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VDARE
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VDARE is an American far-right[1] website that promotes opposition to immigration to the United States.[2] It is associated with white supremacy,[3][4][5] white nationalism,[6][7] and the alt-right.[8][9][10] Anti-Immigration in the United States: A Historical Encyclopedia describes VDARE as "one of the most prolific anti-immigration media outlets in the United States" and states that it was "broadly concerned with race issues in the United States".[11] Established in 1999, the website's editor was Peter Brimelow, who once stated that "whites built American culture" and that "it is at risk from non-whites who would seek to change it".[11]
Key Information
The Southern Poverty Law Center describes VDARE as "an anti-immigration hate website" that "regularly publishes articles by prominent white nationalists, race scientists, and anti-Semites", including Steve Sailer, Jared Taylor, J. Philippe Rushton, Samuel T. Francis, John Derbyshire[2] and Pat Buchanan.[12] Brimelow acknowledged that VDARE published writings by white nationalists but said that VDARE was not a "white nationalist Web site".[13][14]
In July 2024, it was announced that VDARE would be suspending operations in response to legal and technical issues. Brimelow also stepped down as president of the VDARE Foundation.[15]
In September 2025, New York sued to shut down the VDARE Foundation, alleging the non-profit was operated for the benefit of its owners Peter and Lydia Brimelow.[16]
History
[edit]Peter Brimelow, who edits VDARE, is a former editor at the National Review[17] and Fortune.[11] The English-born Brimelow founded the website in 1999 under the auspices of the Center for American Unity, a Virginia-based organization that he also founded[12] in 1999.[8] VDARE was founded as an outgrowth of Brimelow's anti-immigration activism and the publication of his book Alien Nation: Common Sense About America's Immigration Disaster.[7] The website says it is concerned with the "racial and culture identity of America" and "honest consideration of race and ethnicity, the foundations of human grouping, that human differences can be explained and their social consequences understood, whether those differences are philosophical, cultural or biological."[18]
Brimelow was president of the center,[8] which funded VDARE.com until 2007, when the center announced an intent to focus on litigation.[12] The VDARE Foundation, a 501(c)(3) organization, was formed by Brimelow to take the place of the center as the website's sponsor.[12] Brimelow's wife, Lydia Brimelow, is VDARE's advancement officer.[7]
The name VDARE and the site's logo, the head of a white doe, refer to Virginia Dare, the first child born to English settlers in the New World in the late 16th century.[8][19] Dare disappeared along with every other member of the Roanoke Colony.[11] Anti-Immigration in the United States: A Historical Encyclopedia explains that "For Brimelow, Anglo-Saxon Americans and their culture are in danger of disappearing like Virginia Dare; he writes that he considered adding a fictional vignette at the end of his book Alien Nation (1995), in which the last white family flees Los Angeles, which had been overrun by the crime and pollution caused by its non-white residents."[11]
Brimelow has written on the site that United States immigration policy constitutes "Adolf Hitler's posthumous revenge on America". In a radio interview with Alan Colmes, he said he wished to return to the US immigration policies before 1965, when restrictions to non-whites were lifted, as "the US is a white nation."[18]
New York Attorney General investigation
[edit]
In February 2020, the VDARE Foundation purchased the Samuel Taylor Suit Cottage (also known as the Berkeley Castle or Berkeley Springs Castle), a Medieval-style castle located on a hill above Berkeley Springs, in the Eastern Panhandle of West Virginia, for $1.4 million.[20] New York Attorney General (NYAG) Letitia James alleged that VDARE had violated New York law by misusing non-profit resources while residing on the castle grounds since March 2020.[21][22] VDARE Foundation is registered in New York and thus subject to New York regulation.[22]
In March 2024, a New York state judge found the VDARE Foundation in civil contempt for failing to turn over evidence related to the investigation. The organization was required to pay a $250-per-day fine until it complied with a subpoena issued by the NYAG in 2022.[22] In July, it was announced that VDARE would be suspending operations, with Brimelow resigning as president of the VDARE Foundation. A spokesperson for the attorney general's office said that the website's closure would not affect their investigation.[15]
In September 2025, New York sued the VDARE foundation and its owners, alleging the non-profit was operated for the benefit of its owners Peter and Lydia Brimelow. Saying her office would "shut down this fraudulent organization", the state attorney general alleged, "The Brimelows used VDARE like their personal piggy bank, draining millions in charitable assets to enrich themselves."[16]
Hate speech and white nationalism
[edit]Designation as a hate website
[edit]The Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC), which tracks extremist groups in the United States, wrote that VDARE was "once a relatively mainstream anti-immigration page" but had become "a meeting place for many on the radical right" by 2003.[8] The SPLC describes VDARE as "an anti-immigration hate website" which "regularly publishes articles by prominent white nationalists, race scientists and anti-Semites".[8] The SPLC cited examples such as a column concerning immigration from Mexico that warned of a "Mexican invasion" where "high teenage birthrates, poverty, ignorance and disease will be what remains", and an essay complaining how the U.S. government encourages "the garbage of Africa" to come to the United States.[8]
The SPLC has described VDARE's contributor list as "a Rolodex of the most prominent pseudo-intellectual racists and anti-Semites. They include people such as Jared Taylor and Kevin MacDonald.[8] Taylor (who Brimelow acknowledges is a "white nationalist")[12] once wrote that black people are incapable of sustaining any kind of civilization, while MacDonald is a retired professor who wrote a trilogy claiming that Jews are genetically driven to undermine the Christian societies they live in. Another former contributor, Sam Francis, was the editor of a newspaper published by the Council of Conservative Citizens, a white supremacist group.[8] Francis died in 2005.[12]
The Anti-Defamation League (ADL) similarly concluded that "VDARE posts, promotes, and archives the work of racists, anti-immigrant figures, and anti-Semites".[23][24]
