Extremist Steve Sailer is Source for CNN's 'Black in America' Series
As part of its ongoing project, CNN posted a to its website earlier this week titled 鈥淐ould an Obama presidency hurt black Americans?鈥 Credited to CNN correspondent John Blake, the piece quotes the wit and wisdom of Steve Sailer, identified only as 鈥渁 columnist for 尘补驳补锄颈苍别.鈥
Specifically, the CNN story quotes a column by Sailer first published last year in which he opined that Obama offers voters 鈥淲hite guilt repellent.鈥
"So many whites want to be able to say, 'I'm not one of them, those bad whites. ... Hey, I voted for a black guy for president,'" Sailer wrote.
What the CNN article fails to note is that in addition to writing columns and movie reviews for The American Conservative, Sailer is the founder of the Human Biodiversity Institute, a neo-eugenics online discussion forum where right-wing journalists and race scientists have promoted selective breeding of the human species. He also writes frequently for the anti-immigrant hate site Vdare.com, named for the first white child born in America, and runs a website, isteve.com.
Sailer's website is rife with primitive stereotypes. On it, Sailer mocks professional golfer Annika Sorenstam for having well-developed muscles and claims that Asian men have a hard time finding dates because they look 鈥渓ess masculine鈥 than other men.
Last January, on the hate site vdare.com, Sailer labeled Obama a 鈥渨igger.鈥
鈥淗e's a remarkably exotic variety of the faux African-American, but a wigger nonetheless,鈥 Sailer wrote. 鈥淓ven genetically, Obama, whose East African descent is apparent in his unusual features, has only a distant relationship to the West Africans who are the ancestors of almost all African-Americans.鈥 To illustrate his point, Sailer used photos of Obama side-by-side with Jesse Jackson and the rapper Ludacris, 鈥渂oth of whom have conventional West African features.鈥
Assessing the tragic aftermath of Hurricane Katrina in September 2005, Sailer wrote, 鈥淭he plain fact is that they [black Americans] tend to possess poorer native judgment than members of better-educated groups. Thus they need stricter moral guidance from society.鈥
This isn鈥檛 the only time in recent history that CNN has turned to an unabashed bigot for commentary on controversial issues in America while cloaking the source鈥檚 full identity.
In October 2006, CNN medical correspondent Dr. Sanjay Gupta on a study by that purported to show that men, on average, are more intelligent than women. Gupta identified Rushton only as a professor of psychology at the University of Western Ontario. Since 2002, Rushton has been the head of the , a pro-eugenics foundation that funds the research of academic racists like and Rushton, who himself has received over $1 million in Pioneer grants. Among Rushton鈥檚 findings are that on average blacks have larger genitals, breasts and buttocks, characteristics that, according to Rushton鈥檚 "research," have an inverse relationship to brain size and, thus, intelligence.
Then last April, CNN host Paula Zahn invited white supremacist James Edwards to participate in a live on-air panel discussion of 鈥渟elf-segregation鈥 in America. Edwards, a self-proclaimed crusader for the white race, is the co-founder of the Political Cesspool, a Memphis, Tenn.-based AM radio show whose guest lineup is a rogue鈥檚 gallery of prominent figures on the radical right, including former Klan leader David Duke, anti-Semitic attorney Edgar Steele and the neo-Nazi teen singing duo Prussian Blue.
On that occasion, CNN identified Edwards rather sparingly as a 鈥渢alk radio show host.鈥