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Joseph Sobran

Michael Joseph Sobran Jr. (/ˈsbræn/; February 23, 1946 – September 30, 2010) was a paleoconservative American journalist. He wrote for the National Review magazine and was a syndicated columnist. During the 1970s, he frequently used the byline M. J. Sobran.

Joseph Sobran
Born
Michael Joseph Sobran Jr.

(1946-02-23)February 23, 1946
DiedSeptember 30, 2010(2010-09-30) (aged 64)
Alma materEastern Michigan University
Political partyConstitution Party

In his columns, Sobran was moralistic, opposed to big government, and an isolationist critic of U.S. foreign policy. When he fired Sobran from his longtime job at National Review in 1993, publisher William F. Buckley termed some of Sobran's writings "contextually anti-Semitic". In the early 2000s, Sobran was a speaker for a Holocaust denial group.[1][2]

Biography

Early life

Sobran was born in Ypsilanti, Michigan, into a Roman Catholic family. He graduated in 1969 from Eastern Michigan University in Ypsilanti with a Bachelor of Arts in English. He studied for a Master of English degree with a concentration on Shakespearean studies. In the late 1960s, Sobran lectured on Shakespeare and English on a fellowship with Eastern Michigan.[1]

Columnist

In 1972, while at Eastern Michigan, Sobran published rebuttals of criticisms from other faculty of an upcoming campus visit by William F. Buckley Jr., publisher of the National Review and a prominent conservative. After reading Sobran's comments, Buckley hired him as a columnist at the National Review. After three years, Buckley promoted Sobran to senior editor.[1] They had a long friendship.[3]

Aside from his work at National Review, Sobran spent 21 years as a commentator on the CBS Radio Spectrum program series. He was a syndicated columnist, first with the Los Angeles Times and later with the Universal Press Syndicate. From 1988 to 2007, he wrote the column "Washington Watch" for the traditionalist lay Catholic weekly The Wanderer. He also wrote a monthly column for the traditionalist Catholic Family News (a publication considered anti-Semitic by the Southern Poverty Law Center[4]) and the "Bare Bodkin" column for Chronicles magazine. He was a media fellow of the Mises Institute.[5][6][1]

Firing from National Review

In 1993, in a column in The Wanderer, Sobran attacked Buckley for his support of the 1991 Gulf War. Already unhappy with Sobran's columns on Israel and anti-Semitism, Buckley was reportedly angered that Sobran had used information from their private conversations and decided to fire him as senior editor. Buckley said he considered some of Sobran's columns to be "... contextually anti-Semitic. By this I mean that if he had been talking, let us say, about the lobbying interests of the Arabs or of the Chinese, he would not have raised eyebrows as an anti-Arab or an anti-Chinese".[7][8] In response to his firing, Sobran claimed that Buckley told him to "stop antagonizing the Zionist crowd" and accused him of libel and moral incapacitation.[9] In his own assessment, Columnist Norman Podhoretz wrote that Sobran's columns were "anti-Semitic in themselves, and not merely 'contextually'".[10]

In 1994, he founded "Sobran’s: The Real News of the Month", a newsletter that published until 2007.[1] Sobran was named the Constitution Party's vice presidential nominee in 2000, but withdrew later that year due to scheduling conflicts.[11]

Institute for Historical Review

In 2001, Pat Buchanan offered Sobran a column in Buchanan's new magazine The American Conservative. (After Sobran's death, Buchanan called him "perhaps the finest columnist of our generation".[12]) However, the magazine's editor, Scott McConnell, withdrew the offer when Sobran refused to cancel his appearance before the Institute for Historical Review, a leading Holocaust-denying group.[3]

In 2001 and 2003, Sobran spoke at conferences organized by David Irving and shared the podium with Paul Fromm, Charles D. Provan, and Mark Weber, director of the Institute for Historical Review. In 2002, he spoke at the Institute for Historical Review's annual conference.[13] Referring to Sobran's appearance at the conferences, historian Deborah Lipstadt wrote: "Mr. Sobran may not have been an unequivocal [Holocaust] denier, but he gave support and comfort to the worst of them".[14] Writing in National Review, Matthew Scully said: "His appearance before that sorry outfit a few years ago [...] remains impossible to explain, at least if you're trying to absolve him".[15]

