Sam Francis (writer): Difference between revisions
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{{Short description|American columnist and writer (1947–2005)}} | {{Short description|American columnist and writer (1947–2005)}} | ||
{{Use American English|date=August 2023}} | {{Use American English|date=August 2023}} | ||
{{Use mdy dates|date= | {{Use mdy dates|date=November 2025}} | ||
{{Infobox person | {{Infobox person | ||
| name = | | name = | ||
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| death_place = [[Cheverly, Maryland]], U.S. | | death_place = [[Cheverly, Maryland]], U.S. | ||
| resting_place = Forest Hills Cemetery, Chattanooga, Tennessee, U.S. | | resting_place = Forest Hills Cemetery, Chattanooga, Tennessee, U.S. | ||
| | | education = {{plainlist| | ||
* [[Johns Hopkins University]] ([[Bachelor of Arts|BA]]) | |||
* [[University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill]] ([[PhD]])}} | |||
}} | }} | ||
'''Samuel Todd Francis''' (April 29, 1947 – February 15, 2005) was an American writer.<ref>{{cite web |title=Sam Francis, Voice of the Radical Right, Dies Unexpectedly |url=https://www.splcenter.org/fighting-hate/intelligence-report/2005/sam-francis-voice-radical-right-dies-unexpectedly |website=Southern Poverty Law Center |access-date=22 | '''Samuel Todd Francis''' (April 29, 1947 – February 15, 2005) was an American writer.<ref>{{cite web |title=Sam Francis, Voice of the Radical Right, Dies Unexpectedly |url=https://www.splcenter.org/fighting-hate/intelligence-report/2005/sam-francis-voice-radical-right-dies-unexpectedly |website=Southern Poverty Law Center |access-date=February 22, 2024 |language=en |date=April 28, 2005 |quote=Sam Francis, a white supremacist writer and veteran of such publications as The Washington Times, the CCC's Citizens Informer, and The Occidental Quarterly, died in February 2005 at the age of 57.}}</ref><ref name=":2" /><ref name=":4" /><ref>{{Cite book |last=Balleck |first=Barry J. |title=Hate Groups and Extremist Organizations in America: An Encyclopedia |publisher=ABC-CLIO |year=2019 |isbn=9798216094685 |location=United States}}</ref><ref name=":3" /> He was a columnist and editor for the conservative ''[[The Washington Times|Washington Times]]'' until he was dismissed after making racist remarks at the 1995 ''[[American Renaissance (magazine)|American Renaissance]]'' conference.<ref name=":0">{{Cite book |last1=Berich |first1=Heidi |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=M7p6TDR1zwcC |title=Hate Crimes |last2=Hicks |first2=Kevin |publisher=Praeger |year=2009 |editor-last=Perr |editor-first=Barbara |pages=112–113 |chapter=White Nationalism in America |isbn=978-0-275-99569-0 }}</ref> Francis would later become a "dominant force" on the [[Council of Conservative Citizens]], a [[white supremacist]] organization identified as a [[hate group]] by the [[Southern Poverty Law Center]] (SPLC).<ref name=":0" /><ref name="FrancisProfile" /> Francis was the chief editor of the council's newsletter, ''Citizens Informer'', until his death in 2005.<ref name="FrancisProfile">{{Cite web |title=Extremist Files: Individuals: Sam Francis |url=https://www.splcenter.org/fighting-hate/extremist-files/individual/sam-francis |access-date=May 5, 2017 |website=Southern Poverty Law Center}}</ref> The white supremacist [[Jared Taylor]] called Francis "the premier philosopher of white racial consciousness of our time".<ref>{{cite magazine |author-link=Jared Taylor|last=Taylor |first=Jared |year=2005 |title=Personal Recollections of Sam Francis |magazine=The Occidental Quarterly |volume=5 |issue=2 |page=55}}</ref> | ||
The political scientist and writer [[George Michael ( | The political scientist and writer [[George Michael (academic)|George Michael]], an expert on extremism, identified Francis as one of "the far right's higher-caliber intellectuals."<ref name=":1">George Michael, ''Confronting Right Wing Extremism and Terrorism in the USA'' (Routledge, 2003), p. 51.</ref> The SPLC described Francis as an important [[White nationalism|white nationalist]] writer known for his "ubiquitous presence of his columns in racist forums and his influence over the general direction of right-wing extremism" in the United States.