Samuel T. Francis

Samuel T. Francis
Born Samuel Todd Francis
(1947-04-29)April 29, 1947
Chattanooga
Hamilton County
Tennessee, USA
Died February 15, 2005(2005-02-15) (aged 57)
Cheverly
Prince George's County, Maryland
Cause of death Complications from surgery to repair an aneurysm in the aorta
Resting place Forest Hills Cemetery in Chattanooga, Tennessee
Residence Seabrook
Prince George's County
Alma mater Johns Hopkins University
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Occupation Journalist
Historian
Religion Southern Presbyterian Church
Spouse(s) Never married

Samuel Todd Francis (April 29, 1947 – February 15, 2005), known as Sam Francis, was an American paleoconservative, iconoclastic anti-capitalist[1] columnist, nationally syndicated in the United States. He was known for his controversial views on immigration, multiculturalism, miscegenation, and his debates on public issues. His supporters characterized him as a conservative and a realist; his critics, a reactionary and a racist. Francis was also a leading political theorist of paleoconservatism and outspoken critic of neoconservatism; among his better-known stances was his view that the Iraq War was illegitimate.[2]

Career

The Washington Times

In 1986, Francis joined the editorial staff of The Washington Times as an editorial writer. He served as deputy editorial page editor from 1987 to 1991, as acting editorial page editor from February to May 1991, and as a staff columnist through September 1995. Francis received the Distinguished Writing Award for Editorial Writing of the American Society of Newspaper Editors in both 1989 and 1990. He was a finalist for the National Journalism Award (Walker Stone Prize) for Editorial Writing of the Scripps Howard Foundation in 1989 and 1990. His twice-weekly column was nationally syndicated through Creators Syndicate. In addition to his journalistic career, Francis was an adjunct scholar at the Ludwig von Mises Institute of Auburn, Alabama.[3]

In September 1995, Editor-in-Chief Wesley Pruden fired Francis after conservative journalist Dinesh D'Souza described Francis's appearance at the 1994 American Renaissance conference:

A lively controversialist, Francis began with some largely valid complaints about how the Southern heritage is demonized in mainstream culture. He went on, however, to attack the liberal principles of humanism and universalism for facilitating "the war against the white race." At one point he described country music megastar Garth Brooks as "repulsive" because "he has that stupid universalist song, in which we all intermarry." His fellow whites, he insisted, must "reassert our identity and our solidarity, and we must do so in explicitly racial terms through the articulation of a racial consciousness as whites... The civilization that we as whites created in Europe and America could not have developed apart from the genetic endowments of the creating people, nor is there any reason to believe that the civilization can be successfully transmitted to a different people."[4]

Francis said soon after the firing:

I understand what I said was controversial. I believe there are racial differences, there are natural differences between the races. I don't believe that one race is better than another. There's reasonably solid evidence for IQ differences, personality and behavior differences. I understand those things have been taken to justify segregation and white supremacy. That is not my intent.[5]

Pruden had cut back on Francis' column after The Times ran his June 27, 1995 essay criticizing the Southern Baptist Convention, based in Nashville, Tennessee, for its approval of a resolution which apologized for slavery.[6]

In it, Francis quoted Oswald Spengler that "Christian theology is the grandmother of Bolshevism." He argued that if the Baptists "dismiss the New Testament passages about slaves obeying their masters as irrelevant," then they might as well join the Bolsheviks. He concluded:

The contrition of the Southern Baptists for slavery and racism is a bit more than a politically fashionable gesture intended to massage race relations. It's a radical split from their own church traditions as well as from their determination to let the modern world go to hell by itself. Now that they've decided to join the parade toward that destination, we can expect them to adopt some even more modern resolutions that will pave the road for them.[7]

According to Eric Peters, then an editorial writer for The Washington Times:

Someone – maybe [editorial page editor Tod] Lindberg, perhaps someone higher up – was without doubt gunning for Sam, who circa '92–'93 was still both an editorial writer and a staff columnist. You could feel it in the air. People upstairs were waiting for their moment. It came when Sam wrote his infamous (to detractors) column on slavery. It was seized upon as the first of several pretexts to shove him out the door. First, Sam lost his staff columnist title – and soon thereafter, everything else.

