Mcliniet Dzcvat and Sali Recica, were also born in Yugoslaviarnin the late I’^Jf^D’s. ‘I’herc are about SO.OOO fonner YugosUns inrntheCzeeli Republie tocla; half of them are Albanians serving asrnaeconipliees to the Albanian mafia and drug dealers.rnAlbanians and Kosovo Albanians, together with their fellowrnnationals from Turke}’, have been involved in drug smugglingrnfor ()er ^O ears. The...
Author: The Archive (The Archive)
Chronicles Intelligence Assessment
ni for a ear and secretK recorded some 6,000 of his “business”rnconversations. He was apprehended in the spring of 1995, sentencedrnto 17 years in prison, and sent to the Regcnsdorf jail.rnWhile being transferred to Bern for a second trial in Jannar-rn1996, Sabcdini escaped from the train. The Swiss suspect thatrnhe now lives in the Czech...
Signs of the Times
“All the NewsrnUnfit to Print” ignsJ of tjje tKimesirnVol. 1 No. 7 July 1999rnThe crisis in Kosovo continues to illuminaternthe glaring gap between the qualityrnof reporting in America and in the restrnof the world. In Western Europe, in particular,rnthe tragedy in the Balkans hasrncome to be seen as the defining moment ofrnour civilization and of...
Signs of the Times
vided free air lanes for militaryrnplanes to Yugoslavia, and now wernmust identify ourselves with arnwar against a neighboring country.rnI was in favor of Hungaryrnjoining NATO, and I’m glad NATOrnwill protect us against externalrnenemies . . . Two years ago, hundredsrnof thousands demonstratedrnagainst Milosevic in Belgrade’srnRepublic Square, demanding lawful,rnpluralist democracy. I wasrninvited to speak to the...
Signs of the Times
to apologize for chief of staffrnRene Emilio Ponce, dismissing thernmurders as a sort of forgivablerncorporate glitch, like runningrnout of Xerox toner. “Managementrncontrol problems can exist inrnthese kinds of situations,” hernsaid.rnDiscussing the wider problem of staternviolence and repression in El Salvador,rnWalker was remarkably circumspect.rn”I’m not condoning it, but in times likernthis of great emotion and great...
The Vanishing Anglo-Saxon Minority
OPINIONSrnThe Vanishing Anglo-Saxon Minorityrnby Samuel Francisrn”The Anglo-Saxon carries self-government and self-developmentrnwith him wherever he goes.”rn— Henry Ward BeecherrnThe Cousins’ Wars:rnReligion, Politics, Civil Warfare,rnand the Triumph of Anglo-Americarnby Kevin P. PhiUipsrnNew York: Basic Books;rn707 pp., $32.50rnFor almost exactly 30 years, Kevin P.rnPhillips has been cranking out somernof the most interesting and provocativernworks of political analysis written...
The Vanishing Anglo-Saxon Minority
tantism, commercially adept, militantlvrnexpansionist, and highly convinced,rnin Old World, New World,rnor both, that it represented a chosenrnpeople and a manifest destiny,rnhi the full, three-century context,rnCavaliers, aristocrats, and bishopsrnprett’ much lost and Puritans, Yankees,rnself-made entrepreneurs, Anglo-rnSaxon nationalists, and expansionistsrnhad the edge, especially inrnAmerica.rnMr. Phillips may not realize it, but hisrninterpretation is not exactly new. It is...
In Memory of One of the Better Ones
whole, and also the interpretative modelrnof the left that goes with it. As a result,rneach of the Cousins’ Wars, in his analysis,rntends to be the same war over and overrnagain, like Twilight Zone renms. To arnlarge extent, this is the result of historicalrncoincideirce: The Puritans of East Angliarnwere the leading forces against the crownrnin the...
Christianity and Slavery in the Old South
Christianity and Slavery in the Old Southrnby H. Arthur Scott Traskrn”Slavery is as ancient as war, and war as human nature.”rn—VoltairernA Consuming Fire:rnThe Fall of the Confederacy in thernMind of the White Christian Southrnby Eugene D. GenovesernAthens, GA: University of Georgia Press;rn169 pp., $24.95rnA mencans, with their strong tenden-rn.cy to externalize the evil withinrnthem and...
Christianity and Slavery in the Old South
rian should gloss over past injustices. Yet,rndespite what he regards as the whiternSouth’s “tragic commitment to slaveryrnand racism,” he is willing to praise “Davisrnand Stephens, Calhoun and Thornwell,rnLee and Stonewall Jackson” as “greatrnmen.” He has insisted that the bestrnminds of the Old South in the fields ofrnpolitical economy and political science,rnconstitutional theory, Christian theolog}’,rnand historical...