In the 2008 presidential election, Sobran endorsed Constitution Party candidate Chuck Baldwin.[16]

Death and legacy

Sobran was twice married and divorced. He had four children. Sobran died in a nursing home in Fairfax, Virginia, on September 30, 2010, of kidney failure due to diabetes.[3][1]

Views

Philosophy

Throughout much of his career, Sobran identified as a paleoconservative like his colleagues Samuel T. Francis, Pat Buchanan, and Peter Gemma.[third-party source needed] He claimed to support a strict interpretation of the United States Constitution. He asserted that the Tenth Amendment meant that almost every federal government act since the Civil War had been illegal.[1] In 2002, Sobran announced his philosophical and political shift to libertarianism (paleolibertarian anarcho-capitalism), citing inspiration by theorists Murray Rothbard and Hans-Hermann Hoppe.[17] He referred to himself as a "theo-anarchist".[18]

Sobran asserted in the neo-Confederate Southern Partisan magazine that Martin Luther King Jr.'s dream had become an "American nightmare" because civil rights had encouraged, in Sobran's words, "black thugs".[19]

Catholic teachings

Sobran said Catholic teachings were consistent with his opposition to abortion and the Iraq War.[citation needed] Asked to summarize his views, Sobran said once, "I won't be satisfied until the Church resumes burning for heresy" — a remark that Buchanan's biographer Timothy Stanley described as "funny, offensive and honest".[3]

Jews and Israel

Sobran frequently used his columns to criticize Israel, the Holocaust and Zionism. In one column, Sobran wrote that The New York Times "really ought to change its name to Holocaust Update".[20] In a 1992 column, he complained of "a more or less official national obsession with a tiny, faraway socialist ethnocracy", meaning Israel. Sobran argued that the 9/11 attacks were a result of the United States government's policies in the Middle East. He claimed those policies are formed by the "Jewish lobby".[1]

In 2002, Sobran wrote, "My chief offense, it appears, has been to insist that the state of Israel has been a costly and treacherous ‘ally’ to the United States. As of last Sept. 11, I should think that is undeniable. But I have yet to receive a single apology for having been correct."[1] Sobran said he lacked the "scholarly competence" to be a Holocaust denier. He also claimed that the official number of Holocaust victims was inaccurate and that Nazi Germany was not intent on racial extermination.[21][third-party source needed] He said his attitude was not anti-Semitism but "more like counter-Semitism".[22]

Published works

Books

At the time of his death, Sobran was working on two books, one concerning Abraham Lincoln's presidency and the United States Constitution and another about de Vere's poetry.[citation needed]

Articles and speeches

His essays appeared in The Human Life Review, Celebrate Life! and The Free Market.

  • The Church Today: Less Catholic Than the Pope? – National Committee of Catholic Laymen – 1979
  • How Tyranny Came to America, Sobran's, n.d.
  • Pensees: Notes for the reactionary of tomorrow, National Review, December 31, 1985. (extended essay)
  • Power and Betrayal – Griffin Communications – 1998
  • Anything Called a Program is Unconstitutional – Griffin Communications – 2001

