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Face to Face with Race Paperback – September 4, 2014

4.2 out of 5 stars 70 customer reviews

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Product Details

  • Paperback: 222 pages
  • Publisher: New Century Books (September 4, 2014)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0983891028
  • ISBN-13: 978-0983891024
  • Product Dimensions: 5.5 x 0.5 x 8.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 12.3 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (70 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #343,566 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Customer Reviews

Top Customer Reviews

Format: Paperback
In the nine years I spent as pólice reporter for The Washington Times of Washington, DC, I constantly saw a level of black crime and social dsyfunction that were almost beyond belief, but little of it ever made print anywhere. This book describes what I saw in most of DC, in South Central LA, in Cabrini Green and Robert Taylor Homes,in Chicago, on East Colfax in Denver. These essays tell what is out there. It isn't pretty and you won't like it. But if you want to know what really goes on, where the talking heads don't go and nice white people in nice neighborhoods have never been, read it.
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Format: Kindle Edition Verified Purchase
Looking back at my beliefs as a young man, one thing that astounds me is the almost unbelievably naïve views I had of American blacks. They were just like us, except, well, except oppression. No doubt like many, my own thoughts of them often involved helping them, specifically because they were black and therefore morally worthy of help. Would not that sheen of moral goodness emanate from me?

My beliefs now are significantly less sympathetic. I have come to the painful conclusion that, although some individual blacks will make it in our society, the race as a whole will not. I further believe that this has essentially nothing to do with whites, legacies of racism and slavery, or white privilege. Rather, it is because of blacks themselves.

This change did not come about because of anything I read in a book. Instead, it was the result of innumerable interactions I had with blacks that led to a change of heart. The list goes on and on, but for me, it was early instances (at least that I saw) of what I now consider the most noxious aspect of black culture: their reflexive racial solidarity for any black against whites, which has been on full display the past couple of years during which blacks rioted in St. Louis in support of a criminal thug, and in Baltimore, where they reflexively sided with a heroin dealer with a rap sheet as long as my arm over law and order. To point out the painfully obvious, the stability that the law would bring to their own community is considerable. But they made the choice, so reflexively that it likely required no thought at all, for the criminal instead, with any morally honest person admitting that it was solely on the basis of skin color.

Sure, there are certainly some good and non-dysfunctional blacks.
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Format: Paperback Verified Purchase
Face to Face With Race brings the reader face to face with realities congenial to race realism. These realities are expressed in 14 essays that originally appeared on The American Renaissance website, which is owned by the editor of Face to Face With Race, Jared Taylor. Face to Face With Race demonstrates why diversity can be a weakness.

My chief regret about this anthology is that it did not include an essay by Mary Morrison. She is a public school teacher in the Los Angeles area. She has written several essays for American Renaissance about the persistence of the race gap in academic achievement, yearly and futile efforts to close the race gap, and the way the gap is blamed on teachers, rather than the brutal reality of innate racial inequality.

The insights of these essays are presented as experiences and anecdotes rather than statistics. In his Introduction Jared Taylor wrote, “Statistics are not reality; they are only a way to try to interpret reality. It is useful to know that the average black IQ is one standard deviation lower than the average white IQ, but what does that mean?”

In one of her essays, Mary Morrison wrote of eleventh graders in her school who read at a fourth grade level, while being praised for aspiring to become professionals.

In Christopher Jackson’s essay “A White Teacher Speaks Out,” Christopher Jackson includes a poignant quote from students who tell him, while struggling with an assignment, “I cain’t do dis Mr. Jackson. I black.”

Although it can be dangerous for a white person to publicly agree with Christopher Jackson’s students, blacks seem candid in their agreement.
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This is a short, accessible book. Fourteen articles by white people in situations in which they deal with Blacks (mostly) and Hispanics. It addresses the effects of forced diversity in schools, the military, construction trades, public safety and neighborhoods. He concludes with a chapter by author Geladiah Brown of Racism, Guilt and Self-Deceit which distills the high points of Brown's decades of experience in South Africa.

These are first-person accounts of how the facts that scholars spell out dispassionately in books such as Bell Curve, Race, Evolution & Behavior and Race Differences in Intelligence: An Evolutionary Analysis play out. Blacks in America average a full standard deviation lower in intelligence. This correlates directly with their much lower empathy for the suffering of (and suffering they inflict upon) their fellow man, their lesser ability to perform almost all jobs, whether or not they would be called "cognitively challenging," and their criminality.

Many of the authors have lived through the changes they describe. They write of a better balance before the liberal courts began to challenge every manifestation of unequal results as prima facie evidence of white prejudice and forced integration in all spheres of American life.
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