Attempted domain name delisting
[edit]In June 2020, the domain registrar Network Solutions announced plans to terminate the account for VDARE. An attorney for Network Solutions cited a policy prohibiting customers using its domains from "display[ing] bigotry, racism, discrimination, or hatred in any manner whatsoever", and stated that VDARE had until June 26 to transfer its domain name to a different registrar before it would be deleted.[25] An update to its WHOIS data was made on June 26, 2020.[26] As of 2023[update], the domain exists under a different registrar.[27]
Social media presence and bans
[edit]In August 2019, VDARE's YouTube channel was banned. The ban was later reversed.[28] The channel was permanently banned in August 2020 for violating YouTube's policies against hate speech.[29]
In November 2019, The Guardian identified VDARE as one of several white nationalist websites which had remained active on Facebook, contrary to Facebook's stated intention to ban such material.[30] In May 2020, VDARE and the similar website The Unz Review were banned by Facebook. According to Facebook, the sites formed a network of "coordinated inauthentic behavior" intended to influence the 2020 election via fake accounts.[31][32]
As of October 2023, VDARE operated a verified Twitter account.[33]
White nationalist writings
[edit]VDARE is regarded as a white nationalist website.[6] David Weigel wrote in 2010 that the site "is best known for publishing work by white nationalists while maintaining that it is not a white nationalist site".[34]
Brimelow "denies that the organization itself is white nationalist, but he admits that VDARE.com provides a forum for a variety of viewpoints, including white nationalism".[11][13] Of individuals like Taylor, Brimelow has written they "aim to defend the interests of American whites. They are not white supremacists. They do not advocate violence. They are rational and civil." As immigration from the developing world increases, he believes "this type of interest-group 'white nationalism' will inexorably increase."[12] Brimelow has participated on panels multiple times with Taylor and Richard Spencer on the aims of the alt-right.[18]
Brimelow sued the New York Times in 2020, alleging libel over several articles describing him as a white nationalist and the VDARE web site as "animated by race hatred." The suit was dismissed.[35][36]
References
[edit]- ^ a b Multiple sources:
- Tischauser, Jeff; Musgrave, Kevin (May 26, 2020). "Far-Right Media as Imitated Counterpublicity: A Discourse Analysis on Racial Meaning and Identity on Vdare.com". Howard Journal of Communications. 31 (3). Routledge: 282–296. doi:10.1080/10646175.2019.1702124. S2CID 213418152. Archived from the original on November 4, 2021. Retrieved February 9, 2021 – via Academia.edu.
- Kaiser, Jonas; Rauchfleisch, Adrian; Bourassa, Nikki (March 15, 2020). "Connecting the (Far-)Right Dots: A Topic Modeling and Hyperlink Analysis of (Far-)Right Media Coverage during the US Elections 2016". Digital Journalism. 8 (3). Routledge: 422–441. doi:10.1080/21670811.2019.1682629. S2CID 211434599.
- Caiani, Manuela; Della Porta, Donatella; Wagemann, Claudius (February 16, 2012). Mobilizing on the Extreme Right: Germany, Italy, and the United States. Oxford University Press. pp. 218, 227. ISBN 978-0-19-964126-0. Retrieved February 9, 2021 – via ResearchGate.
- Baele, Stephane J.; Brace, Lewys; Coan, Travis G. (December 30, 2020). "Uncovering the Far-Right Online Ecosystem: An Analytical Framework and Research Agenda". Studies in Conflict & Terrorism. 46 (9). Routledge: 1599–1623. doi:10.1080/1057610X.2020.1862895. hdl:2078.1/283421.
- ^ a b Thielman, Sam (May 9, 2019). "The fascist next door: how to cover hate". Columbia Journalism Review. Archived from the original on August 6, 2019. Retrieved February 9, 2021.
- ^ Mudde, Cas (October 25, 2019). The Far Right Today. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-1-5095-3685-6. Archived from the original on February 17, 2024. Retrieved October 10, 2020.
- ^ Sam Frizell, GOP Shows White Supremacist's Tweet During Trump's Speech . Time, July 21, 2016
- ^ Arnold, Kathleen (2011). Anti-Immigration in the United States: A Historical Encyclopedia. ABC-CLIO. p. 89. ISBN 9780313375224. Archived from the original on June 25, 2024. Retrieved August 30, 2017.
- ^ a b Multiple sources:
- Holly Folk, The Religion of Chiropractic: Populist Healing from the American Heartland (University of North Carolina Press, 2017), p. 64: "the white nationalist website VDARE.com."
- Robert W. Sussman, The Myth of Race: The Troubling Persistence of an Unscientific Idea (Harvard University Press, 2014), p. 299.
- Alan Rappeport, Hillary Clinton Denounces the 'Alt-Right,' and the Alt-Right Is Thrilled Archived June 19, 2017, at the Wayback Machine, The New York Times (August 26, 2016), A11: "The white nationalist website VDare..."
- John Woodrow Cox, The financial secrecy behind white-nationalist group known for 'Hail Trump,' Nazi salutes Archived February 18, 2017, at the Wayback Machine, The Washington Post (December 1, 2016): "Three white-nationalist nonprofits similar in size and mission — the VDare Foundation, the New Century Foundation and the Charles Martel Society..."
- Caitlin Dewey, Amazon, PayPal and Spotify inadvertently fund white supremacists. Here’s how Archived August 11, 2017, at the Wayback Machine. Washington Post (March 17, 2015): "VDARE, a radical white nationalist site"
- Flynn, Kevin (July 15, 2006). "Funding questioned; Critics say some Defend Colorado money tainted". Rocky Mountain News. p. 4.A. Archived from the original on July 19, 2009.
- ^ a b c Kristine Phillips, Resort cancels 'white nationalist' organization's first-ever conference over the group’s views Archived November 7, 2019, at the Wayback Machine, The Washington Post (January 26, 2017).
- ^ a b c d e f g h i Beirich, Heidi; Potok, Mark (Winter 2003). "'Paleoconservatives' Decry Immigration". Intelligence Report. Southern Poverty Law Center. Archived from the original on December 19, 2019. Retrieved May 5, 2017.
- ^ Stephen Piggott (December 21, 2016). "Ann Coulter Attends VDARE Christmas Party – Her Second White Nationalist Event In Three Months". Southern Poverty Law Center. Archived from the original on February 25, 2020. Retrieved May 9, 2017.
- ^ Hannah Gais (December 11, 2016). "Cucking and Nazi salutes: A night out with the alt-right". The Washington Spectator (republished by Newsweek). Archived from the original on August 9, 2019. Retrieved May 9, 2017.
- ^ a b c d e f Rebecca Nelson Jacobs, "VDARE" in Anti-Immigration in the United States: A Historical Encyclopedia (ed. Kathleen R. Arnold, Vol. 1: A-R), pp. 481-82.
