"The Guardian" Promotes "Noticing" for Father's Day
Last chance to buy my book for Dear Old Dad's day.
With the diligent assistance of The Guardian of London, let me point out that you can still order my anthology Noticing for Dear Old Dad in time for Father’s Day from Amazon in paperback, Kindle, or the new audiobook. (Apparently, Amazon charged me $24.95 for the audiobook, but they will sell it to you for $21.83 if you don’t have an Audible subscription.)
From The Guardian:
How the far right seeks to spread its ideology through the publishing world
Efforts raise questions about the far right’s place in the broader culture wars waged by the Trump administration
Jason Wilson
Tue 3 Jun 2025 06.00 EDT
The far right US publisher Passage Press is now part of Foundation Publishing Group and it is connected via a Foundation director, Daniel Lisi, to Network Press, whose only title to date is an “effective accelerationist” manifesto by the tech-right venture capitalist Marc Andreessen. …
Heidi Beirich, co-founder of the Global Project Against Hate and Extremism, told the Guardian it was “another example of the far right moving to directly impact culture, and especially young people, with extremist and anti-democratic beliefs”. …
Passage’s authors include Curtis Yarvin, whose anti-democratic ideas have influenced the Trump administration, neo-reactionary Nick Land, and Steve Sailer, who has been described as a “white supremacist” and a “proponent of scientific racism”.
“Has been described” — I mean, if that’s not proof, what is?
Passage recently announced four new books to its newsletter subscribers whose authors include Taki Theodoracopulos, Charles Cornish-Dale and Paul Gottfried.
… the USPTO requires trademark applicants to provide a specimen of a trademark in use, and Foundation’s specimen was the cover of Noticing, the Passage-published anthology of Sailer’s often far-right writing.
My book is their biggest seller.
… In the last year, Passage has maintained a brisk schedule of events including Sailer’s book tour, a debate at Harvard between Curtis Yarvin and Professor Danielle Allen, and a coronation ball at the Watergate Hotel in Washington DC for Trump’s inauguration.
Jason Wilson then carries on in his tireless campaign to expose the fact that every salaried employee of this upstart publishing juggernaut is much better looking than poor Jason:
Wilson’s writing reminds me of a teenage girl telling her friends how much she *really* doesn’t have a crush on a particular boy.
They're never gonna let up with “white supremacist” and “proponent of scientific racism”, so whenever they do this just say, "...but in a good way".