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Grimes, William (October 1, 2010). "Joseph Sobran, Writer Whom Buckley Mentored, Dies at 64". The New York Times. Retrieved February 7, 2019.
  2. ^ Rudin, Ken (2010-12-29). "Political Powerhouses: Remembering Those Who Died". NPR. Retrieved 2022-07-11.
  3. ^ a b c d Timothy Stanley, The Crusader: The Life and Tumultuous Times of Pat Buchanan (New York City: St. Martin's Press, 2012), p. 359; ISBN 978-0-312-58174-9
  4. ^ "12 Anti-Semitic Radical Traditionalist Catholic Groups". Southern Poverty Law Center. Retrieved 2022-07-11.
  5. ^ "The Free Market | Mises Institute". Mises.org. Retrieved 2016-07-25.
  6. ^ "Joseph Sobran, 1946-2010". Blog.mises.org. 2010-09-30. Retrieved 2016-07-25.
  7. ^ McDonald, Michael (June 2011). "Wills Watching". The New Criterion. Retrieved 2011-06-06.
  8. ^ "In Pursuit of Anti-Semitism," National Review, 16 March 1992.
  9. ^ Ralph Z. Hallow, "War of words raging at National Review," The Washington Times, October 7, 1993.
  10. ^ William F. Buckley Jr."In search of anti-Semitism: what Christians provoke what Jews? Why? By doing what? – And vice versa 2006-02-23 at the Wayback Machine", National Review, December 30, 1991.
  11. ^ . politics1.com. 2000. Archived from the original on 2008-05-10. Retrieved 2008-05-08.
  12. ^ W. James Antle, III (October 4, 2010). "Remembering Joe Sobran". Enter Stage Right. Retrieved 2011-06-06.
  13. ^ "For Fear of the Jews". ihr.org. 2002-06-22. Retrieved 2016-07-25.
  14. ^ Deborah Lipstadt "'Skeptical' on the Holocaust?", The New York Times, October 5, 2010.
  15. ^ Matthew Scully, "Bard of the Right", National Review Online, October 16, 2010.
  16. ^ Sobran, Joseph (November 3, 2008). . The American Conservative. Archived from the original on 2008-10-30. Retrieved 2008-11-04.
  17. ^ "Sobran's - The Reluctant Anarchist". Sobran.com. Retrieved 2016-07-25.
  18. ^ . weekendinterviewshow.com. Archived from the original on 2006-11-13. Retrieved 2007-01-15.
  19. ^ Hague, Euan (2008-12-31), "7. Neo-Confederacy and Education", Neo-Confederacy, University of Texas Press, pp. 202–225, doi:10.7560/718371-010, ISBN 9780292793873, S2CID 243776146, retrieved 2022-07-11
  20. ^ Jim Naureckas, "The Philadelphia Inquirer's New Spectrum: From Centrism to Anti-Semitism", FAIR, November/December 1995.
  21. ^ "For Fear of the Jews". Sobran's: The Real News of the Month. Retrieved 2016-07-25.
  22. ^ Weisberg, Jacob (1990-10-22). "The Heresies of Pat Buchanan". The New Republic. ISSN 0028-6583. Retrieved 2022-07-11.

External links

  • Appearances on C-SPAN
  • How Tyranny Came to America
  • Pensees: Notes for the reactionary of tomorrow
Party political offices
Preceded by Constitution nominee for Vice President of the United States
Withdrew