Paul Craig Roberts defended Francis: "In typical Beltway conservative fashion, The Washington Times management fell all over itself to placate the outrage of critics who are the mortal enemies of real conservatism by throwing Sam to the wolves – for daring to speak his piece and (worse) for daring to espouse authentic conservative views, which it was clear were becoming heretical. Of course, they didn't put it that way. What they did say was that Sam was "insensitive" and (no surprise) "racist".[8]

Later career

Ideas

For many years the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review (owned by conservative Richard Mellon Scaife) and several major newspapers in smaller metropolitan areas published his column. An American traditionalist, one of his more cutting edge columns cited implicit miscegenation in a skit referring to the television series Desperate Housewives, which aired during ABC's Monday Night Football. Francis denounced the advertisement, which featured sexual innuendo between a black football player and a white actress, arguing that "The point was not just to hurl a pie in the face of morals and good taste but also of white racial and cultural identity." The advertisement, argued Francis, implicitly argued that "interracial sex is normal and legitimate," an idea that Francis saw as "fairly radical." Francis went on to argue that "breaking down the sexual barriers between the races is a major weapon of cultural destruction."[9]

Francis had also argued that Barack Obama's campaign for the U.S. Senate from Illinois in 2004 would lead toward the moment when America ceases to be "characterized by the white racial identity of its founders and historic population".[10] The Anti-Defamation League branded Francis an advocate of well-mannered white supremacy, but Francis' defenders maintained that he was being persecuted for his politically incorrect views.

Before his death, Francis wrote the "Statement of Principles", the platform of the Council of Conservative Citizens.[11] It refers to America as a "Christian country" with a "Christian heritage" – and calls for states' rights, "America First" policies, and "protection of the environment and natural heritage."[11] It states that "the American people and government should remain European in their composition and character." It attacks immigration from "non-European and non-Western peoples," because it "threatens to transform our nation into a non-European majority in our lifetime."[11] It also says that:

We also oppose all efforts to mix the races of mankind, to promote non-white races over the European-American people through so-called "affirmative action" and similar measures, to destroy or denigrate the European-American heritage, including the heritage of the Southern people, and to force the integration of the races.[11]

Work

Francis was editor of the Citizens Informer quarterly newsletter (published by the Council of Conservative Citizens) and an editor of The Occidental Quarterly, a white nationalist and self-described "pro-Western" journal edited by Kevin Lamb and sponsored by William Regnery, II.

He served as a contributor and editor of the Intercollegiate Studies Institute's quarterly, Modern Age. After his dismissal from The Washington Times and the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, Francis continued to write a syndicated column for VDARE.com and Chronicles magazine, and spoke at meetings of American Renaissance and the Council of Conservative Citizens. He attended the American Friends of the British National Party's meeting on April 22, 2000, where he heard and met Nick Griffin.[12] His articles also appeared in Middle American News. Francis' last published work was an article penned for the 2005 IHS Press anti-war anthology, Neo-Conned!.

In his later years the burgeoning "World Wide Web" as it was then called, boosted his readership exponentially. Wide online exposure led him to become quite proficient in voicing his ideas and commentary to an expanding fan base. He came to appreciate information technology, and relocated his office to fashionable Old Town Alexandria, Virginia. Having become a leading critic of the neoconservative establishment and the "welfare warfare state," many traditionalists, libertarians and paleoconservatives rallied to his support. Prominent among them was friend and fellow columnist Pat Buchanan who stated: "Sam was denounced as a racist. But Sam did not hate anyone. He was a victim of hatred, of those who advance by slandering, censoring, and silencing braver men to appease the prevailing power."[6]

Core beliefs

Conservatism and tradition

Appreciation

Francis defined authentic conservatism as "the survival and enhancement of a particular people and its institutionalized cultural expressions."[13] He de-emphasized the "conservative" part of the "paleoconservative" label, saying that he did not want the status quo preserved.[14] He said of the paleo movement:

What paleoconservatism tries to tell Americans is that the dominant forces in their society are no longer committed to conserving the traditions, institutions, and values that created and formed it, and, therefore, that those who are really conservative in any serious sense and wish to live under those traditions, institutions, and values need to oppose the dominant forces and form new ones.[15]

Francis respected the role tradition plays in civil society. "The power of tradition and its allies lies not in their ability to justify themselves through logic but in their capacity to mobilize those who remain attached to tradition; in a declining civilization, or one challenged by the enemies of tradition, that capacity will dwindle as the power of the challenger grows."