- ^ a b c d e f g "Extremist Files: Groups: VDARE". Southern Poverty Law Center. Archived from the original on October 8, 2017. Retrieved January 9, 2020.
- ^ a b Brimelow, Peter (July 23, 2006). "Speakout: VDare.com is no 'white nationalist Web site'". Rocky Mountain News. p. 5E. Archived from the original on May 12, 2008.
- ^ Michael Kunzelman, White nationalists raise millions with tax-exempt charities Archived July 18, 2019, at the Wayback Machine, Associated Press (December 22, 2016): "Brimelow has denied that his website is white nationalist but acknowledged it publishes works by writers who fit that description "in the sense that they aim to defend the interests of American whites."
- ^ a b Gais, Hannah (September 18, 2024). "White Nationalist Website VDARE Suspends Operations Amid Legal Scrutiny". Southern Poverty Law Center. Archived from the original on September 23, 2024. Retrieved September 23, 2024.
- ^ a b Uebelacker, Erik (September 3, 2025). "New York sues to shutter alt-right nonprofit VDARE over misuse of donor funds". Courthouse News Service. Retrieved October 8, 2025.
- ^ Sanneh, Kelefa (July 24, 2013). "A Sermon on Race from National Review". The New Yorker. Archived from the original on December 2, 2014. Retrieved May 20, 2015.
- ^ a b c Coaston, Jane (September 24, 2018). "Peter Brimelow and VDare, the white nationalist website with close ties to the right, explained". Vox. Archived from the original on June 25, 2024. Retrieved January 9, 2020.
- ^ "Why VDARE.COM/The White Doe?". VDARE.com. Archived from the original on March 14, 2012. Retrieved March 22, 2012.
- ^ Hayden, Michael Edison (March 19, 2020). "West Virginia Tourist Hub Rejects VDARE's 'Negative' Message". Hatewatch. Southern Poverty Law Center. Archived from the original on February 22, 2021. Retrieved February 7, 2021.
- ^ Newton, Creede (May 24, 2023). "Experts: VDARE's Real Estate Deals May Cost Group Nonprofit Status". Hatewatch. Southern Poverty Law Center. Archived from the original on May 3, 2024. Retrieved June 25, 2024.
- ^ a b c Gais, Hannah (June 20, 2024). "What We Know About the VDARE Legal Situation That They Say 'Finished' Them". Hatewatch. Southern Poverty Law Center. Retrieved June 25, 2024.
- ^ Brenda Walker and Dan Amato Inject Anti-Immigrant Fervor into the Blogosphere Archived August 11, 2017, at the Wayback Machine, Anti-Defamation League (2012).
- ^ Immigrants Targeted: Extremist Rhetoric Moves into the Mainstream Archived August 11, 2017, at the Wayback Machine, Anti-Defamation League (2008), p. 11: "VDare, a Web site that publishes racist, anti-Semitic, and antiimmigrant articles."
- ^ Kunzelman, Michael (June 23, 2020). "Online registrar threatens to drop anti-immigration website". Associated Press. Archived from the original on June 27, 2020. Retrieved June 26, 2020.
- ^ "DomainTools WHOIS History". Archived from the original on February 26, 2023. Retrieved February 26, 2023.
- ^ "DomainTools WHOIS". Archived from the original on February 26, 2023. Retrieved February 26, 2023.
- ^ Holt, Jared (August 30, 2019). "YouTube Reverses Course, Apologizes to Far-Right Channels & Unbans Them". Right Wing Watch. Archived from the original on March 22, 2023. Retrieved June 25, 2024.
- ^ Holt, Jared (August 10, 2020). "White Nationalist VDARE Suspended From YouTube. This Time It's Permanent". Right Wing Watch. Archived from the original on April 28, 2024. Retrieved June 25, 2024.
- ^ Wong, Julia Carrie (November 21, 2019). "White nationalists are openly operating on Facebook. The company won't act". The Guardian. Archived from the original on June 23, 2022. Retrieved June 16, 2020.
- ^ Sommer, Will (May 5, 2020). "Facebook Bans Anti-Immigrant Group VDARE for 'Inauthentic Behavior'". The Daily Beast. Archived from the original on May 29, 2020. Retrieved June 16, 2020.
- ^ "April 2020 Coordinated Inauthentic Behavior Report". About Facebook (Press release). May 5, 2020. Archived from the original on May 11, 2020. Retrieved June 16, 2020.
- ^ Darcy, Oliver (October 6, 2023). "Elon Musk's X faces advertiser backlash after placing marketing for major brands on notorious white supremacist account". CNN Business. Archived from the original on October 19, 2023. Retrieved June 25, 2024.
- ^ Weigel, David (June 18, 2010). "An immigration restrictionist chart at Mint.com". The Washington Post. Archived from the original on January 31, 2013. Retrieved June 25, 2024.
- ^ Gerstein, Josh (January 10, 2020). "Anti-immigration author sues NYT over 'white nationalist' label". POLITICO. Retrieved October 8, 2025.
- ^ Hals, Tom. "NY Times fires back at defamation plaintiff with anti-SLAPP lawsuit". Reuters. Archived from the original on June 3, 2023. Retrieved October 8, 2025.