Christianity and Slavery in the Old South
gious instruction for their slaves. Theyrnencouraged Southern legislators to repealrnthe literacy laws, which forbadernteaching slaves to read, for by denyingrnthem that skill, they were denying themrnthe Bible. They also called for the legalrnrecognition of slave marriages and slavernfamihes so that planters could no longerrnbreak up de facto families. Genovese recognizesrnthat many, if not most, plantersrntried...
Mea Culpa
REVIEWSrnMea Culparnby George GarrettrnEx-Friends: Falling Out With AllenrnGinsberg, Lionel & Diana Trilling,rnLillian Hellman, Hannah Arendt,rnand Norman Mailerrnby Norman PodhoretzrnNew York: The Free Press;rn256pp.J25.00rnDear Norman,rnThis is the second (and probably thernlast) time I have written to you. The firstrntime was way back in tumultuous 1968rnwhen, as a kind of review of your bookrnMaking It, for tlie...
Shaked and Stirred
Shaken and Stirredrnby J.O.TaternMartini, Straight Up:rnThe Classic American Cocktailrnby Lowell EdmundsrnBaltimore: The Johns HopkinsrnUniversity Press; 153 pp., $24.95rnProfessor Edmunds’ study is welcomernfor several reasons, not the least ofrnwhich is that it is the revised edition of hisrnThe Silver Bullet: The Martini in AmericanrnCivilization (1981). That noble andrninstructive volume was much too good torndisappear into oblivion....
Letter From Los Angeles
CORRESPONDENCErnLetter FromrnLos Angelesrnby Jonathan EllisrnOn the Celebrity WaterfrontrnBv the time I arrived at the DorothyrnChandler Pavilion in Los Angeles, the selectionrnwas over. About 200 people hadrnwon coveted bleacher seats to the red-carpetrnentrance of the 71st AcademyrnAwards. Among celebrit)’-worshipers, sittingrnin the Academy Award bleachers isrnlike taking commnnion from the pope.rnReaching this pinnacle requires a fanaticalrndedication that...
Letter From Venice
sidewalks, with more arriving by thernminute. An occasional limousinerncruised slowly by, and sometimes yourncould make out a waving hand from behindrntinted glass. Of course, this onlyrnteased the gawking folks who had comernto see stars. More than once a newcomerrnasked if I had “seen anyone yet,” which Irntook to mean “anyone like Tom Cruisernor Mer)i Streep,”...
Letter From Venice
from the chaise lounge on my terrace itrnseems that this was in another Hfe. Here,rnat last, I know I am where I belong, arnspark of cosmic indolence fortuitously restoredrnto the serene plenitude of the greatrngreen lagoon, or, in a less overdy Gnosticrnidiom and the more popular style ofrnDean Martin and Jerry Lewis:rnFirst I moved all...
Letter From London
had sold the old one, that are razing thernlast love of my life to the ground. It isrnsimply the realization, on the part of mostrndecent, working, normal people —inrnItaK as elsewhere—that things are goingrnin a certain very obvious way, and thatrnone must in the end be a stubborn, recalcitrant,rnalmost suicidally lackadaisicalrnsort of person not to...
Letter From London
After the inquest, the Lawrence familyrncomplained formally to the Police ComplaintsrnAuthority about the investigation.rnThe Kent police, who conducted the review,rnfound that the investigation had notrnbeen perfectly conducted and recommendedrndisciplinary action against onernofficer. But this did not suffice. Regrettably,rneven Mrs. Lawrence began sayingrnthat the investigation had been mishandledrnbecause of police racism, not humanrnerror. (After the report’s...
Law: Matthew Shepard and the Thought Police
VITAL SIGNSrnMatthew Shepardrnand thernThought Pohcernby Justin RaimondornLong before the advent of “politiealrncorrectness” as we have come tornknow (and hate) it, there was an activernand ongoing campaign to outlaw “haterncrimes.” This movement had its first bigrnsuccess in 1944, when 36 isolationists ofrnvaried backgrounds were indicted forrnsedition, hi charging the defendants —rnwho had nothing in common but...
America’s Race Religion
mosexLiality is a choice and offeringrncounseling services, gay-rights activists hterallyrnscreamed bloody murder.rnIn retrospect, it seems almost inevitablernthat 21-year-old Matthew Shepardrnwould become the poster boy martyrrnof the “hate crimes” movement. A 105-rnpound, slightly effeminate student at thernUniversity of Wyoming, Shepard was anrnintelligent lad who wanted to become arndiplomat and dreamed of being famous.rnHe was also a...
