Re: Steve Sailer’s The Cultural Construction of the QuikTrip Pogrom

From: Delmar Jackson (e-mail him)

Steve Sailer writes,

Seems odd to me that nobody is bringing up “Django Unchained” and/or “12 Years a Slave.”

It seems odd to me no one ever brings up books like Nathan McCall’s Makes Me Wanna Holler: A Young Black Man in America that are required reading in many classrooms, or more importantly, the climate of anti-white hate that must exist in academia to popularize and legitimize such hate-causing books.

I never read it, but hearing the part about the author and his friends running after white boys riding by on bicycles and beating them to a pulp for fun, and years later as successful adults gloating over the memory instead of being remorseful is sure to make an impression on schoolchildren.

It might even be the genesis for the “Knockout Game.”

See previous letters from Delmar Jackson.

James Fulford writes: I mentioned McCall’s book, which I have read, in a 2002 column that asked if racial profilers weren’t frequently right.

McCall not only admits to the beating mentioned below—on the first page of his book--but later he admits to being an active participant in gang rape. (His description of this is quoted in some detail by Jeff Jacoby in The Weekly Standard, October 13, 1997—the victims were quite young black women.)

In 1997, the Flummery Digest (an early proto-blog) printed this note.