External links
[edit]VDARE
View on GrokipediaHistory
Founding and Early Development
VDARE was founded in 1999 by Peter Brimelow, a British-born journalist and immigration restriction advocate who had previously edited National Review and Forbes magazines.[6] [7] Brimelow established the site under the auspices of the newly formed Center for American Unity, a nonprofit organization he created to promote research and commentary on immigration's impacts on American society.[8] The name VDARE derives from Virginia Dare, the first child of English parentage born in the New World in 1587 at the Roanoke Colony, symbolizing early European settlement and continuity of American heritage.[9] The founding stemmed from Brimelow's earlier work, particularly his 1995 book Alien Nation: Common Sense About America's Immigration Disaster, which critiqued the 1965 Immigration and Nationality Act for shifting U.S. demographics away from European origins toward non-European sources, arguing this eroded cultural cohesion without economic benefits justifying the change.[10] VDARE emerged as an online platform to extend these arguments, providing space for unfiltered discussions on immigration policy, free from editorial constraints Brimelow experienced at mainstream outlets like National Review, from which he departed in 1997 amid tensions over his views.[7] Initially operating as a blog-like site, it published Brimelow's essays alongside contributions from economists, demographers, and commentators emphasizing data-driven critiques of mass immigration's fiscal costs, labor market effects, and effects on national identity.[8] In its early years, VDARE gained traction among restrictionist circles by aggregating empirical analyses, such as studies on immigrant welfare usage and crime rates, often citing government data like Census Bureau reports showing non-European immigrants' higher rates of chain migration and lower assimilation metrics compared to pre-1965 patterns.[11] The site hosted occasional conferences starting around 2000, featuring speakers like Samuel Francis and Jared Taylor, fostering a network of writers focused on moratoriums or quotas favoring cultural compatibility over numerical increases.[12] By 2001, it had established itself as a key alternative voice, bridging academic critiques with public advocacy, though critics from advocacy groups alleged promotion of racialist undertones—a charge Brimelow rejected as mischaracterizing data-centric opposition to open borders.[11]Growth and Key Milestones
VDARE.com launched on December 24, 1999, as an online platform founded by Peter Brimelow to critique U.S. immigration policies and promote restrictionist views, building on his 1995 book Alien Nation.[13] The site initially focused on articles and commentary from various contributors, establishing itself as a hub for data-driven analyses of immigration's economic and cultural effects, with early growth tied to Brimelow's prior journalism career at outlets like National Review and Forbes.[6] By the mid-2010s, VDARE experienced heightened visibility amid national debates on immigration, particularly after Donald Trump's August 2015 campaign announcement emphasizing border security and reduced legal immigration, which aligned with themes the site had advanced for over a decade.[4] This period saw expanded content production, including regular podcasts and columns, contributing to a broader audience among restrictionist advocates, though precise traffic metrics remain unpublished. The organization's nonprofit arm, the VDARE Foundation (initially named Lexington Research Institute), supported this expansion through donor funding, raising nearly $4.8 million in 2016 alone.[14] A significant milestone came in early 2020, when the VDARE Foundation acquired Berkeley Castle in Berkeley Springs, West Virginia, a 132-year-old property intended as a headquarters and venue for in-person events to foster discussion among supporters.[15] This purchase enabled the hosting of conferences, such as the Spring 2024 gathering planned for April 26–28, representing a transition from purely digital operations to physical networking amid ongoing online deplatforming pressures.[16] These developments underscored VDARE's evolution into a multifaceted advocacy entity over its first 25 years.[4]Recent Challenges and Suspension
In the early 2020s, VDARE encountered escalating difficulties with financial service providers, including payment processors and banks that declined to handle transactions due to the organization's immigration restrictionist content. These issues intensified by 2024, as VDARE reported that even willing processors could not proceed without banking support, effectively halting donation inflows.[17] On July 26, 2024, founder Peter Brimelow announced the suspension of VDARE's operations, stating that the website had been "destroyed" by technical and financial barriers, and he resigned after 25 years of leadership.[17] The group had previously relied on alternative processors like those from fringe platforms, but persistent refusals from major banks left it unable to sustain activities.[18] As a response to earlier deplatforming pressures, VDARE Foundation acquired Berkeley Castle, a historic property in Berkeley Springs, West Virginia, in 2020 for $1.4 million using nonprofit funds, intending it as a headquarters and event space to achieve operational independence. The purchase, totaling over $1.7 million when including related foundation transfers, drew local controversy in the small town, exacerbating community divisions over VDARE's presence.[2] However, the site was allegedly used primarily as a personal residence by Brimelow and his wife Lydia, with expenditures including renovations and family-related costs funded through VDARE.[2] On September 3, 2025, New York Attorney General Letitia James, whose office oversees VDARE's incorporation as a Connecticut-based nonprofit registered in New York, filed a lawsuit accusing the organization and the Brimelows of rampant self-dealing and misuse of over $3 million in charitable assets since 2018. The complaint seeks repayment of misused funds, penalties, dissolution of VDARE Foundation, and dispersal of remaining assets to other nonprofits, alleging violations of fiduciary duties through insider transactions like the castle acquisition and over $700,000 in personal compensation.[2] VDARE has contested such regulatory actions as ideologically motivated, pointing to James's history of targeting conservative entities, though the suit proceeds on documented financial transfers.[17] A court imposed a $250 daily fine on VDARE in 2024 for noncompliance with document requests in related probes, further straining resources.[19]Mission and Ideology
Immigration Restriction Advocacy