<ref name="FrancisProfile" /> The journalist [[Leonard Zeskind]] called Francis the "philosopher king" of the [[Radical right (United States)|radical right]],<ref name="FrancisProfile" /> writing that, "By any measure, Francis's white nationalism was as subtle as an eight-pound hammer pounding on a twelve inch [[I beam]]."<ref name=":2">{{cite book |first=Leonard |last=Zeskind |url=https://archive.org/details/bloodpoliticshis0000zesk |title=Blood and Politics: The History of the White Nationalist Movement from the Margins to the Mainstream |publisher=[[Farrar, Straus and Giroux]] |year=2009 |isbn=978-0-374-10903-5 }}</ref> The political analyst [[Chip Berlet]] described Francis as an ultraconservative ideologue akin to [[Pat Buchanan]],<ref>{{cite book |first=Chip |last=Berlet |chapter=Who Is Mediating the Storm? |title=Media, Culture, and the Religious Right |editor-first=Linda |editor-last=Kintz |editor-first2=Julia |editor-last2=Lesage |publisher=University of Minnesota Press |year=1998 |page=251}}</ref> whom Francis advised.<ref name="Dougherty">{{cite web|first=Michael Brendan|last=Dougherty|url=https://theweek.com/articles/599577/how-obscure-adviser-pat-buchanan-predicted-wild-trump-campaign-1996|title=How an obscure adviser to Pat Buchanan predicted the wild Trump campaign in 1996|work=The Week|date=January 19, 2016|access-date=December 29, 2024}}</ref> The [[Anarcho-capitalism|anarcho-capitalist]] political theorist [[Hans-Hermann Hoppe]] called Francis "one of the leading theoreticians and strategists of the Buchananite movement."<ref>{{cite web|first=Hans-Hermann|last=Hoppe|author-link=Hans-Hermann Hoppe|url=https://mises.org/mises-daily/intellectual-incoherence-conservatism|title=The Intellectual Incoherence of Conservatism|work=Mises Daily|date=March 4, 2005|access-date=December 29, 2024}}</ref> | ||
==Early life== | ==Early life== | ||
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===''The Washington Times'' === | ===''The Washington Times'' === | ||
Francis was a policy analyst at the [[The Heritage Foundation|Heritage Foundation]] and an aide to the U.S. senator [[John P. East]] before joining the editorial staff of ''[[The Washington Times]]'' in 1986.<ref name="Kurtz">{{cite | Francis was a policy analyst at the [[The Heritage Foundation|Heritage Foundation]] and an aide to the U.S. senator [[John P. East]] before joining the editorial staff of ''[[The Washington Times]]'' in 1986.<ref name="Kurtz">{{cite news|first=Howard |last= Kurtz |author-link= Howard Kurtz|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/lifestyle/1995/10/19/washington-times-clips-its-right-wing/dd009c93-883b-446c-bbbf-94c0a0570a1a/|title=Washington Times Clips Its Right Wing |newspaper=The Washington Post|date=October 19, 1995|access-date= December 29, 2024}}</ref><ref name= ":4" /> Five years later, he became a columnist for the newspaper, and his column became syndicated.<ref name= "Kurtz" /> | ||
In addition to his journalistic career, Francis was an adjunct scholar at the [[Ludwig von Mises Institute]] of [[Auburn, Alabama|Auburn]], [[Alabama]].<ref>{{cite book|editor-last=Rockwell |editor-first= Llewellyn H. |title=Murray Rothbard, In Memoriam |date=August 18, 2014 |publisher= von Mises Institute |location=Auburn, AL |pages=64, 127 |url=https://mises.org/books/memoriam.pdf}}</ref> | In addition to his journalistic career, Francis was an adjunct scholar at the [[Ludwig von Mises Institute]] of [[Auburn, Alabama|Auburn]], [[Alabama]].<ref>{{cite book|editor-last=Rockwell |editor-first= Llewellyn H. |title=Murray Rothbard, In Memoriam |date=August 18, 2014 |publisher= von Mises Institute |location=Auburn, AL |pages=64, 127 |url=https://mises.org/books/memoriam.pdf}}</ref> | ||
In June 1995, editor-in-chief [[Wesley Pruden]] "had cut back on Francis' column" after ''The Washington Times'' ran his essay criticizing the [[Southern Baptist Convention]] for its approval of a resolution which apologized for [[slavery]].<ref>Timothy Stanley | In June 1995, editor-in-chief [[Wesley Pruden]] "had cut back on Francis' column" after ''The Washington Times'' ran his essay criticizing the [[Southern Baptist Convention]] for its approval of a resolution which apologized for [[slavery]].<ref>{{cite book |first=Timothy |last=Stanley |title=The Crusader: The Life and Tumultuous Times of Pat Buchanan |location=[[New York City]] |publisher=[[St. Martin's Press]] |year=2012 |page=358 |isbn=978-0-312-58174-9}}</ref> In the piece, Francis asserted that, "The contrition of the Southern Baptists for slavery and racism is a bit more than a politically fashionable gesture intended to massage race relations"<ref>{{cite news | first = Samuel T. | last = Francis | title = All those things to apologize for | work = The Washington Times | date = June 27, 1995}}</ref> and that "Neither slavery nor racism as an institution is a sin."<ref name="Kurtz" /> | ||
