Re: Favor Regarding Robert Stacy McCain
Subject: Re: Favor Regarding Robert Stacy McCain
From: Barrett Brown <barriticus@gmail.com>
Date: 10/20/09, 17:11
To: David Neiwert <dneiwert@comcast.net>

Incidentally, do you know of any editors who might be interested in taking a look at this piece I've just written on McCain? Usually I'd just sell it to Vanity Fair, but they won't touch it for some reason. Anyway, some of the information here might be useful to you.


The Weasel and the Damage Done

    Mathematics professor Jonathan Farley has a hell of a resume, having served in varying academic capacities at Harvard, Cal Tech, Stanford's Center for International Security and Cooperation, and MIT, among other institutions of learning, as as having received the Harvard Foundation's Distinguished Scientist of the Year Award, Oxford University's Senior Mathematical Prize, and other, similarly dull-sounding yet prestigious things. He has been referred to by prominent neuroscientist and longtime Harvard administrator Dr. S. Allen Counter as "one of the world's most impressive young mathematicians," was one of only four Americans to be named a Fulbright Distinguished Scholar in the 2001-2002 nomination round, founded a firm that provides consultations on films using elements of math, and has provided notable contributions U.S. counterterrorism capabilities by way of his applied research regarding something I'm not really going to look into.

    As well as he's done so far, Dr. Farley would have almost certainly managed even greater things were it not for a widespread campaign among neo-Nazis and Confederacy apologists to harass the professor and put some dents in his career prospects by way of death threats and disinformation. These things happen, of course, but in this case the extent of the attacks was such that they actually achieved their purpose; after finding that some unknown individuals were contacting administrators at several universities and government agencies where he'd been taken on or considered for employment, he eventually gave up on the U.S. in favor of Europe, where he now teaches algebra at Johannes Kepler University in Linz. And many of the thousands who were involved in this campaign against an academic with real contributions to make to the world were mobilized in the first place by a prominent conservative pundit who has thus far managed to pass himself off as a respectable mainstream journalist despite an ever-growing body of evidence to the contrary. 

    The nonsense in question began in 2002 with one of those irritating controversies over Confederate iconography; in this case, various administrators at Vanderbilt had expressed an interest in removing the word "Confederate" from one of its dormitories. Farley, who was then teaching mathematics at the university, wrote an op-ed piece for The Tennessean to the effect that officers and enlisted men of the Confederacy ought to have been executed for treason after the war and their property dispersed among former slaves. Being a black academic of a leftist bent, Farley was perhaps not the best person to deliver that particular message to a region in which the most destructive and poorly-conceived insurrection in American history is still celebrated as some sort of neat thing. The threats on his life, challenges to duels, racially-charged e-mails, and denouncements by public figures of various sorts began immediately, as these things tend to do. And just as it seemed that the whole incident might soon run out of steam, the story began to go national.

    On December 3rd of that year, The Washington Times ran a "news" piece by features editor Robert Stacy McCain, a rising figure among the conservative commentariat who had successfully made the transition from sports to politics. A couple of passages merit particular scrutiny, beginning with this seemingly innocuous sentence fragment:

Mr. Farley has complained of threatening e-mails and phone calls...

    Another way of phrasing this would have been, "Mr. Farley has received threatening e-mails and phone calls," as this was by then a verifiable fact; Farley had by this point forwarded many of the more sinister messages to Tennessee police. I've seen a selection of them and have managed to determine that several of the death threats came from presumably armed military veterans living within a half-hour of Memphis, whereas others came from out-and-out white supremacists with ties to violence-advocating organizations like the National Vanguard.

    Now, take a gander at the following excerpt from the same article:

Tim Chavez, a columnist for the Tennessean, described one 66-year-old reader's frustration over Mr. Farley's views: "This just burns me because I don't know what to do about it," the man said. "If someone compared your ancestors to mass murderers, what would you do?" 

    Note that the anti-Farley crowd is merely "frustrated;" hundreds of racist e-mails and a smattering of death threats , McCain was more interested in Farley's own transgressions against civility.

In response to complaints from [Sons of Confederate Veterans] members, Mr. Farley has posted e-mail replies that "drip venom," [SCV leader Allen] Sullivant said. Replying to one SCV member, Mr. Farley vowed to "form our own armies to expose and smash you. ... Very simply, we represent good and you represent evil." 

    The nerve of the fellow!

    If McCain's Times piece seems to be lacking in traditional journalistic objectivity, this could be explained in a number of ways. Maybe he's simply not a very good journalist. Or maybe his piece was biased against the black professor in question because McCain himself is a white supremacist who, at the time he wrote the article, was also writing under an assumed name for the white nationalist publication American Renaissance, linking to that site as well as to the neo-Nazi outlet Overthrow.com in messages he posted on the conservative forum Free Republic, hanging around with neo-Nazi agitator William White and other admitted racists, serving as a member of the all-around wacky League of the South, and doing God knows what else that he's actually managed to conceal. Also, he's simply not a very good journalist. 

    He's actually not an unskilled commentator, though, which is why he's managed to develop a large blog following over the last couple of years while also writing regularly for American Spectator and a variety of other conservative outlets and meanwhile be cited, defended, and otherwise elevated to supposed respectability by dozens of prominent conservative bloggers such as Glenn Reynolds of Instapundit. Had he been merely some random blog jockey who turned out to be a racist, this would be of no concern to anyone. But McCain has managed to find a reasonably prominent place among the conservative commentariat and associate himself with a number of individuals who themselves are now confronted with the unpleasant evidence of their own poor judgement. Few of them are willing to acknowledge this, of course; their collective response has been to denounce Charles Johnson - once among the most prominent of conservative bloggers, co-founder of Pajamas Media, and the fellow who helped lead the way in such early victories of citizen journalism as Rathergate - out of anger over his recent work in uncovering and accumulating the large body of evidence that now exists to prove that McCain is the white supremacist he always appeared to be.