VDARE's immigration restriction advocacy centered on the proposal for a comprehensive moratorium on all forms of immigration, legal and illegal, to halt demographic transformation and facilitate assimilation of existing immigrants. This position, articulated by founder Peter Brimelow since the site's inception in 1999, posited that mass immigration since the 1965 Immigration Act had overwhelmed the nation's capacity for integration, leading to parallel societies and political shifts unfavorable to restrictionist policies.[20][21] VDARE argued that a moratorium, potentially lasting decades, would reduce the annual influx from over 1 million net migrants to near zero, allowing time to enforce existing laws and address backlogs in immigration courts, which exceeded 3 million cases by mid-2024.[22][23] Economically, VDARE contended that unrestricted immigration depressed wages for native-born workers, particularly low-skilled Americans, by increasing labor supply in sectors like construction and services. They referenced analyses showing that post-1965 immigration had correlated with stagnant real wages for non-college-educated natives, citing Harvard economist George Borjas' estimates of a 3-5% wage reduction per 10% immigrant influx in affected groups.[24] Fiscal costs were highlighted through references to National Academies of Sciences reports indicating that low-skilled immigrants imposed net lifetime costs of $300,000 per household on taxpayers, straining welfare systems and infrastructure without proportional contributions.[25] VDARE advocated prioritizing high-skilled, assimilable immigrants post-moratorium, akin to pre-1965 policies favoring European sources, to align inflows with economic needs rather than family reunification chains that perpetuated low-wage dependency.[26] On cultural and demographic grounds, VDARE maintained that sustained high immigration eroded the historic American nation's core identity, rooted in British Protestant origins and European-descended majorities. They invoked "demography is destiny," arguing that the white population share fell from 88.5% in 1960 to 57.8% by 2020 per Census data, accelerating non-white political majorities in states like Virginia, where whites dropped from 77.4% in 1990 to under 65% recently, correlating with Democratic gains despite Republican white voter turnout.[27][28] Cultural preservation arguments drew on studies like Robert Putnam's finding that ethnic diversity reduced social trust and civic engagement, positing that rapid change fostered balkanization rather than the "melting pot" assimilation of earlier eras.[29] VDARE rejected multiculturalism as unsustainable, advocating restriction to maintain social cohesion and avert ethnic conflict, with Brimelow emphasizing biological and cultural continuity through selective policy.[30] Security concerns underpinned further calls for restriction, with VDARE linking lax enforcement to elevated crime rates among certain immigrant cohorts; for instance, they cited data showing illegal immigrants comprised disproportionate shares of federal prison populations for offenses like drug trafficking.[31] Overall, the moratorium served as a foundational demand, endorsed in alignment with figures like Donald Trump during his 2016 campaign, to reset policy toward sovereignty and citizen priority over global humanitarianism.[32][33]National Identity and Demographic Concerns
VDARE maintained that American national identity was inextricably linked to the "Historic American Nation," defined as the European-descended founding stock whose culture, language, and traditions formed the core of the United States. This identity, they argued, was under existential threat from post-1965 immigration policies that prioritized non-European inflows, leading to rapid demographic transformation incompatible with cultural continuity.[34][35] Peter Brimelow, VDARE's founder, had contended since the 1990s that such changes eroded the ethnic and civic cohesion that sustained the nation, drawing on historical precedents like the Anglo-Saxon base of early America symbolized by Virginia Dare, the first English child born in the New World.[36] Central to VDARE's demographic concerns was the "Great Replacement," a term they applied to empirically observable shifts where non-Hispanic whites were projected to become a minority by mid-century due to immigration and differential fertility rates. Citing U.S. Census projections, they noted that whites could comprise only 46% of the population by 2065, with Hispanics at 24%, Asians at 14%, and blacks at 13%, a trajectory accelerated by the 1965 Immigration Act's abolition of national-origins quotas.[37] VDARE highlighted supporting data, such as Pew Research Center findings on K-12 public school enrollment dropping from 65% white in 1995 to 48% in 2018, interpreting this as a harbinger of broader societal balkanization and political realignment favoring collectivist policies.[38] They rejected narratives framing these trends as benign or inevitable, asserting instead that demography drove destiny through causal mechanisms like ethnic voting patterns and cultural dilution, as evidenced by California's shift from Republican stronghold to Democratic dominance post-1980s immigration surges.[39][40] VDARE contributors, including John Derbyshire and Steve Sailer, framed these concerns within first-principles realism: nations thrived on shared kinship and identity, not abstract propositional ideals, and ignoring ethnic realities invited conflict, as seen in rising tribalism and identity politics. They advocated moratoriums on immigration to halt displacement and restore majority status, warning that failure risked the "disintegration of American national unity" and the dilution of its foundational gene pool and civic trust.[41][42] This stance contrasted with mainstream conservative reluctance to address racial demographics explicitly, which VDARE attributed to ideological blind spots enabling the trends.[41]Broader Political Perspectives
VDARE's political philosophy extended beyond immigration to encompass a critique of mainstream conservatism, positioning itself as a proponent of paleoconservatism or its evolution. Paleoconservatism, as articulated in VDARE contributions, involved skeptical resistance to multiculturalism, advocacy for immigration reform, and preservation of traditional American institutions against egalitarian universalism.[43] This stance contrasted with what VDARE described as the deformation of conservatism through neoconservative influences, which prioritized foreign policy interventionism and economic globalism over domestic cultural continuity.[44] Founder Peter Brimelow had contended that American conservatism effectively ended by the early 21st century due to its failure to confront mass immigration's transformative effects on national identity, rendering prior ideological battles obsolete.[45] Central to VDARE's broader framework was "citizenism," a term coined by contributor Steve Sailer to advocate prioritizing the material and cultural interests of existing American citizens, irrespective of race or ethnicity, as a pragmatic alternative to multiculturalism or ethnic particularism.[46] This approach rejected neoconservative endorsements of open borders and endless wars, which VDARE argued undermined citizen welfare by eroding national cohesion and economic protections.[47] VDARE portrayed neoconservatism not as a conservative variant but as a distinct ideology favoring elite cosmopolitanism over rooted patriotism, exemplified by figures like William Kristol who admitted its divergence from traditional conservatism.[48] VDARE frequently lambasted "Conservatism Inc."—a network of think tanks, media outlets, and donors—as gatekeepers who suppressed nationalist critiques to maintain donor-friendly orthodoxy on trade, foreign aid, and demographics.[49] This opposition aligned VDARE with "America First" priorities, including economic protectionism and non-interventionism, as seen in endorsements of policies reducing global entanglements to focus on internal renewal.[50] Contributors argued that such perspectives represented a resurgence of pre-neoconservative conservatism, capable of addressing failures like unchecked abortion, same-sex marriage legalization, and demographic shifts ignored by establishment figures.[51] In events like CPAC Hungary in 2022, VDARE highlighted models of conservatism integrating nationalism without "cuckery," suggesting a template for revitalizing American politics through unapologetic defense of historic majorities.[52]Organization and Operations
Leadership and Governance
