Wednesday, October 22, 2008

Nicholas Stix, Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

(This is my censored Wikipedia/Pretend Encyclopedia entry, which I just did a verbatim copy-and-paste of from Deletionpedia. I coded the top version, so as to be presentable within Blogger’s coding scheme. In the bottom version, the Wikipedia/Pretend Encyclopedia coding is untouched and exposed. )

Nicholas Stix is a New York-based freelance investigative journalist and social critic who often writes on controversial issues such as race, feminism, and the media from a generally right-wing perspective. In 2006, researcher-journalist Carl Horowitz cited Stix in a list of “Northern paleoconservatives,” “a fraternity whose prominent names include Peter Brimelow, Steve Sailer, Nicholas Stix, Lou Dobbs, Tom Clancy, Mark Krikorian, Ted Nugent, Rep. Tom Tancredo, and yes, the late Sen. Robert Taft."

Stix founded A Different Drummer magazine (1990-93), which he continues online, and has written for numerous paper and online publications, including Die Suedwest Presse, New York Daily News, New York Post, Newsday, the Westsider, Chelsea Clinton News, Flatiron News, Middle American News, Toogood Reports, Global Politician, Insight on the News, Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture, the American Enterprise, Campus Reports, VDARE, American Renaissance, the Weekly Standard, Front Page Magazine, the New York Press, New York Newsday, Ideas on Liberty, Academic Questions, National Review Online, Liberty, Men's News Daily, Intellectual Conservative, WEBCommentary, the Autonomist, the Magic City Morning Star, the Post Chronicle, the New Dominion, the Conservative Voice, The Illinois Leader, Enter Stage Right, MichNews OpinioNet, American Daily and News by Us. His day jobs have included washing pots, building Daimler-Benzes on the assembly-line, tackling shoplifters, serving as an adjunct lecturer at the City University of New York, and being a stay-at-home dad.

Controversies
Since the 1990s, Stix has written extensively on a number of controversies, including Kwanzaa; Ebonics; remedial education and grade inflation; New York City school scandals; one of the October Surprises in the 2000 presidential election; charges that on Election Day 2000, Florida state officials prevented black voters from going to the polls, or having their votes counted; bilingual education; the 2001 Cincinnati riots; the Steven Hatfill case; the racial profiling debate; the de-policing debate; race hoaxes; affirmative action; the Sally Hemings-’Thomas Jefferson imbroglio; the Jayson Blair case; the Brian Nichols case; the New York City police crime statistics scandal; the corruption scandals enveloping then-Gov. Jim McGreevey of New Jersey; then-Illinois State Sen. Barack Obama; the Associated Press "Boosgate" scandal; the CBS News "Memogate" scandal; The Color of Crime; what Stix called "reverse reporting" in ‘New Orleans, following Hurricane Katrina; the illegal immigration amnesty movement; what Stix charged was a cover-up by the Associated Press in the Baytown, Texas, black-on-white, homosexual serial rape case; the "Duke Rape Hoax"; and the "Knoxville Horror."

Praise and criticism
Stix’s work has elicited responses running the gamut. In 2002, in “The Crucifixion of Steven Hatfill,” Newsmax reporter Phil Brennan wrote of the attempt by the media and the FBI to link biodefense scientist, Dr. Steven Hatfill, to the previous fall’s deadly anthrax attacks, due to the anthrax letters having had the return address of a non-existent “Greendale School” in New Jersey, and Hatfill’s having once lived in Harare, Zimbabwe, near a neighborhood called “Greendale”:

“Investigative journalist Nicholas Stix took the trouble the rest of the media couldn’t bother themselves with. He contacted people in Zimbabwe and asked if anyone knew about the so-called Greendale school. Here are two answers he got:

‘There was [and still is] only one school in the neighbourhood. In my day, it was called Courtney Selous primary school. ... I checked on a NGO website which listed all the name changes which the government is proposing presently and discovered that the school is, indeed, still called Courtney Selous [after a famous 'White Hunter,' Frederick Courtney Selous, who featured prominently in early Rhodesian pioneer history]. Although the school is located in Greendale, it has never been known as “Greendale School.” No other schools have ever been built in the area.’

‘There isn't and never has been a Greendale School. There is a suburb in Harare called Greendale. The schools in that area were Courteney Selous School, which is a school for junior kids. The only other schools in that area were for high school, i.e Oriel Boys, Oriel Girls and Chisipite. There is a school that is called Greengrove but is not in the school zone in the area mentioned although it is fairly close.’”