Film: Reel Crimes, True Illusions
universities, and others operating underrnthe federahzed affirmative-action programrnare portentous. Civil-rights advocatesrnand their lawyers should find theirrnbusiness booming.rnYet consider Ward Connerly, businessrnentrepreneur, vice chairman of the Universityrnof California board of regents, andrnchief advocate of California’s Propositionrn209, which bars the state from favoringrnminorities in such matters as state contractrnawards and college entrance ratios.rnConnerly sees himself as an...
Film: Reel Crimes, True Illusions
posterous film.rnBeachum has been fingered by arnmealy-nionthed white accountant —rnnicely played by Michael Jeter —whornstumbled upon a botched hold-up andrnsaw what his racist mind wanted to believe.rnNeed I add that Beachum is a solidrnfamily man with a devoted wife andrndarling daughter?rnEnter our hero: Clint Eastwood asrnSteve Everett, recovering alcoholic, inveteraternwomanizer, and unrepentantrnsmoker. He is feckless...
Society: Cheap Thrills
must be able to walk on ceilings, leaprnacross rooftops, literally dodge bullets,rnand engage in aerial kung-fu battlesrnof wall-smashing fury. Well, why not?rnDidn’t Edmund Spenser dress the RedrnCross Knight, his allegorical savior, in armorrnand give him a dragon to battle inrnThe Faerie Queene? And didn’t IanrnFleming steal this conceit from Spenserrnwhen he had James Bond redeem...
Guns: Arms and Thomas Jefferson
ful) of people he didn’t know. A roomfulrnof strangers, for instance, was wherernBill Clinton found himself when hernheard the question, “Boxers or briefs?”rnAnd “recognition and appreciation” —rnas opposed to dignity —were what hernsought when he basked in the focus thernquestion generated, hesitating just longrnenough before responding to intensifyrnthat focus, finally succumbing in his answerrnto the...
Guns: Arms and Thomas Jefferson
Congress complied, and during Jefferson’srnsecond term and Madison’s first,rn”public arms” were supplied at federalrnexpense to state militias all over the nation.rnThe militia was intended to preventrnthe conquest of America, not only by arnforeign power but also by a centralizedrnnational government and its standingrnarmy. At his first inaugural, Jefferson explainedrnthat “a well-disciplined militia” isrn”our best reliance...
Guns: Arms and Thomas Jefferson
he was familiar with the frequent misusernof guns. Writing to his grandson ThomasrnJefferson Randolph, he emphasized thernnecessit)’ ofrnnever entering into dispute or argumentrnwith another. I never saw anrninstance of one of two disputantsrnconvincing the other by argument.rnI have seen many, on their gettingrnwarm, becoming rude, & shootingrnone another.rnIf the widespread presence of guns inrnJefferson’s Virginia...
The Hundredth Meridian
The Hundredth Meridianrnby Chilton Williamson, JrrnHome and AbroadrnThe stock market is over 10,000, MichaelrnKinsley exhorted Pat Buchanan recently,rnand so America can do as it likes internationallyrnin the exercise of the U.S. megamilitaryrnmachine that Madeleine Albrightrnhas been slavering, throughout herrnFogg)’ Bottom years, to activate. America,rnaccording to journalistic convention,rnis fat, happy, and content, having arrivedrnfinally after half...
The Hundredth Meridian
a couple of hours later, the fall had deepenedrnto eight. We broke trail for 20 milesrnin four-wheel-drive, past groves of aspenrnwhitened by the flying snow and standingrnpale against the black timber, the willowsrnalready turned spring orange in the floodplain,rnand arrived after an hour or so atrncivilization, where the storm was expectedrnto make a four-day blow...
The Hundredth Meridian
Modern Editions of Classic Works for Readers TodayrnJUDGMENTS ON HISTORY AND HISTORIANSrnBy Jacob BurckhardtrnTranslated by Harry ZohnrnForeword by Alberto R. CollrnRenowned for his Civilization of the Renaissance in Italy and Reflections onrnHistory (published by Liberty Fund), Jacob Burckhardt (1818-1897) hasrnwell been described as “the most civilized historian of the nineteenth century.”rnJudgments on History and Historians...
