Richard McCulloch

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Richard McCulloch (born 1949) is an American author who has written several books advocating white nationalism.

Theories[edit]

McCulloch promoted the phrase "declaration of racial independence" in his 1994 book The Racial Compact. In this book he claimed that every race had a requirement for "its own exclusive racial territory or homeland, its own independent and sovereign government".[1] McCulloch has given his views in the white supremacist magazine American Renaissance. In a 1995 article on "Separation for Preservation", he alleged that there was evidence "that a multiracial society is detrimental to the interests of European-Americans", going on to say that "Separation ... is necessary for [White] racial preservation".[2] He is the author of "The Racial Compact", a website that advocates the maintenance of "racial purity".[3]

In his 2005 book on the Melungeons, Walking Toward The Sunset: The Melungeons Of Appalachia, Wayne Winkler notes that McCullogh "espouses views that seem dated to many Americans today, but were widely held in the not-to-distant past ... since then, the idea of 'racial purity' has been largely - but not completely - discredited".[3] As late as 2005, McCulloch's writings were being promulgated by Föreningen för Folkens Framtid (FFF, Association for the People's Future), a Swedish neo-Nazi networks.[1]

Bibliography[edit]

  • Richard McCulloch (1982). The ideal and destiny. McClain Printing Company. ISBN 0-9608928-0-X.

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Jared Sexton (2008). Amalgamation schemes: antiblackness and the critique of multiracialism. U of Minnesota Press. p. 74ff. ISBN 0-8166-5105-1.
  2. ^ Richard R. Valencia (2010). Dismantling Contemporary Deficit Thinking: Educational Thought and Practice. Taylor & Francis. p. 32. ISBN 0-415-87709-1.
  3. ^ a b Wayne Winkler (2005). Walking Toward The Sunset: The Melungeons Of Appalachia. Mercer University Press. p. 12. ISBN 0-86554-869-2.

Further reading[edit]

Richard McCulloch's online book "The Racial Compact"