In Richard P. Phelps’s book, Kill the Messenger: The War on Standardized Testing, he praises “free-lance investigative reporter Nicholas Stix” as being among the “small proportion of journalists [who] do make some effort at writing balanced stories on testing.”

In Writing Alone and with Others, Prof. Pat Schneider lists among “some of my favorites from other writers” two lines from one of Stix’s poems: “Please do not call to me mother / while I am making pancakes…”

Other writers have judged Stix negatively. In the article, “The Struggle over Language Rights,” published in the anthology, Rhetoric and Composition as Intellectual Work, Prof. Keith Gilyard identifies Stix as “a steadfast opponent of language rights for African Americans.”
While condemning Stix over the course of 1,300 words: “But as [sic] evident by now, Stix isn't much about logic,” “In the final analysis, intellectually speaking, Stix is for kids,” etc., Gilyard failed to disclose his prior history with Stix. In 1997, in the pages of the news magazine, Insight on the News, the two had squared off in a 3,500-word debate on the pedagogical value of using Ebonics in the classroom.

In 2005, after Stix published a story about convicted rapist Roman Polanski, Polanski’s victim, ‘Samantha Geimer wrote Stix,

“It should be a crime for you to make a living re-victimizing me with your stupid story.

”You and your fellow reporters are no better than Polanski.

”I wish you would all get sued for every lie your print."

Stix published Geimer’s letter, and responded that he had not written anything about her that wasn’t true, and had not taken the initiative in revealing her identity. Geimer had in recent years given numerous on-camera TV interviews, newspaper interviews in which she had permitted herself to be photographed, and had even revealed where she lived.

In "Into the Mainstream: Academic Racists' Work Inching Toward Legitimacy," in its Winter 2005 Intelligence Report, the Southern Poverty Law Center cited Stix as having written on the ‘New Century Foundation’s report, The Color of Crime, about which the SPLC was highly critical. On April 8, 2008, the SPLC’s Mark Potok condemned the National Policy Institute as a “white supremacist” organization, and wrote that Stix’s report, The State of White America-2007, “paints ‘a statistical and narrative portrait of the war on white America,’ in the website’s words. Nicholas Stix’s introduction "The State of White America: A Major New Study on American Race and Ethnic Relations," to the article describes the Supreme Court’s 1954 Brown vs. Board of Education ruling outlawing school segregation as ‘arguably the worse [sic] decision in the Court’s 216 year history.’ He claims later civil rights legislation was unconstitutional. ‘[I]ntegration and the civil rights movement led directly to the destruction of great cities,’ he concludes.”

More nuanced positions were taken by Thomas Jackson in the August 2007 issue of American Renaissance magazine and by Casey Sanchez, in the Fall 2007 Intelligence Report of the Southern Poverty Law Center. Reviewing the National Policy Institute report that Stix edited, The State of White America-2007, Jackson criticized Stix for the latter’s harsh tone in his introduction to the report, while praising him for his exhaustive report on black-on-white school atrocities, his analysis of the pitfalls of affirmative action hiring of black police officers, and for his chapter on black-on-white crime.

While in “The Big Lie: Criminal Cases Exploited to Attack Blacks,” Sanchez referred to Stix as a “white nationalist,” he praised him for casting doubt on uncorroborated Internet rumors, and for exposing journalist Michelle Malkin’s spreading of uncorroborated rumors regarding the murder of Channon Christian and Christopher Newsom.

==Works Citing Nicholas Stix==
(Added October 24, 2009)

The American Directory of Certified Uncle Toms, by James B. Lowe (Bensenville, IL: Lushena Books, 2002).

Boxing is My Sanctuary: A Collection of Essays, by Theodore Roland Sares (New York, Lincoln, NE: iUniverse, 2007).

Breve Antología Poética, by Luís Benítez, (Jaén, Spain: Publicatus Libros, 2006).

Composition and Cornel West: Notes toward a Deep Democracy, by Keith Gilyard, Ph.D., (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, (Boston: Allyn & Bacon; Brief edition, 2000).

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: 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).

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).

Kill the Messenger: The War on Standardized Testing, by Richard Phelps (New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Books, 2003).

The New Absolutes, by William D. Watkins (Bloomington, MN: Bethany House, 1996).

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).

A Rational Approach to Race Relations: A Guide to Talking Straight about Contemporary Race Issues, by R.V. Roush (New York, Lincoln, NE: iUniverse, 2008).

Rhetoric and Composition as Intellectual Work‎, edited 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).

Small Press Record of Books in Print: 1994-1995, by Len Fulton (Paradise, CA: Dustbooks, 1994).

Spoken Soul: The Story of Black English‎, by John R. and Russell J. Rickford (Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons), 2000.

