks), 1994.
Somebody: The Reckless Life and Remarkable Career of Marlon Brando, by Stefan Kanfer (New York: Alfred A. Knopf), 2008.
Spoken Soul: The Story of Black English, by John R. and Russell J. Rickford, (Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons), 2000.
Stranger in the Nest: Do Parents Really Shape Their Child's Personality, Intelligence, or Character?, by David B. Cohen, (Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons), 1999. (Cited as Robert Berman.)
Stranger Than Fiction: An Independent Investigation of the True Culprits Behind 9-11, by Albert D. Pastore, Ph.D. (Mesa, AZ: Dandelion Books), 2004.
Basic Writing in America: The History of Nine College Programs, by George Otte (Hampton Pr) 2008 (cited as Robert Berman).
Toward a Literacy of Promise: Joining the African-American Struggle, by Linda A. Spears-Bunton, Rebecca Powell, editors (Routledge), 2008.
True to the Language Game: African American Discourse, Cultural Politics, and Pedagogy, by Keith Gilyard (New York: Routledge), 2011.
Understanding Interpersonal Communication: Making Choices in Changing Times, Enhanced Edition, by Richard West and Lynn H. Turner (Florence, KY: Wadsworth Publishing; 2nd edition), 2010.
The Unsleeping Eye: Secret Police and Their Victims, by Robert James Stove (San Francisco: Encounter Books), 2003.
VDARE.com 2010 Anthology, edited by Peter Brimelow (Litchfield, CT: VDARE.com Books), 2010.
VDARE.com 2011 Anthology, edited by Peter Brimelow (Litchfield, CT: VDARE.com Books).
VDARE.com 2012 Anthology, Peter Brimelow, John Derbyshire, Nicholas Stix and Many More, edited by Peter Brimelow (Litchfield, CT: VDARE.com Books), 2013.
VDARE.com 2013 Anthology, edited by Peter Brimelow (Litchfield, CT: VDARE.com Books), 2013.
VDARE.com 2014 Anthology, edited by Peter Brimelow (Litchfield, CT: VDARE.com Books).
El venenero y otros poemas, by Luis Benítez (Buenos Aires: Ediciones Nueva Generación), 2005.
What Were They Thinking? Crisis Communication: The Good, the Bad, and the Totally Clueless, by Steve Adubato, Ph.D. (New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers
University Press), 2008.
Welcome to Soviet America, by Michael T. Petro Jr. (Longwood, FL: Xulon Press), 2010.
White Identity: Racial Consciousness in the 21st Century, by Jared Taylor (New Century Books: Oakton, VA, 2011)
84. Writing Alone and with Others, by Pat Schneider (New York: Oxford University Press), 2003.
Does this list make me look insecure about my place in the literary world? Well, I am! Like I have something to prove? I sure do!
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1 comment:
There are those who will not allow themselves to believe what you say.
There are those who will not allow other people to believe what you say.
There are those who will not allow other
people to HEAR what you say.
Those are the abnegaters you need to convince about race and the future of white people.
There are others who just don't want to look at the big picture--maybe not enough time--or they're just not thinkers in general.
With restrictions by media outlets and websites growing by the day,the goal of enlightening Americans is a tough job.I'm convinced of your knowledge in this field--with an equally commensurate skill in writing about it.I only wish more Americans could be made aware of your work,read it objectively and decide on a solution to what's happening to whites in the United States.
--GR Anonymous
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