VDARE was founded in 1999 by Peter Brimelow, a British-born journalist who led the organization as its president, editor-in-chief, and chairman.[11] Brimelow, who previously worked as a financial journalist for publications including National Review and Forbes, established VDARE to advocate for immigration restriction, drawing its name from Virginia Dare, the first English child born in the Americas.[2] As of tax filings through 2023, Brimelow held the roles of chairman and vice president of the VDARE Foundation, the nonprofit entity operating the website, with reported compensation varying by year, including $25,000 in direct pay in 2023 alongside related organizational expenses.[53] Lydia Brimelow, Peter's wife, served as the president of the VDARE Foundation, assuming the role after Peter stepped down from the presidency in July 2024; she also held positions as chief operating officer, publisher, treasurer, secretary, and chief advancement officer, with authority over non-editorial operations since July 2020.[6] Her compensation from the foundation was minimal in direct terms, such as $3,333 in 2023, though tied to broader operational funding. The couple's dual roles had centralized control, with Lydia managing day-to-day affairs amid VDARE's shift to remote operations following payment processor restrictions in 2021.[6] The VDARE Foundation's board of directors historically comprised a small group dominated by Brimelow family members and close associates, lacking independent members and enabling concentrated decision-making.[6] As of 2020 Form 990 filings, the board included Peter Brimelow, Lydia Brimelow, and Peter's brother John Brimelow as secretary and director; earlier and later records list additional directors such as Joe Fallon and John Wall, all serving without compensation.[53][55] Annual board meetings, when held, were described in a September 2025 New York Attorney General complaint as perfunctory, with the Brimelows voting on their own compensation and major transactions without independent oversight, in alleged violation of New York not-for-profit laws.[6] This structure reflected VDARE's operation as a closely held nonprofit since its incorporation in 2002, prioritizing ideological advocacy over diversified governance.[53]Funding Sources and Financial Practices
The VDARE Foundation, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization supporting VDARE's operations, primarily derived its revenue from private contributions. In 2019, contributions totaled $4,259,309, representing over 98% of revenue and marking a surge from $500,000 in 2018 and $385,000 in 2017, amid increased donations during the Trump administration era.[53][56] A significant portion included $1.5 million from DonorsTrust, a donor-advised fund associated with conservative funders such as the Koch and Mercer families, alongside smaller amounts from funds like Fidelity Charitable, Vanguard Charitable, and Schwab Charitable.[56] Subsequent years showed variability, with contributions at $664,477 in 2023 and total revenue of $763,754, reflecting a decline after the 2019 peak.[53] Financial practices involved standard nonprofit reporting via IRS Form 990 filings, with expenses directed toward program services, administrative costs, and salaries. In 2019, total expenses reached $991,515 against $4.3 million in revenue, leaving net assets of $3.5 million; by 2023, expenses were $1.5 million with net assets at $1.2 million.[53] Compensation to officers included $345,364 to founder Peter Brimelow in 2019 and $25,000 in 2023, with minimal reported pay to his wife Lydia Brimelow ($3,333 in 2023).[53] The foundation made payments to related entities, such as $1.187 million to Happy Penguins Media (controlled by the Brimelows) from 2019 to 2022 for services.[6] In September 2025, New York Attorney General Letitia James filed a lawsuit against the VDARE Foundation, Peter Brimelow, and Lydia Brimelow, alleging rampant self-dealing and misuse of over $2 million in charitable assets for personal benefit from 2019 to 2023.[2][6] Key claims include diverting $1.4 million in 2020 to purchase Berkeley Castle in West Virginia, subsequently transferred to affiliated entities like the Berkeley Castle Foundation without independent board approval, followed by rent payments of $6,000 to $33,000 monthly from VDARE to these entities; unreported compensation exceeding Form 990 disclosures, totaling $1.1 million to Peter Brimelow (35% of program expenses); and loans such as $497,500 to the Berkeley Castle Foundation.[6] The suit seeks dissolution of the foundation, restitution, and penalties, citing solicitation of New York donors despite registration lapses.[2] VDARE and Brimelow characterized the action as politically motivated harassment by the attorney general, contributing to operational suspension rather than substantive financial impropriety.[57]Content and Contributors
Publication Style and Topics
VDARE's publications consist primarily of online articles, blog posts, and serialized columns, formatted as text-based essays with hyperlinks to supporting data, often incorporating embedded statistics, graphs, and references to official reports. The style emphasizes argumentative prose that integrates empirical evidence—such as U.S. Census Bureau demographic projections or immigration court backlog figures—with historical precedents and policy critiques, employing a forthright tone that prioritizes logical deduction over neutral detachment.[27] Authors frequently use personal anecdotes or rhetorical questions to underscore causal links between immigration policies and societal outcomes, avoiding euphemistic language in favor of direct terminology like "mass immigration" or "demographic displacement."[58] Core topics center on immigration restrictionism, with articles dissecting the economic, cultural, and security impacts of post-1965 U.S. immigration levels, including fiscal costs exceeding $300 billion annually in net transfers according to some analyses cited. Demographic shifts receive extensive coverage, framing "demography is destiny" as a principle evidenced by declining native-born birth rates and rising foreign-born populations, projected to reach 18% of the U.S. total by 2060 per Census estimates. Related subjects include critiques of elite-driven multiculturalism, media distortions of restrictionist views, and endorsements of enforcement measures like E-Verify or border barriers, often referencing legislative failures such as the 1986 Immigration Reform and Control Act's amnesty outcomes.[59][42] Broader topics intersect with these, such as race realism discussions drawing on IQ variance data from works like The Bell Curve, European migration crises (e.g., 2013 Lampedusa events symbolizing policy failures), and political endorsements of figures advocating reduced inflows. Content types extend to podcast transcripts, like John Derbyshire's "Radio Derb" segments blending commentary on current events with statistical breakdowns, and occasional book excerpts or archival pieces on citizenism—a doctrine prioritizing national loyalty over abstract universalism.[60][61][62] While focused on restriction, publications avoid partisan alignment, critiquing both major U.S. parties for enabling open borders, with emphasis on verifiable metrics over ideological appeals.[17]Key Writers and Contributions