The Hundredth Meridian
“A lu^d effort to repairrnour understanding ofrnChristian truth.”rn—Joseph Sobran,rnNationally syndicatedrncolumnist;rnEditor, SOBRAN’Srn”This is a very significantrnboolf, one thatrnis sociologically andrnhistorically wellrnresearched, theologicallyrnwell thought out,rnand forthrightly andrnclearly written. It deservesrna fearless andrnserious discussion.”rn— Thomas Weinandy,rnO.F.M., Cap., ThernWarden of Greyfriars,rnOxford; Tutor andrnLecturer in Historyrnand Doctrine, thernUniversity of Oxford.rnS P E N C ErnPUBLISHING CO.rnWhy do men stay away...
Polemics & Exchanges
EDITORrnThomas FlemingrnSENIOR EDITOR, BOOKSrnChilton Williamson, Jr.rnMANAGING EDITORrnScott P. RichertrnART DIREGTORrnH. Ward SterettrnDESIGNERrnMelanie AndersonrnCONTRIBUTING EDITORSrnKatherine Dalton, Samuel Francis,rnGeorge Garrett, Paul Gottfried,rn/.O. Tate, Michael Washburn,rnClyde WilsonrnCORRESPONDING EDITORSrnBill Kauffman, Donald Livingston,rnWilliam Mills, William Murchison,rnAndrei Navrozov, Jacob NeusnerrnFOREIGN AFFAIRS EDITORrnSrdja TrifkovicrnLEGAL AFFAIRS EDITORrnStephen B. PresserrnRELIGION EDITORrnHarold O.]. BrownrnEDITORIAL SECRETARYrnLeann DobbsrnPUBLISHERrnThe Rockford InstituternPUBLICATION DIRECTORrnGuy C. ReffettrnCIRCULATION MANAGERrnCindy LinkrnA publication of...
Cultural Revolutions
A little salt and pepper is interesting, enlivensrnand invigorates culture, and introducesrnnew perspectives. But what if thatrnnumber becomes 40, 60, 80 percent ofrnthe population? Still no problem? No, Irnthink it is called fragmentation, separation.rnBalkanization. Los Angeles is anrnoutstanding example of this. Whilernpoliticians, school officials, and other socalledrncommunity leaders mouth inanernslogans such as “Our Diversity Is...
Cultural Revolutions
pacity of Russia and China to resist thernmadness of world domination of thernAmerican-European alliance.rnWe must incessantly affirm and repeatrnthis: The resistance of the entire Serbianrnpeople to the bloody aggression of a Westrnunited in a murderous and destructivernmadness appears to be one of the lastrnchances open to nations to preserve evenrna semblance of political liberty. After...
Cultural Revolutions
of recent civil strife in Guatemala, ElrnSalvador, Nicaragua, and Chiapas, Mexico,rnis hardly reassuring. In a Los Angelesrnschool district, celebrations of bothrnCinco de Mayo and Black HistoryrnMonth were canceled recendy to avoidrnpotential violence between polarizedrnblack and Hispanic students.rnRather than picking a fight in someonernelse’s backyard, we should be lookingrnto our own country and its immediaternneighbors, and...
Cultural Revolutions
while not allowing the Serbian majorityrnin the Republika Srpska to withdrawrnfrom Bosnia?rnThe Serbs have been characterized asrn”bullies” due to the “ethnic cleansing”rnthat accompanied their actions in thernBosnian civil war. During the March debate,rnRep. Tom Bliley (R-VA) declared,rn”Remember, we hesitated and did not gorninto Bosnia right away. We were treatedrnevery night to the atrocities on CNN.”rnOne...
Cultural Revolutions
gressional Medal of Honor Society, nornless).rnAll of us were tr}’ing to convince twothirdsrnof the House to approve an additionrnto the Constitution stating thatrn”Congress shall have the power to prohibitrnthe physical desecration of the Flagrnof the United States.” The amendmentrnhas the support of 80 percent of thernAmerican people, it has been requestedrnby 49 of the state...
The Only Game in Town
PERSPECTIVErnThe Only Game in Townrnby Thomas FlemingrnMy father often told me the story of how he, as a smallrnboy, had sat on the knee of Wyatt Earp. The formerrnmarshal] of Dodge and Tombstone, as an old man, came tornChicago to give a lecture. He had heard of my Great-UnclernGarret’s heroism in rescuing a lady from...
The Only Game in Town
annoyed with the cowboys’ habit of hurrahing their wayrnthrough town, shooting up bottles at the back of the bar, thernheels off boots, and cigars out of mouths, but as Billy Breakenridgern(SheriflF John Behan’s deputy) was to say years later,rnTombstone (apart from cattle-rustling) was “an orderly andrnlaw-abiding town,” adding.rnWhat little killing was done there was done...