In September 1995, Pruden fired Francis from ''The Washington Times'' after the conservative journalist [[Dinesh D'Souza]], in a column in ''[[The Washington Post]]'', described Francis's appearance at the 1994 ''[[American Renaissance (magazine)|American Renaissance]]'' conference: "A lively controversialist, Francis began with some largely valid complaints about how the Southern heritage is demonized in mainstream culture. He went on, however, to attack the liberal principles of humanism and universalism for facilitating 'the war against the white race.' At one point he described country music megastar [[Garth Brooks]] as 'repulsive' because 'he has that stupid universalist song ''([[We Shall Be Free]])'', in which we all intermarry.' His fellow whites, he insisted, must 'reassert our identity and our solidarity, and we must do so in explicitly racial terms through the articulation of a racial consciousness as whites… The civilization that we as whites created in Europe and America could not have developed apart from the genetic endowments of the creating people, nor is there any reason to believe that the civilization can be successfully transmitted to a different people.'"<ref>{{cite | In September 1995, Pruden fired Francis from ''The Washington Times'' after the conservative journalist [[Dinesh D'Souza]], in a column in ''[[The Washington Post]]'', described Francis's appearance at the 1994 ''[[American Renaissance (magazine)|American Renaissance]]'' conference: "A lively controversialist, Francis began with some largely valid complaints about how the Southern heritage is demonized in mainstream culture. He went on, however, to attack the liberal principles of humanism and universalism for facilitating 'the war against the white race.' At one point he described country music megastar [[Garth Brooks]] as 'repulsive' because 'he has that stupid universalist song ''([[We Shall Be Free]])'', in which we all intermarry.' His fellow whites, he insisted, must 'reassert our identity and our solidarity, and we must do so in explicitly racial terms through the articulation of a racial consciousness as whites… The civilization that we as whites created in Europe and America could not have developed apart from the genetic endowments of the creating people, nor is there any reason to believe that the civilization can be successfully transmitted to a different people.'"<ref>{{cite news|first= Dinesh|last=D'Souza|author-link=Dinesh D'Souza|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/opinions/1995/09/24/racism-its-a-white-and-black-thing/46284ab5-417c-4c0c-83e1-029d51655d91|title= Racism: It's a White (and Black) Thing|newspaper=[[The Washington Post]]|date=September 24, 1995|access-date=December 30, 2024}}</ref> | ||
After D'Souza's column was published, Pruden "decided he did not want the Times associated with such views after looking into other Francis writings, in which he advocated the possible deportation of legal immigrants and forced birth control for welfare mothers."<ref name="Kurtz" /> | After D'Souza's column was published, Pruden "decided he did not want the Times associated with such views after looking into other Francis writings, in which he advocated the possible deportation of legal immigrants and forced birth control for welfare mothers."<ref name="Kurtz" /> | ||
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After being fired from ''The Washington Times'', Francis continued to write a column, which was syndicated through [[Creators Syndicate]] at least as early as January 2000.<ref>{{cite web|first=Simon|last=Maloy|url=https://www.mediamatters.org/research/2004/12/13/the-lowlights-of-sam-francis-distributed-by-cre/132434|title=The lowlights of Sam Francis, distributed by Creators Syndicate|work=Media Matters for America|date=December 13, 2004|access-date=December 30, 2024}}</ref> | After being fired from ''The Washington Times'', Francis continued to write a column, which was syndicated through [[Creators Syndicate]] at least as early as January 2000.<ref>{{cite web|first=Simon|last=Maloy|url=https://www.mediamatters.org/research/2004/12/13/the-lowlights-of-sam-francis-distributed-by-cre/132434|title=The lowlights of Sam Francis, distributed by Creators Syndicate|work=Media Matters for America|date=December 13, 2004|access-date=December 30, 2024}}</ref> | ||