2000
Succeeded by
Curtis Frazier

joseph, sobran, michael, february, 1946, september, 2010, paleoconservative, american, journalist, wrote, national, review, magazine, syndicated, columnist, during, 1970s, frequently, used, byline, sobran, bornmichael, 1946, february, 1946ypsilanti, michigan, . Michael Joseph Sobran Jr ˈ s oʊ b r ae n February 23 1946 September 30 2010 was a paleoconservative American journalist He wrote for the National Review magazine and was a syndicated columnist During the 1970s he frequently used the byline M J Sobran Joseph SobranBornMichael Joseph Sobran Jr 1946 02 23 February 23 1946Ypsilanti Michigan USDiedSeptember 30 2010 2010 09 30 aged 64 Fairfax Virginia USAlma materEastern Michigan UniversityPolitical partyConstitution PartyIn his columns Sobran was moralistic opposed to big government and an isolationist critic of U S foreign policy When he fired Sobran from his longtime job at National Review in 1993 publisher William F Buckley termed some of Sobran s writings contextually anti Semitic In the early 2000s Sobran was a speaker for a Holocaust denial group 1 2 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 Columnist 1 3 Firing from National Review 1 4 Institute for Historical Review 1 5 Death and legacy 2 Views 2 1 Philosophy 2 2 Catholic teachings 2 3 Jews and Israel 3 Published works 3 1 Books 3 2 Articles and speeches 4 References 5 External linksBiography EditEarly life Edit Sobran was born in Ypsilanti Michigan into a Roman Catholic family He graduated in 1969 from Eastern Michigan University in Ypsilanti with a Bachelor of Arts in English He studied for a Master of English degree with a concentration on Shakespearean studies In the late 1960s Sobran lectured on Shakespeare and English on a fellowship with Eastern Michigan 1 Columnist Edit In 1972 while at Eastern Michigan Sobran published rebuttals of criticisms from other faculty of an upcoming campus visit by William F Buckley Jr publisher of the National Review and a prominent conservative After reading Sobran s comments Buckley hired him as a columnist at the National Review After three years Buckley promoted Sobran to senior editor 1 They had a long friendship 3 Aside from his work at National Review Sobran spent 21 years as a commentator on the CBS Radio Spectrum program series He was a syndicated columnist first with the Los Angeles Times and later with the Universal Press Syndicate From 1988 to 2007 he wrote the column Washington Watch for the traditionalist lay Catholic weekly The Wanderer He also wrote a monthly column for the traditionalist Catholic Family News a publication considered anti Semitic by the Southern Poverty Law Center 4 and the Bare Bodkin column for Chronicles magazine He was a media fellow of the Mises Institute 5 6 1 Firing from National Review Edit In 1993 in a column in The Wanderer Sobran attacked Buckley for his support of the 1991 Gulf War Already unhappy with Sobran s columns on Israel and anti Semitism Buckley was reportedly angered that Sobran had used information from their private conversations and decided to fire him as senior editor Buckley said he considered some of Sobran s columns to be contextually anti Semitic By this I mean that if he had been talking let us say about the lobbying interests of the Arabs or of the Chinese he would not have raised eyebrows as an anti Arab or an anti Chinese 7 8 In response to his firing Sobran claimed that Buckley told him to stop antagonizing the Zionist crowd and accused him of libel and moral incapacitation 9 In his own assessment Columnist Norman Podhoretz wrote that Sobran s columns were anti Semitic in themselves and not merely contextually 10 In 1994 he founded Sobran s The Real News of the Month a newsletter that published until 2007 1 Sobran was named the Constitution Party s vice presidential nominee in 2000 but withdrew later that year due to scheduling conflicts 11 Institute for Historical Review Edit In 2001 Pat Buchanan offered Sobran a column in Buchanan s new magazine The American Conservative After Sobran s death Buchanan called him perhaps the finest columnist of our generation 12 However the magazine s editor Scott McConnell withdrew the offer when Sobran refused to cancel his appearance before the Institute for Historical Review a leading Holocaust denying group 3 In 2001 and 2003 Sobran spoke at conferences organized by David Irving and shared the podium with Paul Fromm Charles D Provan and Mark Weber director of the Institute for Historical Review In 2002 he spoke at the Institute for Historical Review s annual conference 13 Referring to Sobran s appearance at the conferences historian Deborah Lipstadt wrote Mr Sobran may not have been an unequivocal Holocaust denier but he gave support and comfort to the worst of them 14 Writing in National Review Matthew Scully said His appearance before that sorry outfit a few years ago remains impossible to explain at least if you re trying to absolve him 15 In the 2008 presidential election Sobran endorsed Constitution Party candidate Chuck Baldwin 16 Death and legacy Edit Sobran was twice married and divorced He had four children Sobran died in a nursing home in Fairfax Virginia on September 30 2010 of kidney failure due to diabetes 3 1 Views EditPhilosophy Edit Throughout much of his career Sobran identified as a paleoconservative like his colleagues Samuel T Francis Pat Buchanan and Peter Gemma third party source needed He claimed to support a strict interpretation of the United States Constitution He asserted that the Tenth Amendment meant that almost every federal government act since the Civil War had been illegal 1 In 