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- Kevin MacDonald (evolutionary psychologist) - Wikipedia
The statement concludes: "While the Academic Senate defends Dr Kevin MacDonald's academic freedom and freedom of speech, as it does for all faculty, it firmly and unequivocally disassociates itself from the anti-Semitic and white ethnocentric views he has expressed "
- Academic Senate Condemns Professor Kevin MacDonald’s Anti-Semitic Research
MacDonald, who is beloved by major American anti-Semites including former Klan leader David Duke, believes that Jews are impelled by genetic factors to undermine the majority populations of the societies they live in
- Ex KKK Leader Turned Life Around, Now Helps Others Do Same
According to the Post, the turning point for Buckley came when a mentor named Arno Michaelis took him to several Los Angeles shelters for homeless people and former gang members
- Kevin MacDonald - Southern Poverty Law Center
The former Klan leader and infamous neo-Nazi David Duke extols MacDonald and cites his trilogy as central to his thinking about the dangers posed by Jews in his autobiography, My Awakening
- 10 Well-Known US Figures Affiliated with the Ku Klux Klan
But evidence of his activities directing, or even participating, in Klan activities post 1866 is almost entirely anecdotal, and significant evidence exists to support his assertions that he was not an active member
- Death of a ‘Truth-Telling Gentleman’
Whitney gained national notoriety when he wrote a fawning introduction to former Ku Klux Klan leader David Duke ‘s 1999 book, My Awakening Whitney concluded that Duke had relied on “good science” in contending that blacks should be separated from whites
- The unlikely friendship between a Muslim doctor and a former Klan . . .
The unlikely friendship between a Muslim doctor and a former Klan member Heval Kelli, MD, fled persecution in Syria and eventually became a U S cardiologist Chris Buckley fought in Afghanistan and came home loathing Muslims Now they’re on a mission to help heal our nation
- The History of the KKK in American Politics - JSTOR Daily
The Ku Klux Klan supported Donald Trump for president Former Klansman David Duke made a bid for the Louisiana Senate, hate incidents followed the election, and Trump named as White House senior counselor Steve Bannon, former head of Breitbart com, a website popular with white supremacists
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