Francis became a "dominant force" on the [[Council of Conservative Citizens]]. | Francis became a "dominant force" on the [[Council of Conservative Citizens]].{{sfn|Berich|Hicks|2009|p=112}} Francis was the chief editor of the council's quarterly newsletter, ''Citizens Informer'', until his death in 2005.<ref name="FrancisProfile" /> Francis wrote the council's ''Statement of Principles'', which "called for America to be a Christian nation"<ref name="Morgenstern">{{cite encyclopedia|first=Elizabeth Bryant |last=Morgenstern |title=White Supremacist Groups |encyclopedia=Anti-Immigration in the United States: A Historical Encyclopedia |volume=1: A-R |editor-first=Kathleen R. |editor-last=Arnold |page=508}}</ref> and "oppose[d] all efforts to mix the races of mankind."<ref>{{cite news |first=Chris |last=Haire |url=http://www.charlestoncitypaper.com/HaireoftheDog/archives/2010/04/14/the-problem-with-sam-francis |title=The problem with Sam Francis |work=Charleston City Paper |date=April 14, 2010}}</ref> In his writings, Francis advocated for a moratorium on all immigration, plus an indefinite suspension of all immigration from non-European and non-Western people.<ref name="Morgenstern" /> | ||
Francis was also an editor of ''[[Occidental Quarterly|The Occidental Quarterly]]'', a [[White nationalism|white nationalist]] journal edited by [[Kevin Lamb]] and sponsored by [[William Regnery II]]. | Francis was also an editor of ''[[Occidental Quarterly|The Occidental Quarterly]]'', a [[White nationalism|white nationalist]] journal edited by [[Kevin Lamb]] and sponsored by [[William Regnery II]]. | ||
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==Thought and legacy== | ==Thought and legacy== | ||
Francis's term "{{vanchor|anarcho-tyranny}}" refers to armed dictatorship without [[rule of law]],{{r|rockwell-2003}} or a [[Hegelian synthesis]] when the state tyrannically or oppressively regulates citizens' lives yet is unable or unwilling to enforce fundamental protective law.<ref> | Francis's term "{{vanchor|anarcho-tyranny}}" refers to armed dictatorship without [[rule of law]],{{r|rockwell-2003}} or a [[Hegelian synthesis]] when the state tyrannically or oppressively regulates citizens' lives yet is unable or unwilling to enforce fundamental protective law.<ref>{{cite magazine |author-link=Chilton Williamson Jr. |last=Williamson |first=Chilton Jr. |url=https://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/2005/November/29/11/magazine/article/10825311/ |title=Synthetic Syntheses |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190818170109/https://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/2005/November/29/11/magazine/article/10825311/ |archive-date=2019-08-18 |magazine=[[Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture]] |date=October 3, 2005}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |author-link=Kevin D. Williamson |first=Kevin D. |last=Williamson |url=https://www.nationalreview.com/corner/bit-more-speech-police-kevin-d-williamson/ |title=A Bit More on the Speech Police |work=[[National Review]] |date=April 18, 2014 |access-date=August 7, 2019}}</ref> Commentators have invoked the term in reference to situations when governments focus on weapon confiscation instead of stopping looters.<ref name= "rockwell-2003">{{cite web |author-link=Lew Rockwell |first=Lew |last=Rockwell |url=https://www.lewrockwell.com/2003/04/lew-rockwell/anarcho-tyranny-in-baghdad/ |title=Anarcho-Tyranny in Baghdad |website=[[lewrockwell.com]] |date=April 12, 2003 |access-date=May 25, 2019}}</ref>{{self-published source|date=November 2025}}<ref>{{cite web |author-link=David Kopel |first=David |last=Kopel |url=https://reason.com/2005/09/10/defenseless-on-the-bayou-2/ |title=Defenseless on the Bayou |work=[[Reason (magazine)|Reason]] |date=September 10, 2005 |access-date=August 7, 2019}}</ref> On Francis's death, the [[Rockford Institute]] magazine ''[[Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture|Chronicles]]'' dedicated its April 2005 issue to his memory and the concept.