Francis used similar ideas to argue that society should regulate sexual behavior. He specifically supported laws against sodomy and opposed gays in the military:

The lesson of four thousand years of social history is that sexual behavior, consensual or not, has consequences for others, that it often affects (and hurts) others in ways society needs to control, and that unregulated sex renders social bonds, especially in the family but also beyond it, impossible. We can regulate it through law or through socially enforced moral custom or both, but we have to do it somehow. History knows of no human society that has not regulated sexual behavior and forbidden some kinds of it, nor is there any reason known to social science to suppose that a society that fails to do so is possible. A "society" that makes no distinction between sex within marriage and sex outside it, that does not distinguish morally and socially between continence and debauchery, normality and perversion, love and lust, is not really a society but merely the chaos of a perpetual orgy. It is an invitation to just such an orgy that the proponents of normalized and unrestricted homosexuality invite America.[16]

Criticism

On the other hand, Francis suggested to The American Conservative magazine, founded by his friend and fellow columnist Pat Buchanan, to "forget about the social issues” that divide left- and right-wing anti-globalization activists.[17] He also complained that the "Religious Right" focuses on certain social issues and neglects other civilizational crises.[18] He also said that the Cold War conservative movement, represented by National Review, was "archaic." Francis regarded himself as a Southern Presbyterian, "long after he had lost a specifically Christian faith."[19]

While Francis was influenced by his Southern roots and supported "authentic federalism,"[20] he stopped short at supporting a contemporary return to Southern secessionism, characterizing it as an "infantile fantasy" and saying it is impractical and that the main political line of division in the United States is not between the regions of North and South (insofar as such regions can still be said to exist) but between elite and non-elite. He said that Middle Americans in both regions face the same threats.[21]

Pop culture

Francis also complained about corrosive elements in popular culture. He complained that corporate "garbage," protected by bureaucratic market controls, kicked traditional and regional music, poetry, and art out of the mainstream. For example, chain bookstores "offer exactly the same stock in every city in the country, almost none of which would have complied with the conventional and moderate obscenity laws of the 1950s." He said that pop culture, beyond being crude and mass-produced, promotes a multicultural, managerial ideology.[22] He wrote that:

The expression "popular culture" originally meant those elements of culture produced by the people. Today it means nothing of the sort, but rather culture produced for the people by elites, and the elites, whether "publicly" or "privately" endowed, are invariably entwined with bureaucratic organizations... Outside the universities, what passes as popular culture manifests itself in television, films, journalism, publishing, music, museums, galleries, and amusement parks, all of which are bureaucratic and professionalized in form, most of which are almost always directly or indirectly dependent on the state, and all of which claim to provide for the people a culture that is so superior to what the people can produce for themselves that no one needs to worry about producing their own.[22]

For example, Francis argued that Star Trek represents "global democratic capitalism gone galactic." It shows what the "cultural elite" would do if it could turn much of the universe into a totalitarian "federation." He said the show's plots are "transparent allegorical representations of whatever social crisis preoccupies the real cultural elite," such as "racism," "sexism," and "the obsolete customs and sometimes obnoxious beliefs and habits of 20th century man." He argued that the decades-long popularity of the franchise shows the power of this myth.[22]

Global capitalism

Francis argued that big business should serve the interests of Middle America. "What Middle Americans need," he said, "is a political formula and a public myth that synthesizes the attention to material-economic interests offered by the left and the defense of concrete and national identity offered by the right."[23] He also said that the American Right "lost Middle Americans when it rehearsed its old bourgeois economic formulas."[24] He argued that defense of capitalism is not a conservative issue:

Conservatives – real conservatives, at least, not classical liberals or neoconservatives – should not be surprised. Capitalism, an economic system driven only, according to its own theory, by the accumulation of profit, is at least as much the enemy of tradition as the NAACP or communism, and those on the "right" who make a fetish of capitalism generally understand this and applaud it. The hostility of capitalism toward tradition is clear enough in its reduction of all social issues to economic ones. Moreover, like communism, capitalism is based on an essential egalitarianism that refuses to distinguish between one consumer's dollar and another. The reductionism and egalitarianism inherent in capitalism explains its destructive impact on social institutions. On the issue of immigration, capitalism is notorious for demanding cheap labor to undercut the cost of native workers. But it is not only in America that it has done so.