The Only Game in Town
less. They are also private and, in the case of the poker game,rnnot always legal. There may have been plenty of cases of goodrnfamily men who bet and lost the ranch to a crooked dealer—arnplot staple of “B” Westerns—but perhaps more typical were thernsingle men who plunged and lost and went back to work onlyrnto...
Death Before Dishonor
VIEWSrnDeath Before Dishonorrnby Roger D. McGrathrnThe 46-year-old veteran frontiersman lay in bed, desperatelyrnill. He was suffering from the effects of a gunshotrnwound that he had received in a fight. But duty called. Thernstate legislature asked him if he would lead an army of volunteersrnto engage the rampaging Red Stick Creeks. Thoughrnscarcely able to sit up...
Death Before Dishonor
McCoys, Buchanans, and Murphys aplenty. The new tribernwas essentially an amalgam of several Anglicized Celtic peoplesrn—Scots, Irish, and Scotch-Irish—with a good dose of Englishrnand some German thrown in. When the Indians slaughteredrna few isolated farm families here and there, they thoughtrnthat the bloody carnage would have the desired effect of intimidatingrnthe rest of the tribe...
Death Before Dishonor
separated from the trail to Oregon. Half of the Bidwell partyrndecided to stay with Fitzpatrick and head for Oregon.rnThe remaining members of the Bidwell party were determinedrnto strike for their original destination, California. Fitzpatrickrndrew them a map and off they went, 31 men, one woman,rnand an infant girl. They did not reach the Sierra Nevadarnuntil...
Death Before Dishonor
al gunmen, miners, teamsters, or cowboys—killing one anotherrnin something resembling a fair fight was one thing, and suchrnoccurred nearly 20 times during Aurora’s first few years, butrnJohnson’s killing was another. The Code of the West, thernmores of the tribe, had been broken. Immediately, a vigilancerncommittee was organized and an investigation launched. Arrestsrnwere made, witnesses interrogated,...
Print the Legend
Print the LegendrnRetaking the Alamornby William MurchisonrnAt the Alamo, Davy Crockett either: A. Died while swingingrnold Betsy; B. Came radically disconnected when herntorched the powder magazine; C. Surrendered to the Mexicans,rnwho tortured, then killed him, along with six other Anglornsurvivors of the siege.rnDoes it matter immensely which of these versions of Crockett’srndeath commends itself to...
Print the Legend
prison. De la Pena shared the Texans’ dislike of the cruel andrncrafty Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna, who had commandedrnthe Mexican forces at the Alamo. De la Pena clearly hoped tornshow Santa Anna at his worst.rnIn fact, the diary disappeared, turning up again only in thern1950’s. When it did so, the Crockett story, as reported...
Print the Legend
are a few things I remember: Crockett has a pre-Alamo romancernwith a Mexican woman, from whom he gallantly detachesrnhimself as the siege begins; after the first, repulsed Mexicanrncharge, one of Crockett’s men, Thimblerig, says of thernfallen Mexican soldiers something I remember as, “I was proudrnof “em. Even when I was killing ’em, I was proud...
Welcome to Dodge City
Welcome to Dodge CityrnThe Gun on the Frontierrnby Dave KopelrnOn the American frontier of previous centuries, the possessionrnof a firearm was often a key to survival. In this regard,rnthe frontier of 20th-century America, although difiFerentrngeographically, is very much like earlier frontiers.rnAs different waves of Europeans arrived in North America,rneach took a distinct approach to trading...
Welcome to Dodge City
dians of New Mexico, who had acquired and hoarded gunsrnone at a time, revolted in 1680. Pueblo attacks in the next 16rnyears killed hundreds of whites and pushed white settlementrnout of Santa Fe, all the way back to El Paso. In the 1750’s, Comanchernraiders, using guns supplied by the French, forcedrnSpain to abandon north Texas.rnWhen...
The Passionate Shepherd’s Return
Indians laid a foundation for America’s attachment to the gun,rnit does not provide a convincing explanation of why Americarnstill cherishes the gun, long after the danger of an Indian raidrnhas passed.rnThe frontier conditions which forced so many Americansrnto own guns for protection have changed, but they havernnot disappeared. The lawless frontier is no longer found...
The Passionate Shepherd’s Return
CHRONICLES’ BACK ISSUES, TAPES, AND BOOKSrn* On Islam, Multiculturalism, and Immigration *rnISLAM AND THE WEST—February 1999—Thomas Fleming defends decadentrnChristendom, James George Jatras exposes America’s collaboration with Islam, HaroldrnO.J. Brown warns the West against submitting to a quiet jihad, and Srdja Trifkovic discussesrnIslam and the multicultural myth. Plus Philip Jenkins on the New York Times andrnthe...