<ref>{{cite magazine | url = https://chroniclesmagazine.org/2005/04/ | archive-date = September 27, 2006 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20060927085339/http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/Chronicles/2005/April2005/ | date = April 2005 | title = Anarcho-Tyranny: The Perpetual Revolution | magazine = [[Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture]]}}.</ref>{{Third-party inline|date=July 2023 |reason= needed for [[WP:PROPORTION]]}} Francis had a significant influence on the [[Paleoconservatism|paleoconservative]] movement.<ref name= ":52">{{Cite news |last=Tait |first=Joshua |date= August 10, 2023 |title=What Was the Alt-Right? |work=[[Tablet (magazine)|Tablet]] |url=https://www.tabletmag.com/sections/news/articles/what-was-alt-right}}</ref> | ||
Francis argued that the conservative movement was made of "beautiful losers", being either "rootless men" attracted to archaic things or crypto-liberals who sometimes resist progressive change before eventually caving in. He argued that the political right kept losing because it was too focused on ideas and less on power. According to Francis, the political left has dominated politics due to the ascendancy of a progressive [[Professional–managerial class|managerial class]], leading to more bureaucratization and more state power while eroding the power of other authorities in society. To combat the emergence of this new class, Francis argued that the political right needed a base for its goals, this base being the white middle class or "Middle American radicals." In order to capture this base for the political right, Francis argued in favor of emphasizing "crime, educational collapse, the erosion of their economic status, and the calculated subversion of their social, cultural, and national identity" to create a class identity for this group.<ref name=":52" /> | Francis argued that the conservative movement was made of "beautiful losers", being either "rootless men" attracted to archaic things or crypto-liberals who sometimes resist progressive change before eventually caving in. He argued that the political right kept losing because it was too focused on ideas and less on power. According to Francis, the political left has dominated politics due to the ascendancy of a progressive [[Professional–managerial class|managerial class]], leading to more bureaucratization and more state power while eroding the power of other authorities in society. To combat the emergence of this new class, Francis argued that the political right needed a base for its goals, this base being the white middle class or "Middle American radicals." In order to capture this base for the political right, Francis argued in favor of emphasizing "crime, educational collapse, the erosion of their economic status, and the calculated subversion of their social, cultural, and national identity" to create a class identity for this group.<ref name=":52" /> | ||
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During the [[2022 U.S. elections]], the [[Republican Party (United States)|Republican Party]] candidates [[Blake Masters]] and [[Joe Kent]] promoted Francis' writings.<ref name=":4">{{cite web |last=Dent |first=Alec |date=October 14, 2022 |title=The Right's Quiet Uncanceling of a Dead White Supremacist |url=https://www.vanityfair.com/news/2022/10/right-uncanceling-dead-white-supremacist-sam-francis |website=[[Vanity Fair (magazine)|Vanity Fair]]}}</ref> | During the [[2022 U.S. elections]], the [[Republican Party (United States)|Republican Party]] candidates [[Blake Masters]] and [[Joe Kent]] promoted Francis' writings.<ref name=":4">{{cite web |last=Dent |first=Alec |date=October 14, 2022 |title=The Right's Quiet Uncanceling of a Dead White Supremacist |url=https://www.vanityfair.com/news/2022/10/right-uncanceling-dead-white-supremacist-sam-francis |website=[[Vanity Fair (magazine)|Vanity Fair]]}}</ref> | ||