    McCain himself has been responding to his critics in an inevitably ridiculous manner; among other things, he's taken to making bizarre comments about both myself and a political action committee for which I serve as director of communications, making announcements along the lines of, "Barrett Brown: He'll get his in turn," threatening to drive to the offices of The Charleston Gazette in order to perpetrate some sort of physical retaliation for that paper having identified him as a white supremacist, and otherwise conducting himself in a strange and goofy manner.

    Meanwhile, McCain is still attempting to explain away his demonstrable sentiments. He wrote the other day that he has "neither any personal nor political interest in the marital preferences of others and have many friends of all races, some of whom are of mixed ancestry and some of whom are in mixed marriages," but in an e-mail he composed a while back, he proclaimed that the "media now force interracial images into the public mind and a number of perfectly rational people react to these images with an altogether natural revulsion. The white person who does not mind transacting business with a black bank clerk may yet be averse to accepting the clerk as his sister-in-law, and THIS IS NOT RACISM, no matter what Madison Avenue, Hollywood and Washington tell us.” And in an interview with Alan Colmes that took place after that e-mail was revealed, he said he didn't know if being disinclined to do business with a black bank clerk constitutes racism, either.

    Robert Stacy McCain can perhaps play an important role in the national conversation insomuch as that there are tens of millions of virulent racists among our citizenry as a whole whose views have not been adequately represented in the mainstream media for half a century, at least not overtly. McCain may yet have a brilliant career ahead of him as a wacky racist pundit with a penchant for revenge fantasies. 
    

On Tue, Oct 20, 2009 at 4:58 PM, David Neiwert <dneiwert@comcast.net> wrote:

Thanks, Barrett. You’ll have to forgive me for being a bit slow on the draw here – I’m in the middle of writing a manuscript while still maintaining C&L, so I’m working on an extended timeline. Hopefully I can do a post on this for tomorrow. -- Dave

 

From: Barrett Brown [mailto:barriticus@gmail.com]
Sent: Tuesday, October 20, 2009 1:25 PM
To: David Neiwert


Subject: Re: Favor Regarding Robert Stacy McCain

 

Another update, with a good link to some research that Sergey Romanov has dug up over the past few days; this is among the most damning material, I think.

 

Thanks,

 

Barrett Brown

Brooklyn, NY

512-560-2302

 

On Mon, Oct 19, 2009 at 11:21 PM, David Neiwert <dneiwert@comcast.net> wrote:

Yeah, I’d love to take this on. McCain has been flying under the radar the past couple of years, to the point now that a lot of “mainstream” cats like Glenn Reynolds link to him regularly now.

 

We’d love to run this stuff at Crooks and Liars. Right up our wingnutty little alley. -- Dave

 

From: Spencer Ackerman [mailto:sackerman@washingtonindependent.com]
Sent: Monday, October 19, 2009 7:17 PM
To: Barrett Brown
Cc: dneiwert@comcast.net
Subject: Re: Favor Regarding Robert Stacy McCain

 

David, meet Barrett. Barrett, meet David. You guys, I think, will have a lot to discuss.

Also, remind me to tell you about the time RS McCain wrote a letter to my editors at NY Press when I was 19 objecting to how I took exception to a GOP bumpersticker that called Democrats Communists. No lie.

On Mon, Oct 19, 2009 at 9:00 PM, Barrett Brown <barriticus@gmail.com> wrote:

Hi, Spencer-

 

Hope all is well and whatnot. Wanted to see if you could help me out with something real quick. Over the last month and a half, I've been writing a bunch of pieces for HuffPo and a few other outlets regarding former Washington Times editor Robert Stacy McCain (who co-wrote Donkey Cons with Lynn Vincent, who ghosted Going Rogue) and his increasingly-evident white supremacist sentiments and neo-Nazi connections. Back in 2002, he wrote under an assumed name for American Renaissance, an white nationalist website. Under the same moniker, he used to link to that site as well the neo-Nazi outlet Overthrow.com from Free Republic and whatnot. There's more along these lines as well, and I've dug up something else over the weekend that I think rounds out the case against him nicely and putting the finishing touches on what I hope will be the last article I have to do on the guy.

 

So, anyway, I've now teamed up with Charles Johnson of LGF - who's actually a pretty cool guy, as it turns out - to ensure that all of this material gets out and reaches the critical mass necessary to get McCain thrown out of polite society. But Johnson's not as influential as he used to be since he started calling out the nonsense among his old allies, and I'm not really hooked in with too many bloggers myself. I know you're essentially a national security writer, but perhaps you know some people who might be interested in bringing all of this to a wider audience and could forward this e-mail along to them? Here are some links to the pertinent facts. Incidentally, he's also been making goofy threats to go beat up the editorial board of the Charleston Gazette, talking nonsense about how I suck Charles Johnson's dick, and otherwise being a silly-billy. It's an unseemly business.

 

 

 

 

There's tons more, too. If you can think of someone who might be interested in taking this ball and running with it, please forward this to them.

 

Also, I met Adam Kruvand a few weeks back - not for the book, he happens to be old friends with a buddy of mine. Had some amusing things to say about Peretz.

 

Regards,

 

Barrett Brown

Brooklyn, NY

512-560-2302




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Spencer Ackerman
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