2002 Sobran announced his philosophical and political shift to libertarianism paleolibertarian anarcho capitalism citing inspiration by theorists Murray Rothbard and Hans Hermann Hoppe 17 He referred to himself as a theo anarchist 18 Sobran asserted in the neo Confederate Southern Partisan magazine that Martin Luther King Jr s dream had become an American nightmare because civil rights had encouraged in Sobran s words black thugs 19 Catholic teachings Edit Sobran said Catholic teachings were consistent with his opposition to abortion and the Iraq War citation needed Asked to summarize his views Sobran said once I won t be satisfied until the Church resumes burning for heresy a remark that Buchanan s biographer Timothy Stanley described as funny offensive and honest 3 Jews and Israel Edit Sobran frequently used his columns to criticize Israel the Holocaust and Zionism In one column Sobran wrote that The New York Times really ought to change its name to Holocaust Update 20 In a 1992 column he complained of a more or less official national obsession with a tiny faraway socialist ethnocracy meaning Israel Sobran argued that the 9 11 attacks were a result of the United States government s policies in the Middle East He claimed those policies are formed by the Jewish lobby 1 In 2002 Sobran wrote My chief offense it appears has been to insist that the state of Israel has been a costly and treacherous ally to the United States As of last Sept 11 I should think that is undeniable But I have yet to receive a single apology for having been correct 1 Sobran said he lacked the scholarly competence to be a Holocaust denier He also claimed that the official number of Holocaust victims was inaccurate and that Nazi Germany was not intent on racial extermination 21 third party source needed He said his attitude was not anti Semitism but more like counter Semitism 22 Published works EditBooks Edit Single Issues Essays on the Crucial Social Questions Human Life Press 1983 Alias Shakespeare Solving the Greatest Literary Mystery of All Time Free Press 1997 Sobran espoused the Oxfordian theory that Edward de Vere 17th Earl of Oxford wrote the plays attributed William Shakespeare 1 Hustler The Clinton Legacy Griffin Communications 2000At the time of his death Sobran was working on two books one concerning Abraham Lincoln s presidency and the United States Constitution and another about de Vere s poetry citation needed Articles and speeches Edit His essays appeared in The Human Life Review Celebrate Life and The Free Market The Church Today Less Catholic Than the Pope National Committee of Catholic Laymen 1979 How Tyranny Came to America Sobran s n d Pensees Notes for the reactionary of tomorrow National Review December 31 1985 extended essay Power and Betrayal Griffin Communications 1998 Anything Called a Program is Unconstitutional Griffin Communications 2001References Edit a b c d e f g h i j Grimes William October 1 2010 Joseph Sobran Writer Whom Buckley Mentored Dies at 64 The New York Times Retrieved February 7 2019 Rudin Ken 2010 12 29 Political Powerhouses Remembering Those Who Died NPR Retrieved 2022 07 11 a b c d Timothy Stanley The Crusader The Life and Tumultuous Times of Pat Buchanan New York City St Martin s Press 2012 p 359 ISBN 978 0 312 58174 9 12 Anti Semitic Radical Traditionalist Catholic Groups Southern Poverty Law Center Retrieved 2022 07 11 The Free Market Mises Institute Mises org Retrieved 2016 07 25 Joseph Sobran 1946 2010 Blog mises org 2010 09 30 Retrieved 2016 07 25 McDonald Michael June 2011 Wills Watching The New Criterion Retrieved 2011 06 06 In Pursuit of Anti Semitism National Review 16 March 1992 Ralph Z Hallow War of words raging at National Review The Washington Times October 7 1993 William F Buckley Jr In search of anti Semitism what Christians provoke what Jews Why By doing what And vice versa Archived 2006 02 23 at the Wayback Machine National Review December 30 1991 PRESIDENCY 2000 politics1 com 2000 Archived from the original on 2008 05 10 Retrieved 2008 05 08 W James Antle III October 4 2010 Remembering Joe Sobran Enter Stage Right Retrieved 2011 06 06 For Fear of the Jews ihr org 2002 06 22 Retrieved 2016 07 25 Deborah Lipstadt Skeptical on the Holocaust The New York Times October 5 2010 Matthew Scully Bard of the Right National Review Online October 16 2010 Sobran Joseph November 3 2008 Joseph Sobran The American Conservative Archived from the original on 2008 10 30 Retrieved 2008 11 04 Sobran s The Reluctant Anarchist Sobran com Retrieved 2016 07 25 Joseph Sobran s Bio weekendinterviewshow com Archived from the original on 2006 11 13 Retrieved 2007 01 15 Hague Euan 2008 12 31 7 Neo Confederacy and Education Neo Confederacy University of Texas Press pp 202 225 doi 10 7560 718371 010 ISBN 9780292793873 S2CID 243776146 retrieved 2022 07 11 Jim Naureckas The Philadelphia Inquirer s New Spectrum From Centrism to Anti Semitism FAIR November December 1995 For Fear of the Jews Sobran s The Real News of the Month Retrieved 2016 07 25 Weisberg Jacob 1990 10 22 The Heresies of Pat Buchanan The New Republic ISSN 0028 6583 Retrieved 2022 07 11 External links EditAppearances on C SPAN How Tyranny Came to America Pensees Notes for the reactionary of tomorrowParty political officesPreceded byHerb Titus Constitution nominee for Vice President of the United StatesWithdrew2000 Succeeded byCurtis FrazierPortals Biography Michigan Virginia Journalism Politics Christianity Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Joseph Sobran amp oldid 1136404750, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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