Richard Hanania | |
---|---|
Born | August 28, 1985 |
Other names | Richard Hoste (pseudonym) [1] |
Occupation(s) | Researcher, columnist |
Known for | Right-wing commentary, The Origins of Woke (2023), various essays |
Academic background | |
Education |
Richard Hanania (born August 28, 1985 [2] ) is an American political science researcher and right-wing political commentator. [3] Hanania is the founder and president of the think tank Center for the Study of Partisanship and Ideology (CSPI). [4] [5] [6]
Between 2008 and the early 2010s Hanania wrote for alt-right and white supremacist publications under the pseudonym Richard Hoste. [6] [7] He acknowledged and disavowed his writing under the pseudonym when it was reported in 2023. [6] [5] A number of journalists note that Hanania continues to make racist statements under his own name. [4] [8] [5] [7]
Hanania has written for The Washington Post , [3] The New York Times , The Atlantic , [5] and Quillette . [5]
Hanania grew up in Oak Lawn, Illinois. [6] He is of Palestinian Christian descent. [7]
He attended Moraine Valley Community College and the University of Colorado. [6] He received a Juris Doctor from the University of Chicago and a Doctor of Philosophy in political science from the University of California, Los Angeles. [9]
Hanania was a research fellow at the Arnold A. Saltzman Institute of War and Peace Studies of Columbia University [10] [9] and a fellow at Defense Priorities as of 2020. [11] In 2022 he became a fellow at the University of Texas at Austin's Salem Center for Public Policy, which had been launched in 2020 with funding from right-wing donors. [4] [9] [12]
Hanania has written opinion pieces for The Washington Post , [3] The New York Times , The Atlantic and Quillette . [5] [ when? ]
He is the founder[ when? ] of the think tank the Center for the Study of Partisanship and Ideology (CSPI). As of summer 2023, he was the organization's president. [9]
Hanania authors a blog on Substack, which was received positively by figures such as the Mercatus economists Tyler Cowen and Bryan Caplan [13] [ third-party source needed ] and JD Vance, noted by Substack co-founder Hamish McKenzie, and publicized by Tucker Carlson, who invited Hanania on his show twice. [6] Hanania also operates a podcast where he has interviewed various people including the billionaire Marc Andreessen. [4]
Hanania has been linked to the New Right. [14] He is sometimes described as libertarian, [6] although he has written in favor of curtailing civil liberties with increased police power targeting African Americans, and has praised mass arrests in El Salvador. [5] In a 2023 essay, Hanania wrote that the only way to reduce crime is "a revolution in our culture or form of government. We need more policing, incarceration, and surveillance of black people. Blacks won't appreciate it, whites don't have the stomach for it." [5] [15] [16] The essay caught the attention of Elon Musk, who called it "interesting". [6]
In his 2023 book The Origins of Woke, Hanania argues that central causes of "wokeness" are the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and multiple inventive court decisions and executive orders. [17] The book has promotional blurbs by Vivek Ramaswamy, David Sacks, and Peter Thiel, who wrote, "Hanania shows we need the sticks and stones of government violence to exorcise the diversity demon." [6] In The Atlantic , Tyler Austin Harper called the book a "Trojan horse for white supremacy", arguing that it is grounded in the assumption that "Black people and women are less competent, capable, and intelligent than white men." [8] Robert VerBruggen, writing in the Washington Examiner , called it "an interesting and mostly sober take on long-debated civil rights topics from one of the Right's most frustrating figures". [18]
In October 2023, Hanania was noted for praising a book by Costin Vlad Alamariu, known for his fascist persona Bronze Age Pervert. [19]
In 2023, the HuffPost analyzed digital records believed to establish that Hanania was the true identity of a poster, "Richard Hoste", who had written articles for multiple far-right publications between 2008 and the early 2010s, including AltRight.com , The Occidental Observer , Taki's Magazine , and VDare . "Hoste" wrote his own blog called HBD Books (a reference to "human biodiversity", a form of scientific racism) [6] and operated a Disqus account. After Disqus was the target of a data leak, passwords and email addresses associated with many accounts became public. Several Disqus accounts (including "Richard Hoste" as well as multiple apparent alts) used Hanania's personal and student email addresses. [6] Under the pseudonym, Hanania argued for eugenics, including the forcible sterilization of everyone with an IQ below 90. [6] He also denounced "race-mixing" and said that white nationalism "is the only hope". [1] He opposed immigration to the United States, saying that "the IQ and genetic differences between them and native Europeans are real, and assimilation is impossible". He cited a speech by neo-Nazi William Luther Pierce, who had used Haiti as an example to argue that black people are incapable of governing themselves. [6] The HuffPost described the persona as "a formative voice during the rise of the racist 'alt-right'". [6]
Hanania did not deny that he was "Richard Hoste", writing: "Recently, it’s been revealed that over a decade ago I held many beliefs that, as my current writing makes clear, I now find repulsive." [6] [20] He also wrote that he was "the target of a cancellation effort" because "left-wing journalists dislike anyone acknowledging statistical differences between races". [21] [20] He wrote in Quillette : "I truly sucked back then." [5] An editor's note by Quilette editor-in-chief Claire Lehmann offered a rationale for publishing Hanania, which includes the “scarcity of narratives portraying young men’s journey away from extremist ideologies through the processes of maturity and moderation." [22]
On August 9, 2023, after his writings as "Richard Hoste" were revealed, the San Antonio Express-News called for University of Texas at Austin to cut ties with Hanania. [23] By August 10, 2023, the Salem Center had removed the "visiting scholar" link to Hanania's bio. [21] [24] In September 2023, Stanford University defended its position to platform him. [25]
Journalists and writers have cast doubt on whether Hanania has in fact disavowed racism. Jeet Heer wrote that the revelations might have the effect of making Hanania more prominent, because "As a former overt racist who now calls himself a supporter of 'enlightened centrism,' he offers a message that can reunite the fractured right." [7]
In September 2023, Adam Serwer wrote in The Atlantic : "People can and do change, even those with extreme views like these, but there’s not much evidence that happened here. As the writer Jonathan Katz notes, Hanania recently wrote, 'These people are animals, whether they’re harassing people in subways or walking around in suits,' in an angry tweet about the Black district attorney of Manhattan indicting a white man who strangled a homeless Black man on the subway." [1]
New York Times opinion columnist Jamelle Bouie wrote that "though he may claim otherwise, it doesn’t appear that his views have changed much [...] he still makes explicitly racist statements and arguments, now under his own name". [4] For New York Magazine , Zak Cheney-Rice wrote, "Hanania is seen as more moderate today because he has shrouded many of his old arguments about race in the mainstream terminology of crime prevention, a subtle shift in emphasis that makes him appealing to both the transgressive right and the broad middle". [5] Tyler Austin Harper wrote in The Atlantic that despite his renunciation of his previous work, "Hanania remains a white supremacist. A real one." [8]
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Writing in The Washington Post in late 2015, political science researcher Richard Hanania...
Richard Hanania, an intellectual muse of the Silicon Valley right ...
Richard Hanania is a research fellow at Defense Priorities
This month HuffPost reported that Richard Hanania, an influential anti-woke writer, published a series of pseudonymous posts at racist publications in the late 2000s and early 2010s. In a Substack post he rejected his old comments, but close observers of his contemporary work were hardly surprised by the revelations. Just this past May, for example, he posted in a thread on crime that America needs "more policing, incarceration, and surveillance of Black people."