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Knowingly or Unknowingly, CIS Newsletters Promote the Work of White Nationalist Kevin DeAnna

Hannah Gais

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Mark Krikorian, executive director of the Center for Immigration Studies (CIS), has attempted to distance his organization from the far-right actors he has cited over the years to promote CIS鈥檚 anti-immigrant agenda.

But Hatewatch鈥檚 analysis of CIS鈥檚 weekly email newsletters shows that for nearly a decade the center has been promoting material from Kevin DeAnna, one of the alt-right鈥檚 most prolific propagandists. CIS newsletters from 2012 to present show the center has circulated at least 83 articles by DeAnna, former Youth for Western Civilization founder and current American Renaissance staff writer. A Hatewatch investigation revealed that DeAnna wrote for VDARE, a white nationalist website run by Peter Brimelow, beginning in 2011, under the pseudonym 鈥淛ames Kirkpatrick.鈥 CIS circulated 鈥淜irkpatrick鈥 articles from The Social Contract, a journal established by CIS鈥檚 founder, John Tanton, in 1990. CIS cited 鈥淜irkpatrick鈥檚鈥 work at both VDARE and The Social Contract.

Hatewatch reached out to both DeAnna and CIS for comment. DeAnna didn鈥檛 respond, and CIS declined to comment.

Kevin DeAnna
Kevin DeAnna speaks at a 2010 conference of The Social Contract Press. (Screenshot via YouTube)

Hatewatch first detailed the proliferation of VDARE links in CIS鈥檚 weekly newsletters in 2017, concluding that the anti-immigrant think tank had circulated over 1,700 VDARE articles over the course of 10 years. Krikorian  in The Washington Post in March 2017 that such findings were 鈥渢rivial.鈥 The center, he contended, linked to 鈥渋mmigration commentary (from all sides)鈥 in its weekly email roundups; hence, it should come as no shock that some of the authors 鈥渙ccasionally . . . turned out to be cranks.鈥

In 鈥淜irkpatrick鈥檚鈥 case however, the inclusion of material authored by DeAnna under a pseudonym bolsters already-existing evidence of the center鈥檚 boosting of white nationalist talking points. DeAnna, under the pseudonym 鈥淕regory Hood,鈥 was a frequent and prolific contributor to a range of white nationalist sites, beginning in 2008.

CIS began including 鈥淜irkpatrick鈥檚鈥 work in the think tank鈥檚 newsletters in 2012. The number of times 鈥淜irkpatrick鈥 was cited rose, corresponding to DeAnna鈥檚 growing involvement with Brimelow鈥檚 site, where he worked as both a writer and an editor. Hatewatch found CIS linked to 鈥淜irkpatrick鈥檚鈥 stories three times in 2012; eight times in 2013; 11 times in 2014; 16 times in 2015; 11 times in 2016; eight times in 2017; 10 times in 2018; seven times in 2019; and at least twice in 2020. While most of these articles were focused on matters of immigration, 鈥淜irkpatrick鈥檚鈥 role as a white nationalist scribe is barely veiled.

CIS circulated 鈥淜irkpatrick鈥 articles pushing major white nationalist tropes

Many of the 鈥淜irkpatrick鈥 articles in CIS newsletters were riddled with common white nationalist tropes. Perhaps the most common theme involved the conspiracy of the 鈥済reat replacement.鈥 The concept originated with French far-right thinker Renaud Camus鈥 racist book of the same name, published in 2010. Though the term has, at times, been painted as a pseudo-intellectual version of the theory of 鈥渨hite genocide,鈥 it has nevertheless inspired the same degree of racist violence, including at Christchurch, New Zealand, and El Paso, Texas, in 2019.

A 2018 English adaptation 颅of Camus鈥檚 original text titled 鈥淵ou Will Not Replace Us鈥 referred to an ongoing 鈥済enocide by substitution鈥 in both Europe and America. As  on Camus and the 鈥済reat replacement鈥 observed, Camus portrayed the so-called 鈥渞eplacists鈥 鈥 that is, proponents of multiculturalism and immigration 鈥 as soon to be 鈥渄evored [sic]鈥 by the 鈥渞eplacees鈥 they invite in.

CIS linked to numerous pieces from 鈥淜irkpatrick鈥 that pushed replacement theory. At times, the articles named the racist conspiracy outright. One Sept. 7, 2015, newsletter links to an article titled 鈥淭he 鈥楪reat Replacement鈥 Is Killing The EU 鈥 Long Live a Europe Of Nations!鈥 In it, 鈥淜irkpatrick鈥 refers to the ongoing 鈥渋mmigrant invasion鈥 in Europe, implying that the continued existence of the European Union has made the replacement of European peoples possible.