Race, culture and ethnicity

American identity

Francis explicitly linked American success with European demographics:

It is all very well to point to black cotton-pickers and Chinese railroad workers, but the cotton fields and the railroads were there because white people wanted them and knew how to put them there. Almost all non-European contributors to American history either have been made by individuals and groups that have assimilated Euro-American ideas, values, and goals, or have been conceived, organized, and directed by white leaders.[25]

He also said that:

Just as the Christians turned pagan temples into churches and pagan holidays into Christian holidays, multiculturalism is replacing an old culture with a new one. It is the expression of a deep-seated hatred of this culture in its religious, racial, and moral expressions.[26]

Francis also called for "white racial consciousness," equating it with Eurocentrism, the "supremacy of white European culture." He distanced this view from white separatism or the white supremacy "obtained under slavery or segregation." He said "there is no reason why nonwhites who reside in the United States could not enjoy equality of legal rights."[27] He also denied that he proposed "political domination of one race by another or military or coercive 'conquest' in any literal sense."[28] Still, he argued:

Whites would simply no longer countenance nonwhite aggression and insults or the idolization of nonwhite heroes, icons, and culture; white children would be raised in accordance with what is proper to being white, and norms openly recognized as appropriate to whites would be the legitimizing and dominant norms of American society as they were prior to the 1960s. Racial guilt and truckling would end.[27][29]

Specifically, he called for:

(1) a long-term moratorium on all immigration,

(2) the withdrawal of the federal government from involvement in all racial issues, and
(3) the repeal of all federal laws and court decisions (including the civil-rights laws of the 1960s and the rulings of the Warren Court) that authorize such involvement.[30]

Paleocons and race

Francis said that paleoconservatism itself makes no scientific conclusions about the nature of race, but gave a summary of the paleo view of race and the state:

What you think the state ought to do about race has little to do with what you think about race. It has everything to do with what you think about the state. Under the properly limited federal government with which this country started out and to which it should return, the state would be unable to do very much at all about race. In the modern leviathan created by liberals, where smoking, sexual beliefs and guns are approved targets of federal meat-grinding, there's no limit to what the state might do about race or those whose IQs it doesn't approve.[30]

Elaborating further, he wrote that:

paleoconservatives, unlike libertarians, most neoconservatives, and many contemporary mainstream conservatives, do not consider America to be an “idea,” a “proposition,” or a “creed.” It is instead a concrete and particular culture, rooted in a particular historical experience, a set of particular institutions as well as particular beliefs and values, and a particular ethnic-racial identity, and, cut off from those roots, it cannot survive. Indeed, it is not surviving now, for all the glint and glitter of empire...

[N]ot a few [paleoconservatives] have been accused of simple-minded “racism,” “white supremacy,” and other ill-defined bugaboos. I, for one, like to think that what they believe about race, while definitely not in the liberal-neocon mainstream, is rather more nuanced and considerably more sophisticated than their enemies (and not a few of their friends) want to think.[31]

Francis himself said that paleocons could even believe that race is a social construct, "but they should be able to agree, at a minimum, that if the historic character of the American nation is to survive, the exploitation of race as a political weapon by the ruling class must end."[30]

American power politics

The managerial revolution

Main article: managerial state

He was greatly influenced by James Burnham's theory of the "managerial revolution" and wrote two books about James Burnham.[32] In part based on Burnham's idea of the "managerial revolution" he developed a theory for a new populist movement based on the idea of "Middle American Radicals". This idea is expressed in a collection of essays entitled Revolution from the Middle.