El venenero y otros poemas‎, by Luis Benítez (Buenos Aires: Ediciones Nueva
Generación), 2005.

The Unsleeping Eye: Secret Police and Their Victims, by Robert James Stove (San Francisco: Encounter Books, 2003).

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).

Writing Alone and with Others, by Pat Schneider, (New York: Oxford University Press, 2003).

==External links==
Nicholas Stix, Uncensored (weblog)

A Different Drummer (online)

Nicholas Stix VDARE Archive

Nicholas Stix Archive from Insight on the News and The American Enterprise


Category:Living people
Category:American journalists
Category:American Jews
Category:American columnists
Category:Race and intelligence controversy
Category:Feminism
Category:White nationalists
Category:Paleoconservatives
Category:Conservatives




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'''Nicholas Stix''' is a New York-based freelance investigative journalist and social critic who often writes on controversial issues such as race, feminism, and the media from a generally right-wing perspective. In 2006, researcher-journalist Carl Horowitz cited Stix in a list of “Northern paleoconservatives,” “a fraternity whose prominent names include [[Peter Brimelow]], [[Steve Sailer]], Nicholas Stix, [[Lou Dobbs]], [[Tom Clancy]], [[Mark Krikorian]], [[Ted Nugent]], Rep. [[Tom Tancredo]], and yes, the late Sen. [[Robert Taft]]."[http://www.thesocialcontract.com/artman2/publish/tsc_17_01/tsc_17_1_horowitz_profiling.shtml “Profiling In an Age of Terrorism,” Carl F. Horowitz, ''The Social Contract'', Volume 17, Number 1 (Fall 2006)]

Stix founded ''A Different Drummer'' magazine (1990-93), which he continues online, and has written for numerous paper and online publications, including ''Die Suedwest Presse'', the New York ''[[Daily News]]'', ''[[New York Post]]'', ''[[Newsday]]'', the ''Westsider'', the ''Chelsea Clinton News'', ''Flatiron News'', ''[[Middle American News]]'', ''Toogood Reports'', ''[[Global Politician]]'', ''[[Insight on the News]]'', ''[[Chronicles]]: A Magazine of American Culture'', the ''American Enterprise'', ''Campus Reports'', ''[[VDARE]]'', ''[[American Renaissance]]'', the ''[[Weekly Standard]]'', ''[[Front Page Magazine]]'', the ''[[New York Press]]'', ''[[New York Newsday]]'', ''Ideas on Liberty'', ''Academic Questions'', ''[[National Review Online]]'', ''[[Liberty]]'', ''[[Men's News Daily]]'', ''Intellectual Conservative'', ''WEBCommentary'', ''The Autonomist'', the ''Magic City Morning Star'', the ''Post Chronicle'', the ''New Dominion'', the ''Conservative Voice'', the ''Illinois Leader'', ''[[Enter Stage Right]]'', ''MichNews'' ''OpinioNet,'' ''American Daily'' and ''News by Us''. His day jobs have included washing pots, building Daimler-Benzes on the assembly-line, tackling shoplifters, serving as an adjunct lecturer at the City University of New York, and being a stay-at-home dad.[http://www.americandaily.com/author/152 ''The American Daily''], an online journal.

==Controversies==
Since the 1990s, Stix has written extensively on a number of controversies, including [[Kwanzaa]]; [[African American Vernacular English|Ebonics]]; [[remedial education]] and [[grade inflation]]; [[New York City]] school scandals; one of the [[October Surprise]]s in the [[2000 presidential election]]; charges that on Election Day 2000, Florida state officials prevented black voters from going to the polls, or having their votes counted;[http://www.geocities.com/nstix/florida2000.html "The Great Florida Disenfranchisement Hoax," Nicholas Stix, ''Middle American News'', February 2001] [[bilingual education]]; the [[2001 Cincinnati riots]]; the [[Steven Hatfill]] case; the [[racial profiling]] debate; the [[de-policing]] debate; race hoaxes; affirmative action; the [[Sally Hemings]]-[[Thomas Jefferson]] imbroglio; the [[Jayson Blair]] case; the [[Brian Nichols]] case; the New York City police crime statistics scandal; the corruption scandals enveloping then-Gov. Jim McGreevey of New Jersey; then-Illinois State Sen. [[Barack Obama]]; the [[Associated Press]] "Boosgate" scandal; the CBS News "Memogate" scandal; ''The Color of Crime''; what Stix called "reverse reporting" in [[New Orleans]], following [[Hurricane Katrina]]; the [[illegal immigration]] amnesty movement; what Stix charged was a cover-up by the [[Associated Press]] in the [[Baytown, Texas]], black-on-white, homosexual serial rape case; the "Duke Rape Hoax"; and the "Knoxville Horror."