Although Francis sometimes engaged with [[Christianity|Christian]] thinkers and publications during his life, he was also harshly [[criticism of Christianity|critical of Christianity]] in his later years and his worldview has been described as [[Irreligion|irreligious]] and [[Scientific materialism|materialistic]]. Francis wrote that "Christianity today is the enemy of the West and the race that created it" and suggested that the "[[Christian right|religious wrong]]" operated under a "false consciousness" that prevented white Christians from recognizing their true interests. Because of this, he has been cited as part of a trend toward increasingly "[[Secularity|secular]], even [[Paganism|pagan]]" ideas among certain segments of the American radical right.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2019 | Although Francis sometimes engaged with [[Christianity|Christian]] thinkers and publications during his life, he was also harshly [[criticism of Christianity|critical of Christianity]] in his later years and his worldview has been described as [[Irreligion|irreligious]] and [[Scientific materialism|materialistic]]. Francis wrote that "Christianity today is the enemy of the West and the race that created it" and suggested that the "[[Christian right|religious wrong]]" operated under a "false consciousness" that prevented white Christians from recognizing their true interests. Because of this, he has been cited as part of a trend toward increasingly "[[Secularity|secular]], even [[Paganism|pagan]]" ideas among certain segments of the American radical right.<ref>{{Cite web |date=October 1, 2019 |title=The Outsider|first= Matthew |last=Rose |url=https://www.firstthings.com/article/2019/10/the-outsider |access-date= December 28, 2024 |website= First Things |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Tait |first=Joshua |date= November 22, 2022 |title= The Growing Religious/Secular Rift on the Illiberal Right |url=https://www.thebulwark.com/the-growing-religious-secular-rift-on-the-illiberal-right/ |access-date=August 29, 2023 |website=The Bulwark |language= en-US}}</ref> | ||
In the end however, Francis died a [[Roman Catholic]] according to Father Paul Scalia (son of [[Antonin Scalia]]) | |||
<ref>{{Cite web |date=May 16, 2014 |url=https://chroniclesmagazine.org/web/reading-antonin-scalia-in-new-york/ |website=Chronicles Magazine |language= en-US |title=Reading Antonin Scalia in New York |first=Eugene |last=Girin}}</ref> | |||
==Works== | ==Works== | ||
* (1984) ''[[iarchive:powerhistorypoli0000fran/page/n3/mode/2up|Power and History | * (1984) ''[[iarchive:powerhistorypoli0000fran/page/n3/mode/2up|Power and History: The Political Thought of James Burnham]]''. University Press of America {{ISBN |0-8191-3753-7}} | ||
* (1994) [[iarchive:beautifullosers00samu/page/n3/mode/2up|''Beautiful Losers: Essays on the Failure of American Conservatism''.]] University of Missouri Press {{ISBN|0-8262-0976-9}} | * (1994) [[iarchive:beautifullosers00samu/page/n3/mode/2up|''Beautiful Losers: Essays on the Failure of American Conservatism''.]] University of Missouri Press {{ISBN|0-8262-0976-9}} | ||
* (1997) ''Revolution From the Middle''. Middle America Press {{ISBN|1-887898-01-8}} | * (1997) ''Revolution From the Middle''. Middle America Press {{ISBN|1-887898-01-8}} | ||
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[[Category:Writers from Alexandria, Virginia]] | [[Category:Writers from Alexandria, Virginia]] | ||
[[Category:Writers from Chattanooga, Tennessee]] | [[Category:Writers from Chattanooga, Tennessee]] | ||
Latest revision as of 11:38, 14 November 2025
Template:Short description Template:Use American English Script error: No such module "Unsubst". Script error: No such module "infobox".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Script error: No such module "Check for clobbered parameters".Template:Wikidata image Samuel Todd Francis (April 29, 1947 – February 15, 2005) was an American writer.[1][2][3][4][5] He was a columnist and editor for the conservative Washington Times until he was dismissed after making racist remarks at the 1995 American Renaissance conference.[6] Francis would later become a "dominant force" on the Council of Conservative Citizens, a white supremacist organization identified as a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC).[6][7] Francis was the chief editor of the council's newsletter, Citizens Informer, until his death in 2005.[7] The white supremacist Jared Taylor called Francis "the premier philosopher of white racial consciousness of our time".[8]