Francis, who said this theory inspired George Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four, explained it thus:

Those who hold such skills are able to dominate the state, the economy, and the culture because the structures of these sectors of modern society require technical functions that only specially skilled personnel can provide. The older elites simply lack those skills and eventually lose actual control over the key institutions of modern mass society. As the new, managerial elites take over, society is reconfigured to reflect and support their interests as a ruling class – interests radically different from those of the older elites. Generally, the interests of the new managerial elites consist in maintaining and extending the institutions they control and in ensuring that the needs for and rewards of the technical skills they possess are steadily increased, that society become as dependent on them and their functions as possible.[33]

Francis, unlike some other paleocons, argued that the existence of managers alone is harmless. Rather, the multiculturalist ideology they adopted drives it toward tyranny. He said that "white, Christian, male-oriented, bourgeois values and institutions" are the principal restraints of managerial power, which this class seeks to undermine. He explained:

If we could somehow take out the ideology, change the minds of those who control the state, and convert them into paleo-conservatives, the state apparatus itself would be neutral. What really animates its drive toward a totalitarian conquest and reconfiguration of society and the human mind itself comes from the ideology that the masters of the managerial state have adopted, a force that is entirely extraneous and largely accidental to the structure by which they exercise power.[33]

Francis also said, however, that ideology helps the managerial elite increase its grip on society:

It is in the long-term interest of the overclass (not of anyone else) to managerialize society so that all aspects of life are organized, packaged, routinized and subjugated to manipulation by the technical skill the overclass possesses, and that interest requires the undermining of institutions and norms that are independent of, and impediments to, overclass control.[34]

Francis argued that this system oversees "the managed destruction of such relationships of civil society as property, patterns of association, education, and employment."[30] He elaborated:

The managerial ruling class, lodged primarily in the state and the other massive bureaucratic structures that dominate the economy and mass culture, must undermine such institutions of traditional social life if its power and interests are to prevail. Disparities between races – rebaptized as "prejudice," "discrimination," "white supremacy," and "hate" to which state and local governments and private institutions are indifferent or in which they are allegedly complicit – provide constant targets of convenience for managerial attack on local, private, and social relationships. Seen in this perspective, as a means of subverting traditional society and enhancing the dominance of a new elite and its own social forms, the crusade for racial "liberation" is not distinctly different from other phases of the same conflict that involve attacks on the family, community, class, and religion.[30]

In addition, Francis argued that since the center-right and center-left refuse to deal with major civilizational issues, they reduce domestic political debates to narrow economic issues. This preoccupation views human beings as "resources" and treats them like inanimate objects.[35] Using a phrase from Peter Drucker, he says this "reflects the myth of Economic Man – that human beings are mainly or entirely economic in their motivations and that therefore the business of America is business, even if it takes the federal leviathan to conduct it or regulate it."[36]

Anarcho-tyranny

Francis argued that the problems of the managerial state extend to issues of crime and justice. In 1992, he introduced the word "anarcho-tyranny" into the paleocon vocabulary.[37] He once defined it this way: "we refuse to control real criminals (that's the anarchy) so we control the innocent (that's the tyranny)."[38]

In one of his last essays, he explained the concept:

What we have in this country today, then, is both anarchy (the failure of the state to enforce the laws) and, at the same time, tyranny – the enforcement of laws by the state for oppressive purposes; the criminalization of the law-abiding and innocent through exorbitant taxation, bureaucratic regulation, the invasion of privacy, and the engineering of social institutions, such as the family and local schools; the imposition of thought control through "sensitivity training" and multiculturalist curricula, "hate crime" laws, gun-control laws that punish or disarm otherwise law-abiding citizens but have no impact on violent criminals who get guns illegally, and a vast labyrinth of other measures. In a word, anarcho-tyranny.[37]

Francis argues that this situation extends across the U.S. and Europe. While the government functions normally, violent crime remains a constant, creating a climate of fear (anarchy). He says that "laws that are supposed to protect ordinary citizens against ordinary criminals" routinely go unenforced, even though the state is "perfectly capable" of doing so. While this problem rages on, government elites concentrate their interests on law-abiding citizens. In fact, Middle America winds up on the receiving end of both anarchy and tyranny.[37]

