This book is made up of personal statements about race from
seventeen racially conscious white Americans.
By racially conscious I mean that, for them, the fact that they are
white--other terms, European American, Euro--is more than an incidental,
insignificant, or peripheral aspect of their being. Their racial identity is central to how they
view themselves and conduct their lives.
The people you will meet come from virtually every part of the
country. None of them knew any of the
others when this project began (I introduced several to one or two of the
others after I had gathered the material for the book).
What you will read is drawn from an audiotape-recorded
conversation I had with each of these individuals separately (in one case it
was a couple). Conversation is a more
accurate term than interview for what went on between them and me. I didn’t have an interview protocol that I
used with everyone. There was nothing so formal as
that. Instead, I was guided by a list of
topics and themes I wanted to explore with each person. I edited myself out of the transcription of
each tape so that it was just a statement, or personal account, from the person
I talked with. I gave each statement a
title and wrote a brief preface to introduce the speaker. After transcribing nine of the tapes myself,
I suddenly lost virtually all my hearing and could no longer hear the voices on
the tapes. I am appreciative of Katrina
Gibson’s excellent work transcribing the last seven tapes, as well as for her
editorial assistance.
The words in this book are the speakers’. I did some editing for length and to avoid
repetition and maintain continuity, but I was careful not to alter, soften, or
censor anything someone said. As much as
possible, I want you to experience these individuals as I did, and reading back
over the statements, I think you will.
This book grows out of another book I authored, The Fame of a Dead Man’s Deeds: An Up-Close Portrait of White Nationalist William Pierce,
which was published in 2000. William Pierce, who died in July of 2002,
was a prominent figure in the white nationalist (another term, white racialist)
movement. He was the founder and
chairman of the National Alliance, which has around two thousand members and is
headquartered on Pierce’s 340-acre property in rural West Virginia.
Pierce is best known as the author of the widely read--a half million
readers--underground novel, The Turner
Diaries, which describes the racially motivated terrorist acts of a band of
white American revolutionaries against a corrupt federal government and its
supporters.
In the process of researching the Pierce book in the late
1990s, I met a number of white racialists, some followers of Pierce and some
not. After the book was published, other
racially aware whites contacted me, and I met still others at various meetings
and through the Internet. What has
struck me about the three hundred or more people I have encountered over the
past five years, and I include the leaders of the movement in this
characterization, is how invisible and silent they are in the public
arena. To be sure, we have a generalized
image of people of this sort and what they believe: ignorant, violence-prone
KKK members, menacing skinheads, and low-life or deranged thugs doing their “perp walks” after committing a heinous hate crime against
minorities. The vast majority of the
white nationalists I have met do not fit these stereotypes, but how would
average Americans know that? These
people aren’t on the television news shows speaking for themselves. They don’t make movies. They don’t publish books and articles. Politicians don’t articulate their
perspective and advocate their positions.
Journalists and intellectuals don’t write about them unless it is to
belittle them. They aren’t on university
and college faculties, and schools make no attempt to consider them
objectively.
What has also struck me about the people I have met is that,
at least in my view, they have something to say that would contribute to the
public dialogue and debate. I believe
this society and culture would benefit from hearing what they think about
race. Which is not to
say that I consider them to be right about everything. I do offer, however, that, in the main, white
racialists are serious and thoughtful and sincere, and they are trying to live
just and honorable lives. If you find
this to be true of the people in this book, know that they aren’t
exceptional. They are typical.