The political scientist and writer George Michael, an expert on extremism, identified Francis as one of "the far right's higher-caliber intellectuals."[9] The SPLC described Francis as an important white nationalist writer known for his "ubiquitous presence of his columns in racist forums and his influence over the general direction of right-wing extremism" in the United States.[7] The journalist Leonard Zeskind called Francis the "philosopher king" of the radical right,[7] writing that, "By any measure, Francis's white nationalism was as subtle as an eight-pound hammer pounding on a twelve inch I beam."[2] The political analyst Chip Berlet described Francis as an ultraconservative ideologue akin to Pat Buchanan,[10] whom Francis advised.[11] The anarcho-capitalist political theorist Hans-Hermann Hoppe called Francis "one of the leading theoreticians and strategists of the Buchananite movement."[12]
Early life
Francis was born in Chattanooga, Tennessee. He received a bachelor's degree from Johns Hopkins University in 1969, and a master's degree in 1971 and doctorate in 1979 from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.[5]
Career
The Washington Times
Francis was a policy analyst at the Heritage Foundation and an aide to the U.S. senator John P. East before joining the editorial staff of The Washington Times in 1986.[13][3] Five years later, he became a columnist for the newspaper, and his column became syndicated.[13]
In addition to his journalistic career, Francis was an adjunct scholar at the Ludwig von Mises Institute of Auburn, Alabama.[14]
In June 1995, editor-in-chief Wesley Pruden "had cut back on Francis' column" after The Washington Times ran his essay criticizing the Southern Baptist Convention for its approval of a resolution which apologized for slavery.[15] In the piece, Francis asserted that, "The contrition of the Southern Baptists for slavery and racism is a bit more than a politically fashionable gesture intended to massage race relations"[16] and that "Neither slavery nor racism as an institution is a sin."[13]
In September 1995, Pruden fired Francis from The Washington Times after the conservative journalist Dinesh D'Souza, in a column in The Washington Post, described Francis's appearance at the 1994 American Renaissance conference: "A lively controversialist, Francis began with some largely valid complaints about how the Southern heritage is demonized in mainstream culture. He went on, however, to attack the liberal principles of humanism and universalism for facilitating 'the war against the white race.' At one point he described country music megastar Garth Brooks as 'repulsive' because 'he has that stupid universalist song (We Shall Be Free), in which we all intermarry.' His fellow whites, he insisted, must 'reassert our identity and our solidarity, and we must do so in explicitly racial terms through the articulation of a racial consciousness as whites… The civilization that we as whites created in Europe and America could not have developed apart from the genetic endowments of the creating people, nor is there any reason to believe that the civilization can be successfully transmitted to a different people.'"[17]
After D'Souza's column was published, Pruden "decided he did not want the Times associated with such views after looking into other Francis writings, in which he advocated the possible deportation of legal immigrants and forced birth control for welfare mothers."[13]
Francis said soon after the firing that "I believe there are racial differences, there are natural differences between the races. I don't believe that one race is better than another. There's reasonably solid evidence for IQ differences, personality and behavior differences. I understand those things have been taken to justify segregation and white supremacy. That is not my intent."[13]
Later career
After being fired from The Washington Times, Francis continued to write a column, which was syndicated through Creators Syndicate at least as early as January 2000.[18]
Francis became a "dominant force" on the Council of Conservative Citizens.Template:Sfn Francis was the chief editor of the council's quarterly newsletter, Citizens Informer, until his death in 2005.[7] Francis wrote the council's Statement of Principles, which "called for America to be a Christian nation"[19] and "oppose[d] all efforts to mix the races of mankind."[20] In his writings, Francis advocated for a moratorium on all immigration, plus an indefinite suspension of all immigration from non-European and non-Western people.[19]
Francis was also an editor of The Occidental Quarterly, a white nationalist journal edited by Kevin Lamb and sponsored by William Regnery II.