The laws that are enforced are either those that extend or entrench the power of the state and its allies and internal elites ... or else they are the laws that directly punish those recalcitrant and "pathological" elements in society who insist on behaving according to traditional norms – people who do not like to pay taxes, wear seat belts, or deliver their children to the mind-bending therapists who run the public schools; or the people who own and keep firearms, display or even wear the Confederate flag, put up Christmas trees, spank their children, and quote the Constitution or the Bible – not to mention dissident political figures who actually run for office and try to do something about mass immigration by Third World populations.[37]

Francis argued that anarcho-tyranny is built into the managerial system and cannot be solved simply by fighting corruption or voting out incumbents. In fact, he says that the system generates a false "conservatism" that encourages people to act passively in the face of perpetual revolution. He concludes that only by devolving power back toward law-abiding citizens can sanity be restored.[37]

Middle-American revolution

Francis argued that the managerial regime is here indefinitely. He advocated transforming the managerial state into a new regime that supports the right's demographic and cultural goals and institutions. He argued that "Middle America," a vanguard of "working-class social conservatives" and "the still-structured middle class," provide a social base for resistance.

Francis argued that this new coalition would support the "values and goals" of this "increasingly alienated and threatened strata." It should then assert leadership and rally Middle America "in radical opposition to the regime."[39] He described elements of the "Middle American revolution" in Pat Buchanan's ill-fated 1992 presidential campaign:

[Buchanan] appealed to a particular identity, embodied in the concepts of America as a nation with discrete national political and economic interests and of the Middle American stratum as the political, economic, and cultural core of the nation. In adopting such themes, Mr. Buchanan decisively broke with the universalist and cosmopolitan ideology that has been masquerading as conservatism and which has marched up and down the land armed with a variety of universalist slogans and standards: natural rights; equality as a conservative principle; the export of global democracy as the primary goal of American foreign policy; unqualified support for much of the civil rights agenda, unlimited immigration, and free trade; the defense of one version or another of "one-worldism"; enthusiastic worship of an abstract "opportunity" and unrestricted economic growth through acquisitive individualism; and the adulation of the purported patron saints of all these causes in the persons of Abraham Lincoln and Martin Luther King, Jr.[13]

After Buchanan's slim showing in the 2000 presidential election, Francis remarked that success was still a "long way off."[26] In one of his last essays, he wrote, "The problem today is not to conserve [the status quo], let alone to persuade Americans that it ought to be conserved. The problem today is how to persuade Americans that it ought to be – and can be – changed."[40]

Francis' last column was critical of what he viewed as the liberalism and globalism themes inherent in the second inaugural address of U.S. President George W. Bush, delivered on January 20, 2005.[41]

Bush, wrote Francis, "confirmed once and for all that the neo-conservatism to which he has delivered his administration and the country is fundamentally indistinguishable from the liberalism many conservatives imagine he has renounced and defeated."[42]