Peter Brimelow, the founder of VDARE in 1999, serves as its primary editorial voice, authoring numerous articles and essays that critique post-1965 U.S. immigration policies for eroding national cohesion and economic stability, drawing on data from sources like the Census Bureau showing shifts in demographic majorities.[63] His contributions often reference historical precedents, such as the 1924 Immigration Act, arguing for moratoriums based on assimilation challenges evidenced by language proficiency rates among immigrants remaining below 50% after 20 years in some cohorts.[20] Steve Sailer, a longtime columnist, has produced hundreds of pieces since the early 2000s emphasizing empirical patterns in immigration outcomes, including analyses of crime disparities and academic performance across ethnic groups using public datasets like NAEP scores and FBI statistics.[64] Sailer's concept of "citizenism"—prioritizing the interests of American citizens over global humanitarianism—underpins many of his arguments, as seen in his examinations of how chain migration amplifies family-based inflows exceeding 1 million annually in peak years.[65] John Derbyshire contributes regular columns and has authored books published through VDARE, such as From the Dissident Right (2012), focusing on demographic projections like the Census Bureau's estimate of non-Hispanic whites becoming a minority by 2045 and linking this to policy failures in border enforcement, where apprehensions exceeded 2 million in fiscal year 2000.[66] His writings extend to cultural critiques, incorporating statistical evidence on fertility rates—e.g., native-born total fertility at 1.6 versus higher immigrant rates driving population growth.[67] James Fulford, a staff writer for over two decades, compiles daily blog entries and articles aggregating news on immigration enforcement lapses, such as sanctuary city policies correlating with rises in specific crimes per DOJ reports, and tracks legislative efforts like failed E-Verify mandates.[68] Fulford's work often highlights underreported data, including remittances outflows topping $150 billion annually from the U.S. to origin countries, underscoring economic drains not offset by fiscal contributions from low-skilled entrants.[4]Reception and Influence
Support from Restrictionists
Restrictionist figures have expressed support for VDARE through participation in its events, contributions to its platform, and alignment with its analyses of immigration's demographic and economic effects. Ann Coulter, author of books advocating reduced immigration such as Adios, America! (2015), attended VDARE's Christmas party on December 9, 2016, and spoke at its writers' workshop in October 2016, events focused on advancing restrictionist arguments against mass immigration.[69][70] Similarly, Michelle Malkin, a columnist known for critiquing open borders policies in works like Invasion (2002), has published articles on VDARE, including a 2021 piece on immigration enforcement disparities.[71] Stephen Miller, who served as senior policy advisor to President Donald Trump from 2017 to 2021 and shaped executive actions like the 2017 travel ban and reduced refugee admissions to 15,000 in 2020, cited VDARE articles in internal emails from 2015 to 2016. These recommendations promoted VDARE's data on immigration's fiscal burdens, such as a 2015 piece estimating net costs exceeding $300 billion annually, to argue for policy reforms prioritizing American workers.[72] Miller's use of VDARE underscores its influence among restrictionists seeking evidence-based critiques of post-1965 immigration levels, which rose from under 500,000 annually pre-1965 to over 1 million by the 1990s.[72] Pat Buchanan, a three-time presidential candidate and author of The Death of the West (2001) warning of population replacement via immigration, has echoed VDARE founder Peter Brimelow's positions, such as rejecting multiculturalism as incompatible with Western cohesion. In a 2015 column, Buchanan mirrored Brimelow's arguments against excusing unrest linked to immigrant communities, affirming VDARE's framing of immigration as a threat to social stability.[73] These endorsements reflect VDARE's appeal to restrictionists valuing its aggregation of Census data showing non-European immigrants comprising 85% of inflows by 2015, alongside critiques of assimilation failures evidenced by persistent ethnic enclaves and welfare usage rates 50% higher among immigrants than natives.[73]Criticisms and Designations
The Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) has designated VDARE as a white nationalist hate group since at least 2003, classifying it under its anti-immigration hate category for publishing articles that, according to the SPLC, frame immigration as an existential threat to America's predominantly white culture and feature contributions from figures linked to white nationalism.[11] The organization cites VDARE's employment of writers like Jason Kessler, a participant in the 2017 Unite the Right rally, and its sympathetic coverage of white nationalist events as evidence of ideological alignment beyond mere policy advocacy.[11] VDARE's content has also drawn scrutiny for posts criticized as containing ethnic slurs or anti-Semitic undertones, such as a 2019 blog entry republished in a U.S. Department of Justice newsletter that targeted immigration judges with racially charged language.[74] Media reports and advocacy groups have echoed these concerns, associating VDARE with broader white supremacist networks; for instance, leaked emails from 2015-2016 revealed White House adviser Stephen Miller citing VDARE articles over 1,000 times in communications promoting restrictive immigration policies influenced by the site's demographic analyses.[72] The Anti-Defamation League (ADL) has similarly flagged VDARE's nonprofit status as potentially enabling extremist fundraising, though without a formal hate designation equivalent to the SPLC's.[75] No U.S. government agency has officially labeled VDARE a hate group, distinguishing its designations from legal classifications applied to entities like the Ku Klux Klan. Critics of these labels, including investigative reports, have questioned the SPLC's methodology for designating advocacy organizations as hate groups, arguing it conflates empirical policy critiques—such as VDARE's citations of Census Bureau data on shifting U.S. demographics—with ideological extremism, potentially inflating its annual "hate map" for fundraising purposes.[76] The SPLC has faced lawsuits and settlements over similar designations, including a 2018 $3.375 million payout to an individual wrongly labeled an anti-Muslim extremist, highlighting concerns about overreach.[76] VDARE founder Peter Brimelow has countered that the site prioritizes data-driven arguments on immigration's fiscal costs (estimated at $300 billion annually by some analyses cited on the platform) and cultural cohesion, rejecting white nationalist tags as smears against restrictionist journalism.[57]Role in Policy Debates
VDARE has participated in U.S. immigration policy debates primarily through published analyses challenging post-1965 immigration levels, emphasizing empirical data on fiscal costs, labor market displacement, and cultural assimilation challenges. The organization, launched in 1999 following Peter Brimelow's Alien Nation (1995), which documented shifts toward non-European immigration and warned of national identity erosion, positioned itself as a platform for restrictionist arguments grounded in historical precedents like the 1924 Immigration Act's national origins quotas. These quotas, VDARE contends, maintained ethnic stability until their repeal, a view echoed in debates over bills like the 2007 Comprehensive Immigration Reform Act, which VDARE criticized for embedding amnesty and chain migration expansions that would hasten demographic transformations.[77] During the Trump administration, VDARE's perspectives gained indirect traction via senior advisor Stephen Miller, who, as a Senate staffer in 2015-2016, forwarded VDARE articles and similar restrictionist materials to Breitbart News to shape coverage on issues like H-1B visa abuse and welfare usage by immigrants. Leaked emails reveal Miller promoting VDARE content alongside data from sources like the Center for Immigration Studies, influencing White House policies such as the 2017 travel bans, family separation under zero-tolerance enforcement, and proposed cuts to legal immigration by 50-60%. A 2019 Justice Department newsletter distributed a VDARE post critiquing immigration judges to over 440 officials, highlighting the site's penetration into executive branch discussions despite mainstream media portrayals of it as fringe.[72][74] VDARE's contributions often prioritize first-principles critiques, such as the causal links between high immigration and reduced social trust or wage stagnation for low-skilled natives, drawing on reports like the National Academies of Sciences' 2017 findings that first-generation immigrants impose net fiscal burdens exceeding $300,000 per household over lifetimes. While not a direct lobbyist, VDARE has bridged academic restrictionism—citing works on human biodiversity and ethnic cohesion—with public advocacy, influencing restrictionist factions in Congress during fights against DACA expansions and TPS extensions. Critics from outlets like the Southern Poverty Law Center dismiss these arguments as nativist, but VDARE maintains they reflect verifiable trends, such as the foreign-born share rising from 5% in 1970 to 14% by 2020, per Census data.[11]Controversies and Legal Issues
