The Claremont Institute has launched a campaign to engage our fellow citizens in discussion and debate about what it means to be an American. As part of that effort, we have begun to point out the increasingly existential danger of identity politics and political correctness to our republic. As if to prove our point, Google has judged our argument as wrongthink that should be forbidden. They are now punishing us for our political thought by refusing to let us advertise to our own readers...Google later admitted to "a mistake", but I can't help but wonder why all such mistakes lean one way politically.
Google, either its algorithm or some individual, had a look at my essay launching our new campaign for a unifying Americanism, “Defend America—Defeat Multiculturalism.” They decided it to be in violation of their policy on “race and ethnicity in personalized advertising” and shut down our advertising efforts to American Mind readers. We weren’t “advertising” anything in the essay, of course, but the relevant section of their policy lists “racially or ethnically oriented publications, racially or ethnically oriented universities, racial or ethnic dating” as examples of violations.
Somebody must have determined we were offering “racially or ethnically oriented publications.” This is news to us. The Claremont Institute has spent forty years teaching all who are willing to listen that the meaning of the proposition that all human beings are created equal is the central, animating principle of American political life.
Too many people, mostly our friends on the Left, like to make reference to President Eisenhower's Farewell Address in which he warned about the "military-industrial complex". Those same people, though, should read the entire address, as Eisenhower also warns us:
[I]n holding scientific research and discovery in respect, as we should, we must also be alert to the equal and opposite danger that public policy could itself become the captive of a scientific-technological elite.He was prescient, that Eisenhower fellow.
Roger Staubach served his owed time and so did David Robinson (although Robinson only served 2 years in the Reserves because he grew so much during his Academy years that it interfered with a Naval career) and so should current students.
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