Re: James Fulford's blog items Filipino Named Cesar Sayoc Arrested For Pipe Bombs; Also Claimed Native American Ancestry and How Was Filipino Pipe Bomber Cesar Sayoc's Father Able To Immigrate To The US Before 1965?

Thank You Mr. Fulford, for your great aticle!

I came across your article on VDARE.com.

You claim the bomber is Filipino because he has a Filipino last name. Does that mean that I can assume you are British because of your last name?

Mr. Sayoc was also half Italian. Shouldn’t we also say he was Italian?

It really is whatever. I wanted to email you because it bothered me that there are a ton of subtle hate perpetuating articles online. Upon further research into the company you work for I found a wiki description:

"VDARE is an American website focused on opposition to immigration to the United States and is associated with white supremacy, white nationalism,and the alt-right. Anti-Immigration in the United States: A Historical Encyclopedia describes VDARE as "one of the most prolific anti-immigration media outlets in the United States" and states that it is "broadly concerned with race issues in the United States”. Established in 1999, the website's editor is Peter Brimelow, who believes that "whites built American culture" and that "it is at risk from non-whites who would seek to change it.""

It doesn't surprise me one bit.

Maybe one of these days someone will take care of people like you. Or like Mr. Sayoc, maybe your ideology will blow up from the inside.

P.S. More and more white women and men are marrying non whites. Sit on that fact for a second.

James Fulford writes: While I am tempted to reply to the charge of being British with the words "Oh, quite", in the accents of the late Ian Carmichael (right) I was not in fact born in England, unlike VDARE.com editor Peter Brimelow or columnist John Derbyshire. However, America is "British" in the sense that its inhabitants mostly descend from the British Isles. (That includes Barack Obama, whose mother was a Dunham.)

Cesar Altieri Sayoc is something different.