In other places, 鈥淜irkpatrick鈥檚鈥 references to replacement theory were subtler. CIS鈥檚 Feb. 13, 2016, newsletter promoted an article that blasted then-presidential candidate Marco Rubio for not being sufficiently anti-immigrant. DeAnna, writing as 鈥淜irkpatrick,鈥 bemoaned the 鈥渟weeping demographic changes in Europe鈥 and the allegedly disastrous effect it would have on 鈥淲estern civilization.鈥 Another article, included in CIS鈥檚 Nov. 15, 2018, newsletter, penned by 鈥淜irkpatrick鈥 for Social Contract press referred to migration as punishment inflicted by a cadre of global elites.

On July 28, 2019, CIS linked to an article titled 鈥淪ay It, GOP! 鈥 Or Just Give It Up: Open Borders Is TREASON! The Left Is ANTI-WHITE!鈥 In the piece, 鈥淜irkpatrick鈥 claimed the left had ensured that anyone who didn鈥檛 鈥渨ant whites replaced in their own countries鈥 would be tarnished as 鈥渇ar right.鈥 Furthermore, he noted, assertions that Native Americans or any other indigenous minority in Europe had a right to the land led to the 鈥渓ogical conclusion鈥 that 鈥淲esterners鈥 needed to be dispossessed. That sort of 鈥渢hinking culminates in genocide,鈥 鈥淜irkpatrick鈥 told readers, implying the possibility of what white nationalists refer to as a 鈥渨hite genocide.鈥

Smearing immigrant advocates 鈥 and fellow Republicans

Most of 鈥淜irkpatrick鈥檚鈥 articles in CIS鈥檚 newsletter, however, focused on pushing the right to embrace more draconian restrictions on immigration. Like many other authors at VDARE, he lamented the power of what the site often referred as 鈥淐onservatism, Inc.鈥 鈥 a stand-in for the right-wing media, think tank, and political establishment 鈥 and blasted insufficiently anti-immigrant Republicans as 鈥渢raitors.鈥

The first 鈥淜irkpatrick鈥 piece CIS linked to in its Jan. 27, 2012, newsletter titled 鈥淪outh Carolina Shambles: Slippery Newt Massacres Milquetoast Mitt 鈥 Agonizes Immigration Patriots鈥 blasted Newt Gingrich. In addition to supporting sanctions against apartheid South Africa during the Reagan years, 鈥淜irkpatrick鈥 contended that the Republican presidential candidate and former speaker of the House鈥檚 biggest moral failing was betraying whites.

鈥淧erhaps more than any other person in this country,鈥 鈥淜irkpatrick鈥 argued, 鈥淣ewt Gingrich is responsible for the astonishing conservative retreat on racial preferences and the continued existence of an anti-white racial spoils system in jobs and education.鈥 鈥淜irkpatrick鈥檚鈥 rant linked to a 2011 VDARE article referring to affirmative action as 鈥渁nti-white quotas.鈥

Another CIS newsletter from July 8, 2016, linked to a 鈥淜irkpatrick鈥 article, which referred to anti-Trump Republicans as 鈥淩ATs鈥 and 鈥渢raitors to the party.鈥 The conservative opposition to Trump, 鈥淜irkpatrick鈥 opined, were deserving of such a title due to their cooperation with the 鈥淟ying Press.鈥 The term, as 鈥淜irkpatrick鈥 observed in a VDARE article from June 2016, is an English translation of the German term 尝眉驳别苍辫谤别蝉蝉别, which has become popular among certain circles of the so-called 鈥渁lt-right.鈥 Though the term itself originated as a rhetorical cudgel in the mid-19th-century, .

Occasional 鈥渃ranks鈥 or 鈥渋mportant鈥 sources?

While CIS executive director Mark Krikorian attempted to distance himself and the center from the extreme, racist far-right, he has, as recently as last February, asserted the importance of bringing pieces published on those sites to the attention of readers.

Mark Krikorian
Mark Krikorian of the Center for Immigration Studies speaks at the Budapest Summit on Migration in March 2019. (Photo by Elekes Andor via Wikimedia Commons)

When asked by a caller on CSPAN鈥檚 鈥淲ashington Journal鈥 about the continued inclusion of content from VDARE, Krikorian defended the decision.

鈥淲e send out a weekly roundup of immigration commentary from all sides, including people we don鈥檛 agree with,鈥 Krikorian told CSPAN, citing The New York Times鈥 editorials on immigration as an example. Though he acknowledged that the center linked to 鈥渟ome sites that publish other material鈥 that he viewed as 鈥渙bjectionable,鈥 he posited that such links were needed: 鈥淚f they鈥檙e important sites of immigration news, we include them because the whole point is [to] see the broad spectrum of views and judge for yourself.鈥

Photo illustration by 人兽性交

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