Works

Selected articles

References

  1. Francis, Samuel. "Capitalism the Enemy." (pdf, page 41 at the Wayback Machine (archived July 23, 2004)) Chronicles August 2000
  2. Francis, Samuel (2003-03-21). "Neo-cons seek to start 'World War IV'". Retrieved 2008-09-17.
  3. Rockwell, Llewellyn H. (ed.). Murray Rothbard, In Memoriam (PDF). Auburn, AL: von Mises Institute. pp. 64, 127.
  4. Dinesh D'Souza, "Racism: It's a White (and Black) Thing", The Washington Post, September 24, 1995.
  5. Howard Kurtz, "Washington Times Clips Its Right Wing", The Washington Post, October 19, 1995.
  6. 1 2 Timothy Stanley, The Crusader: The Life and Tumultuous Times of Pat Buchanan (New York City: St. Martin's Press, 2012), p. 358; ISBN 978-0-312-58174-9
  7. Samuel T. Francis, "All those things to apologize for," The Washington Times, June 27, 1995.
  8. Eric Peters, "Paul Craig Roberts And The Decline And Fall Of The Washington Times," VDARE, June 1, 2010.
  9. Samuel T. Francis, "Morality Not The Only Target on Monday Night Football." VDARE, November 26, 2004.
  10. Francis, Sam. "What Kind Of People Are 'People Like Obama'?," VDARE, August 16, 2004.
  11. 1 2 3 4 Francis, Samuel. "Statement of Principles". Council of Conservative Citizens, 2005.
  12. American Friends of the BNP: April Meeting at the Wayback Machine (archived March 12, 2001).
  13. 1 2 Samuel T. Francis, "The Buchanan Revolution" at the Wayback Machine (archived June 25, 2008). Chronicles, July 1992. (Pp. 38–47 of the PDF file.)
  14. Francis, Samuel T. Beautiful Losers: Essays on the Failure of American Conservatism, 1993.
  15. "Principalities & Powers: (Con)fusion on the Right," at the Wayback Machine (archived April 16, 2004) Chronicles Magazine, March 2004.
  16. Samuel T. Francis, "Sex and consequences", The Washington Times, February 2, 1993.
  17. Foer, Franklin. "Buchanan's Surefire Flop" at the Wayback Machine (archived August 6, 2002). The New Republic, July 22, 2002.
  18. Francis, Samuel. "Religious Wrong" at the Wayback Machine (archived May 28, 2008). Chronicles, December 1994. (Pp. 103–112 of the PDF file.)
  19. Gottfried, Paul (Feb 24, 2005), "Parallel Lives: William F. Buckley vs. Samuel T. Francis", VDARE
  20. Samuel T. Francis, "Judicial Tyranny" at the Wayback Machine (archived November 14, 2006). The New American, Vol. 13, No. 8. April 14, 1997.
  21. Samuel T. Francis, "An Infantile Disorder" at the Wayback Machine (archived October 7, 2007). Chronicles, February 1998. (Pp. 9–18 of the PDF file.)
  22. 1 2 3 Samuel T. Francis, "Beam Us Out" at the Wayback Machine (archived May 28, 2008). Chronicles, April 1994. (Pp. 31–40 of the PDF file.)
  23. Paul V. Murphy, The Rebuke of History. University of North Carolina Press, 2001, p. 231
  24. Hans-Hermann Hoppe, "The Intellectual Incoherence of Conservatism." Mises Daily, March 4, 2005.
  25. The Rebuke of History, p. 242.
  26. 1 2 Grace, Kevin Michael. "The global race to the middle." Report Newsmagazine, June 11, 2001.
  27. 1 2 Francis, Samuel. "Prospects for Racial and Cultural Survival." American Renaissance, Vol. 6, No. 3. March 1995.
  28. Letter to The Wall Street Journal, dated March 21, 1996.
  29. The Rebuke of History, p. 351.
  30. 1 2 3 4 5 "Paleoconservatism and Race," at the Wayback Machine (archived January 13, 2004) Chronicles Magazine, January 2001.
  31. Samuel T. Francis, (2002-12-16) "The Paleo Persuasion", The American Conservative.
  32. Andrews, Louis (2000). "James Burnham," The Occidental Quarterly 5 (2), pp. 93–94.
  33. 1 2 Francis, Sam. "Power Trip." The Occidental Quarterly, Vol. 3, No. 2. Summer 2003.
  34. Brooks, David "Buchanan Feeds Class War in the Information Age." Los Angeles Times, October 31, 1999.
  35. Francis, Samuel T. "Immigration: The Republican taboo." The Washington Times, May 30, 1995.
  36. Samuel T. Francis, "Bipartisan loser for GATT." The Washington Times, December 2, 1994.
  37. 1 2 3 4 5 "Synthesizing Tyranny" at the Wayback Machine (archived April 2, 2007), Chronicles Magazine, April 2005.
  38. Francis, Sam. "Anarcho-Tyranny – Where Multiculturalism Leads," VDARE, December 30, 2004.
  39. See Francis' essay, "Beautiful Losers".
  40. Gottfried, Paul (Nov 4, 2004), "How Russell Kirk (And the Right) Went Wrong", VDARE
  41. "Sam Francis, columnist, 57, dies". washingtontimes.com. Retrieved October 2, 2010.
  42. "Joe Holley, "Conservative Writer Samuel T. Francis", February 26, 2005". washingtonpost.com. February 26, 2005. Retrieved October 2, 2010.

Further reading

Obituaries

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