==Praise and criticism==
Stix’s work has elicited responses running the gamut. In 2002, in “The Crucifixion of Steven Hatfill,” [http://archive.newsmax.com/archives/articles/2002/8/19/201601.shtml “The Crucifixion of Steven Hatfill,” Phil Brennan, ''News Max'', August 19, 2002.] ''[[Newsmax]]'' reporter Phil Brennan wrote of the attempt by the media and the [[FBI]] to link biodefense scientist, Dr. [[Steven Hatfill]], to the previous fall’s deadly [[anthrax attacks]], due to the anthrax letters having had the return address of a non-existent “Greendale School” in New Jersey, and Hatfill’s having once lived in Harare, Zimbabwe, near a neighborhood called “Greendale”:[http://web.archive.org/web/20020816230754/toogoodreports.com/column/general/stix/20020814.htm “A High-Tech Lynching: ABC News, the FBI, and the ‘Greendale School’ Myth, Nicholas Stix, ''Toogood Reports'', August 14, 2002.]

“Investigative journalist Nicholas Stix took the trouble the rest of the media couldn’t bother themselves with. He contacted people in Zimbabwe and asked if anyone knew about the so-called Greendale school. Here are two answers he got:

‘There was [and still is] only one school in the neighbourhood. In my day, it was called Courtney Selous primary school. ... I checked on a NGO website which listed all the name changes which the government is proposing presently and discovered that the school is, indeed, still called Courtney Selous [after a famous 'White Hunter,' Frederick Courtney Selous, who featured prominently in early Rhodesian pioneer history]. Although the school is located in Greendale, it has never been known as “Greendale School.” No other schools have ever been built in the area.’

‘There isn't and never has been a Greendale School. There is a suburb in Harare called Greendale. The schools in that area were Courteney Selous School, which is a school for junior kids. The only other schools in that area were for high school, i.e Oriel Boys, Oriel Girls and Chisipite. There is a school that is called Greengrove but is not in the school zone in the area mentioned although it is fairly close.’”

In Richard P. Phelps’s book, ''Kill the Messenger: The War on Standardized Testing'', he praises “free-lance investigative reporter Nicholas Stix” as being among the “small proportion of journalists [who] do make some effort at writing balanced stories on testing.”[http://books.google.com/books?id=i370N8U-ZLoC&pg=PA205&dq=%22Nicholas+Stix%22&sig=w1kXTDxEPoyshbzz6WKYdzFuh7g Richard P. Phelps. ''Kill the Messenger: The War on Standardized Testing'' New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers, 2003], 205. In ''Writing Alone and with Others'', Prof. Pat Schneider lists among “some of my favorites from other writers” two lines from one of Stix’s poems: “Please do not call to me mother / while I am making pancakes…”[http://www.amazon.com/gp/reader/019516573X/ref=sib_dp_pt#reader-link Pat Schneider. ''Writing Alone and with Others'', New York: Oxford University Press US, 2003], 311.

Other writers have judged Stix negatively. In the article, “The Struggle over Language Rights,” published in the anthology, ''Rhetoric and Composition as Intellectual Work'', Prof. Keith Gilyard identifies Stix as “a steadfast opponent of language rights for African Americans.”[http://www.amazon.com/gp/reader/0809324334/ref=sib_dp_pt#reader-link Gary A. Olson, ed. ''Rhetoric and Composition as Intellectual Work'', Carbondale, IL: Southern Illinois University Press, 2002], 116-118. While condemning Stix over the course of 1,300 words: "But as [sic] evident by now, Stix isn't much about logic," "In the final analysis, intellectually speaking, Stix is for kids," etc., Gilyard failed to disclose his prior history with Stix. In 1997, in the pages of the news magazine, ''Insight on the News'', the two had squared off in a 3,500-word debate on the pedagogical value of using Ebonics in the classroom.[http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1571/is_n12_v13/ai_19241610/print “Q: Would ebonics programs in public schools be a good idea? - opposing views,” Keith Gilyard and Nicholas Stix, ''Insight on the News'', March 31, 1997.] In 2005, after Stix published a story about convicted rapist [[Roman Polanski]],[http://www.intellectualconservative.com/article4541.html “Pedophile-Rapist-Fugitive Roman Polanski Demands Respect!,” Nicholas Stix, ''Intellectual Conservative'', 22 August 2005] Polanski’s victim, [[Samantha Geimer]] wrote Stix,
“It should be a crime for you to make a living re-victimizing me with your
stupid story.

