April 21, 2016

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Meanwhile, regarding blacks and Hispanics, on issues like immigration, crime, and educational performance, restraint is demanded. Nothing racial is permitted, and no broad, overarching generalizations are allowed. As I told The Guardian, establishment conservative media bigwigs demand that the official line on immigration must be “€œWe oppose illegal immigration because we don”€™t support lawbreaking, but we love Hispanics and we want “€™em to come here, just legally.”€ While meanwhile, with Muslims, it’s all “€œLet’s kill their leaders and convert their families! Let’s bomb “€™em to dust and ban their mosques! They are all bad to the bone…innately bad.”€ There is something grotesquely ludicrous about the fact that people who venerate Pam Geller and Debbie Schlussel can turn around and call Jared Taylor a madman. That’s even more laughable than Michelle Fields”€™ claim that the arm touch was as traumatic as her father’s death.

Let me personify my point about neocon hypocrisy. Nick Searcy, an actor of some repute, is one of the most outspoken and respected neocons on social media and in the conservative blogosphere. And he hates alt-rightists. He considers them bigots and cranks (“€œBull Connor-style anti-miscegenation racist turds”€ is how he referred to them in a recent rant). Yet last year on 9/11, Nick favored his Facebook followers with a repost about how great it would be if ordinary, innocent Muslims died violently in large numbers as they made the hajj. Nick is a typical neocon hypocrite. He reserves the right to express his own group hatreds, while attacking others for expressing theirs. The neocon press has been getting away with that hypocrisy for years.

Generally, the alt-right has been on the same page as the neocons regarding Muslims, if for different reasons (racial and cultural as opposed to national security and Israel!Israel! Israel!). Now the alt-rightists want to expand the list of groups about which you can speak without worrying about propriety. And the neocons aren”€™t happy about that, because it makes “€œus conservatives”€ look racist. A neocon might say, “€œMuslims killed us on 9/11, so it’s okay to hate them as a group,”€ to which an alt-rightist might reply, “€œAnd how many white Americans are killed and raped by blacks and Mexicans every day, but it’s not okay to hate them as a group?”€

Now, to be clear, I am in no way defending those views; I”€™m merely pointing out that “€œestablishment”€ conservatives created this hypocrisy, and now they”€™re dealing with the consequences, one of which is that the alt-right is no longer content having its hatreds play second fiddle to those of the neocons. This needs to be said: During my years as a high-profile (and very establishment) conservative writer and activist, every single National Review, FrontPage Mag, and PJ Media guy I worked with read and appreciated American Renaissance and VDARE…they would just never admit it publicly. I made the point earlier about how absurd it is to revere Geller and Schlussel while dismissing Taylor, and the neocon media higher-ups do understand that. They like Taylor. But they fear rank-and-file alt-rightists because, while engendering hatred toward Muslims is seen as safe, indeed beneficial, for Jewish neocons and their favorite causes (well, “€œcause,”€ singular”€”Israel), it’s believed that if you let in too many AmRen fanboys, you”€™ll start to accumulate people who are less-than-friendly toward Jews (and almost certainly, you will). So conservative publications like National Review have, in the past, indulged alt-rightists just enough to keep them as readers, but not enough to make them feel like part of the family.

The Trump candidacy has (in my opinion accidentally) led to a permanent end to that détente. Fragmentation, hostility, and side-taking will continue until the Trump coronation or the Trump Waterloo, and there”€™ll be no returning to normal afterward. Someone at National Review might, at some point in the future, say, “€œSorry for that whole “€˜white working-class communities deserve to die“€™ thing,”€ and someone at Breitbart might say, “€œSorry we were kinda acting like paid shills for Trump.”€ But it won”€™t matter. Alt-rightists are tired of being relegated to the part of the bus they believe should be reserved for blacks. And with people like Yiannopoulos at Breitbart essentially saying “€œLet them move up to the front,”€ and people like Kevin Williamson at National Review basically saying, “€œKick them to the gutter and run “€™em over,”€ a rift has been formed that will not and cannot be healed by compromise.

Even Andrew Breitbart himself would not be able to set things right at this point. And frankly, it’s probably for the best that he didn”€™t live to see the demise of his noble dream of a vibrant and unified right-leaning “€œnew media”€ composed of people who, despite their differences, are single-mindedly focused on battling the left rather than each other.

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