He served as a contributor and editor of the Intercollegiate Studies Institute's quarterly, Modern Age. After his dismissal from The Washington Times and the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, Francis continued to write a syndicated column for VDARE and Chronicles magazine,[3] and spoke at meetings of American Renaissance and the Council of Conservative Citizens. He attended the American Friends of the British National Party's meeting on April 22, 2000, where he heard and met Nick Griffin, then the leader of the fascist British National Party and a future member of the European Parliament.Template:Third-party inline His articles also appeared in Middle American News. Francis' last published work was an article penned for the 2005 IHS Press anti-war anthology, Neo-Conned!.Template:Third-party inline
Francis died on February 15, 2005, at Prince George's Hospital Center in Cheverly, Maryland, following an unsuccessful surgery to treat an aortic aneurysm. He was 57.[21] Francis was buried at the foot of Lookout Mountain.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
Thought and legacy
Francis's term "Template:Vanchor" refers to armed dictatorship without rule of law,Template:R or a Hegelian synthesis when the state tyrannically or oppressively regulates citizens' lives yet is unable or unwilling to enforce fundamental protective law.[22][23] Commentators have invoked the term in reference to situations when governments focus on weapon confiscation instead of stopping looters.[24]Template:Self-published source[25] On Francis's death, the Rockford Institute magazine Chronicles dedicated its April 2005 issue to his memory and the concept.[26]Template:Third-party inline Francis had a significant influence on the paleoconservative movement.[27]
Francis argued that the conservative movement was made of "beautiful losers", being either "rootless men" attracted to archaic things or crypto-liberals who sometimes resist progressive change before eventually caving in. He argued that the political right kept losing because it was too focused on ideas and less on power. According to Francis, the political left has dominated politics due to the ascendancy of a progressive managerial class, leading to more bureaucratization and more state power while eroding the power of other authorities in society. To combat the emergence of this new class, Francis argued that the political right needed a base for its goals, this base being the white middle class or "Middle American radicals." In order to capture this base for the political right, Francis argued in favor of emphasizing "crime, educational collapse, the erosion of their economic status, and the calculated subversion of their social, cultural, and national identity" to create a class identity for this group.[27]
Writing in The Week, the commentator Michael Brendan Dougherty wrote that Francis's writings, and his rejection of movement conservatism, presaged Donald Trump's victory in the 2016 U.S. presidential election.[11] In September 2017 the New York Times columnist David Brooks wrote: "The only time I saw Sam Francis face-to-face — in The Washington Times cafeteria sometime in the late 1980s or early 1990s — I thought he was a crank, but it's clear now that he was at that moment becoming one of the most prescient writers of the past 50 years. There's very little Donald Trump has done or said that Francis didn't champion a quarter century ago."[28] In 2023, the historian Joshua Tait said that "Before a Trump-inspired resurgence in interest in Francis, he was a cautionary tale from conservative intellectual history."[29]
During the 2022 U.S. elections, the Republican Party candidates Blake Masters and Joe Kent promoted Francis' writings.[3]
Although Francis sometimes engaged with Christian thinkers and publications during his life, he was also harshly critical of Christianity in his later years and his worldview has been described as irreligious and materialistic. Francis wrote that "Christianity today is the enemy of the West and the race that created it" and suggested that the "religious wrong" operated under a "false consciousness" that prevented white Christians from recognizing their true interests. Because of this, he has been cited as part of a trend toward increasingly "secular, even pagan" ideas among certain segments of the American radical right.[30][31]
In the end however, Francis died a Roman Catholic according to Father Paul Scalia (son of Antonin Scalia) [32]
Works
- (1984) Power and History: The Political Thought of James Burnham. University Press of America Template:ISBN
- (1994) Beautiful Losers: Essays on the Failure of American Conservatism. University of Missouri Press Template:ISBN
- (1997) Revolution From the Middle. Middle America Press Template:ISBN
- (1997) "Classical Republicanism and the Right to Bear Arms," in Costs of War. Transaction Publishers, pp. 53–66 Template:ISBN
- (1999) James Burnham: Thinkers of Our Time. London: Claridge Press Template:ISBN
- (2001) America Extinguished: Mass Immigration and the Disintegration of American Culture. Americans for Immigration Control Publishers Template:Catalog lookup link
- (2003) Ethnopolitics: Immigration, Race, and the American Political Future. Representative Government Press Template:ISBN
- (2005) "Refuge of Scoundrels: Patriotism, True and False, in the Iraq Controversy," in Neo-Conned! IHS Press, pp. 151–60 Template:ISBN
- (2006) Shots Fired: Sam Francis on America's Culture War. FGF Books edited by Peter Gemma Template:ISBN
- (2007) Essential Writings on Race. New Century Foundation Template:ISBN
- (2016) Leviathan and Its Enemies. Washington Summit Publishers Template:ISBN
References
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- ↑ George Michael, Confronting Right Wing Extremism and Terrorism in the USA (Routledge, 2003), p. 51.
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External links
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