”You and your fellow reporters are no better than Polanski.

”I wish you would all get sued for every lie your print."

Stix published Geimer’s letter,[http://mensnewsdaily.com/blog/stix/2005/08/diva-victim-forgives-polanski-condemns.html "Diva-Victim Forgives Polanski, Condemns Journalist," Nicholas Stix, ''Men’s News Daily'', August 16, 2005] and responded that he had not written anything about her that wasn’t true, and had not taken the initiative in revealing her identity. Geimer had in recent years given numerous on-camera TV interviews, newspaper interviews in which she had permitted herself to be photographed, and had even revealed where she lived.

In "Into the Mainstream: Academic Racists' Work Inching Toward Legitimacy," in its Winter 2005 ''Intelligence Report'', the Southern Poverty Law Center cited Stix as having written on the [[New Century Foundation]]’s report, ''The Color of Crime'',
[http://amren.com/colorofcrime/color.pdf]
about which the SPLC was highly critical.[http://www.splcenter.org/intel/intelreport/article.jsp?aid=580 "Into the Mainstream: Academic Racists' Work Inching Toward Legitimacy," ''Intelligence Report'', Winter 2005, Southern Poverty Law Center.] On April 8, 2008, the SPLC’s Mark Potok[http://www.splcenter.org/blog/2008/04/08/immigration-report-being-released-today-linked-to-white-supremacists/ "Immigration Report Being Released Today Linked to White Supremacists," Mark Potok, ''Hatewatch'', SPLC.] condemned the National Policy Institute as a “white supremacist” organization, and wrote that Stix’s report, ''The State of White America-2007'', “paints ‘a statistical and narrative portrait of the war on white America,’ in the website’s words. Nicholas Stix’s introduction[http://nicholasstixuncensored.blogspot.com/2006/11/state-of-white-america-major-new-study.html "The State of White America: A Major New Study on American Race and Ethnic Relations," Nicholas Stix, ''Nicholas Stix, Uncensored'', November 4, 2006.] to the article describes the Supreme Court’s 1954 ''Brown vs. Board of Education'' ruling outlawing school segregation as ‘arguably the worse [sic] decision in the Court’s 216 year history.’ He claims later civil rights legislation was unconstitutional. ‘[I]ntegration and the civil rights movement led directly to the destruction of great cities,’ he concludes.”

More nuanced positions were taken by Thomas Jackson in the August 2007 issue of ''American Renaissance'' magazine and by Casey Sanchez, in the Fall 2007 ''Intelligence Report'' of the [[Southern Poverty Law Center]]. Reviewing the [[National Policy Institute]] report that Stix edited, ''The State of White America-2007'',[http://nationalpolicyinstitute.org/publications.php?b=sowa07 ''The State of White America-2007''] Jackson criticized Stix for the latter’s harsh tone in his introduction to the report, while praising him for his exhaustive report on black-on-white school atrocities, his analysis of the pitfalls of affirmative action hiring of black police officers, and for his chapter on black-on-white crime.[http://www.amren.com/ar/2007/08/index.html#article2 “How Whites Stack Up,” Thomas Jackson, ''American Renaissance'', August 2007] While in "The Big Lie: Criminal Cases Exploited to Attack Blacks," Sanchez referred to Stix as a “white nationalist,” he praised him for casting doubt on uncorroborated Internet rumors, and for exposing journalist [[Michelle Malkin]]’s spreading of uncorroborated rumors regarding the [[murder of Channon Christian and Christopher Newsom]].[http://www.splcenter.org/intel/intelreport/article.jsp?aid=819 “The Big Lie: Criminal Cases Exploited to Attack Blacks,” Casey Sanchez, ''Intelligence Report'' Fall 2007, Southern Poverty Law Center.]

== External links==
*[http://nicholasstixuncensored.blogspot.com/ ''Nicholas Stix, Uncensored''] (weblog)

*[http://geocities.com/nstix/ ''A Different Drummer''] (online)

*[http://vdare.com/stix/index.htm Nicholas Stix ''VDARE'' Archive]

*[http://findarticles.com/p/search?tb=art&qa=Nicholas+Stix Nicholas Stix Archive from ''Insight on the News'' and ''The American Enterprise'']
==References==
{{reflist}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Stix, Nicholas}}
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:American journalists]]
[[Category:American Jews]]
[[Category:American columnists]]
[[Category:Race and intelligence controversy]]
[[Category:Feminism]]
[[Category:White nationalists]]
[[Category:Paleoconservatives]]
[[Category:Conservatives]]

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