Hate Group Labeling Disputes
The Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) has classified VDARE as a white nationalist hate group, asserting that it serves as a platform for writers promoting racialist ideologies, including "race science" and opposition to immigration on grounds that it endangers white American identity and culture.[11] The designation, which traces back to at least the mid-2000s amid the SPLC's expanding scrutiny of immigration restriction organizations, relies on VDARE's publication of contributions from figures labeled as white nationalists or anti-Semites by the SPLC, such as arguments linking demographic shifts to civilizational decline.[11][78] VDARE and its founder Peter Brimelow have rejected the hate group label as a tactic of ideological suppression, contending that the SPLC conflates empirical policy critique—such as data on immigration's fiscal costs, crime correlations, and cultural assimilation failures—with extremism through guilt by association.[79][80] Brimelow has argued that such designations target restrictionist viewpoints disfavored by the SPLC's progressive orientation, rather than evidence of advocacy for violence or illegal acts, and has pursued defamation suits against media amplifying the label, including a 2020 claim against The New York Times for portraying him as an "open white nationalist" in reliance on SPLC assessments (dismissed in 2022 on anti-SLAPP grounds).[81][82] Broader disputes over the SPLC's methodology question its credibility in designating groups like VDARE, with critics highlighting inconsistent criteria that equate non-violent advocacy with groups like the Ku Klux Klan, potential financial incentives from fundraising on inflated "hate" tallies (e.g., reporting 917 groups in 2016), and real-world consequences such as the 2012 Family Research Council shooting, where the perpetrator cited the SPLC's hate map.[76][83] The SPLC's partisan leanings, rooted in its origins monitoring far-right extremism but extending to conservative policy outfits, have prompted settlements like the 2018 $3.375 million payout to reformer Maajid Nawaz after an erroneous "anti-Muslim extremist" tag, underscoring risks of overbroad labeling without rigorous evidentiary thresholds.[76][76] Supporters of VDARE maintain that the dispute reflects institutional bias against nativist perspectives, as the SPLC rarely equates analogous ethnic advocacy (e.g., black nationalist groups) with equivalent threat levels despite similar identitarian rhetoric.[84][76]Deplatforming and Tech Restrictions
In June 2020, VDARE faced a threat of delisting from its domain registrar, Tucows, following complaints from the Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, which described VDARE as an "anti-immigrant hate website."[85][86] The organization responded by initiating a migration to a new registrar, during which its website temporarily went offline.[87] Lawyers' Committee executive Kristen Clarke claimed the action resulted in shutting down VDARE, though the site resumed operations after the transfer.[88] VDARE has encountered intermittent restrictions on video hosting platforms. In August 2019, its YouTube channel, VDARE TV, was suspended without explanation before being reinstated the following day.[89] The platform faced broader censorship pressures that year, with VDARE attributing reinstatements to external advocacy but noting persistent bans on associated channels promoting immigration restriction.[90] Financial service providers have imposed limitations on VDARE's operations over time. As of 2018, VDARE utilized Stripe for credit card donations despite the processor's policies against extremist content.[91] By May 2024, amid heightened scrutiny from the New York Attorney General's investigation into its nonprofit status, VDARE lost access to credit card processing entirely, prompting a shift to direct bank transfers for donations as announced by founder Peter Brimelow.[92][93] Brimelow described this as part of a "crippling pincer attack" involving legal costs and corporate cancellations.[93] These incidents reflect patterns of tech sector enforcement against sites labeled as promoting white nationalism by groups like the Southern Poverty Law Center, though VDARE maintains its content focuses on empirical immigration data and policy critique.[94] Efforts to access alternative processors, such as those in parallel economies, emerged by 2024, with some platforms beginning to handle VDARE payments despite prior restrictions.[95]New York Attorney General Actions
In 2022, the New York Office of the Attorney General initiated an investigation into VDARE Foundation, Inc., a nonprofit incorporated in New York, under authority of Article 7-A of the New York Executive Law, which governs supervision of charitable organizations soliciting funds in the state.[96] The probe focused on VDARE's financial practices and compliance with charitable regulations, issuing subpoenas for documents related to its operations and expenditures.[97] VDARE refused to fully comply with the subpoenas, prompting Attorney General Letitia James to file an enforcement action in 2022 seeking court-ordered compliance.[97] In a 2023 ruling, a New York state court found VDARE in contempt for its non-compliance, granting the Attorney General's motion to compel production of records and imposing potential sanctions.[96] This stemmed from VDARE's arguments that the subpoenas overreached into protected activities, though the court upheld the state's regulatory oversight given VDARE's New York incorporation and fundraising ties.[96] On September 3, 2025, James filed a comprehensive lawsuit in New York Supreme Court against VDARE Foundation, founder Peter Brimelow, and his wife Lydia Brimelow, alleging persistent self-dealing and misuse of at least $2 million in charitable assets for personal benefit, in violation of fiduciary duties under New York not-for-profit law.[2] The complaint detailed transactions including the diversion of $1.4 million in VDARE funds in 2020 to acquire Berkeley Castle, a property in Berkeley Springs, West Virginia, which the Brimelows subsequently used for private events and family purposes rather than charitable ones.[6] Additional claims involved excessive compensation to the Brimelows—totaling over $1 million annually combined—and improper payments to family members and affiliated entities, depleting donor-intended resources.[6] The 2025 suit seeks judicial remedies including full restitution of misused funds plus penalties, rescission of improper transactions such as the castle purchase, dissolution of VDARE Foundation with redistribution of remaining assets to compliant charities, and permanent injunctions barring the Brimelows from serving as officers or directors of New York nonprofits.[2] VDARE, which had relocated operations out of New York years earlier and suspended activities in 2024 amid the probe— with Brimelow attributing the closure to state "persecution"—contends the actions represent selective enforcement against its immigration-restrictionist views rather than genuine charitable violations.[98] The case remains pending as of October 2025, echoing prior high-profile nonprofit dissolutions pursued by James' office.[99]References
- https://projects.[propublica](/page/ProPublica).org/nonprofits/organizations/223691487
