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Sam Francis,columnist, 57, dies -a leading voice of traditional conservatism.
Washington Times ^
| Feb. 18 2005
| staff
Posted on 02/18/2005 12:16:33 AM PST by ETERNAL WARMING
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To: ETERNAL WARMING
RIP Mr. Francis Nope -- BIH, Mr. Francis.
Francis re-fought immoral battles of 1964
David Mastio One of the last columns written by former Washington Times columnist Sam Francis, before his death last week, decried the positive portrayal of sex between men and women of different races. A commercial for Monday Night Football was really "an act of political-cultural subversion."
Francis went on, "Breaking down the sexual barriers between the races is a major weapon of cultural destruction because it means the dissolution of the cultural boundaries that define breeding and the family, and ultimately, the transmission and survival of the culture itself."
"Breeding"? Those sentences define Francis as a man still fighting for causes in 2004 that were obviously immoral and rightly lost in 1964. Francis never understood that the idea of America crossed racial and ethnic boundaries and made "from many, one."...
21
posted on
02/22/2005 11:19:12 AM PST
by
steve-b
(A desire not to butt into other people's business is eighty percent of all human wisdom)
Comment #22 Removed by Moderator
To: Vic Mackey
Benedict Arnold didn't personally kill any of our patriots, either, but he can BIH too, for the same offense (undermining America).
23
posted on
02/22/2005 12:58:35 PM PST
by
steve-b
(A desire not to butt into other people's business is eighty percent of all human wisdom)
Comment #24 Removed by Moderator
Comment #25 Removed by Moderator
To: Vic Mackey
Francis, apparently unrepentant to the end, continued to publish intellectual fodder for racists, mostly in obscure outlets, up until his death. Samuel Francis was the intellectual tribune of the remnant of America's white supremacists. America is a better place without him.
26
posted on
02/23/2005 5:30:42 AM PST
by
steve-b
(A desire not to butt into other people's business is eighty percent of all human wisdom)
To: ETERNAL WARMING
I don't want to dance on anyone's grave but Francis reinforced the leftist stereotype that conservatism is a racist ideology.
27
posted on
02/25/2005 10:25:21 PM PST
by
JohnBDay
To: All
It is with pleasure that I note several people, including some who consider themselves conservatives, have described Sam Francis as he truly was -- a small-minded, bigoted man who was apparently incapable of emotional or intellectual growth. At an early age, Francis latched on to the crude racist ideology of Southern politicians of the pre-civil rights movement era. He never let go. Even fellow bigots, including those at the Washington Times, found his racist hysteria, seemingly influenced by feelings of sexual inadequacy, out of bounds. As a result, he was fired in 1995. Francis' increasingly incoherent and vociferous writing left him unemployable by anyone other than other extremists for the next decade. When he died recently, only some members of the far Right took notice. The relative few who spoke positively about him had to ignore his downwardly mobile career to do so. Hopefully, there is a lesson in his wasted life that others who would follow his footsteps can learn from.
28
posted on
03/03/2005 4:26:57 AM PST
by
Jemima Gaines
(Because someone should tell the truth.)
To: steve-b
"it means the dissolution of the cultural boundaries that define breeding"
I'm not too familiar with Francis' body of writing but here he appears to have caught a dose of multiculturalism, something, like the clap, that is best avoided. It's a little like anti-semitism, which has been subjected to a rather rigorous political-disease eradication effort among conservatives, though it seems to be raging like resistant VD among liberals.
29
posted on
03/03/2005 7:19:18 AM PST
by
ImpeachandRemove
(four more years of dubya, then eight more years of Jeb:))
Comment #30 Removed by Moderator
Comment #31 Removed by Moderator
To: ETERNAL WARMING
Many thanks for posting this obituary for Sam. If nothing else, the scurrilous denunciation of Sam on this thread by the diversity KGB shows that even in death Sam is a force to reckon with.
Interesting too that the Olympians decided not to pull this particular thread---perhaps because the embarrassment of pulling a article on Sam by a paper still respected in White House circles and the very publication that once employed Sam would be too acute. At any rate, WorldNetDaily webpublished today a tribute to Sam by Pat Buchanan. Whether WND or Pat are verboten here these days, I can't say---I'm not here enough any more to know or care.
32
posted on
03/07/2005 10:08:08 AM PST
by
Map Kernow
("I hold that a little rebellion now and then is a good thing" ---Thomas Jefferson)
To: ETERNAL WARMING
Thanks so much for posting this!
May God rest Sam's soul.
To: JohnBDay
That's the impression I got from reading Francis's columns too. Undoubtedly Francis was a very intelligent man and correct on a number of issues. But I couldn't help but get the feeling that he was a strong racist. Many of his columns had a decidedly anti-Black or "minority" tone to them. He sounded like an arch-segregationist/anti-miscegenationist from forty to fifty years ago. If any "minorities" read his column and assumed he spoke for all conservatives, then Republicans would have to forget about getting anything but the all-white vote.
Because someone is correct on a number of conservative issues doesn't make them someone to listen to. Francis had too many unfortunate white-supremicist beliefs to be taken seriously. Our cherished political foundations may have been created by all-white settlers. But the beliefs, benefits, and laws were not just meant for white Europeans...they're for all Americans of whatever ethnic background or skin color.
34
posted on
03/09/2005 3:07:54 AM PST
by
driftless
( For life-long happiness, learn how to play the accordion.)
To: driftless
I have a lot to say on this, since this man's death,(far too early BTW) has brought out some of my concerns about the Republican party, Conservatism and how the two relate today and in the future.
I am of the opinion, that like the term Liberal, the "C" word has been rendered nearly meaningless, and unfortunately assisted by Francis and others with certain single issue passions that distort the meanings of Conservatism.
If we are not careful, we will be looking dumber than Democrats. We need to take that word back and reinforce it's definition before radicals destroy it, and the Republican party with it.IMHO.
35
posted on
03/09/2005 3:28:04 AM PST
by
Cold Heat
(This space is being paid not to do anything.)
To: Jemima Gaines
Nice swan song, enjoy your banishment.
36
posted on
03/21/2005 8:37:51 PM PST
by
TradicalRC
(I'd rather live in a Christian theocracy than a secular democracy.)
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