On March 12, the Smithsonian announced Elizabeth C. Babcock Named Director of the Smithsonian American Women’s History Museum. She is white.
I first became interested in the Smithsonian last May: Nancy Yao—Face Of The Great Replacement At Increasingly Anti-White Smithsonian. I discovered this venerable institution (established in 1846 with funds from an English Radical) was under Minority Occupation Government and was discriminating heavily against white Americans. Others agree: Affirmative Action Hero Edward Blum Challenges Minority Occupation Regime At The Smithsonian
So when the Smithsonian reneged hiring Yao on suspiciously flimsy grounds I asked Smithsonian Dumping Nancy Yao For Black/Lesbian Women’s Museum Director? Why Not A White?
A few days earlier I had suggested Tell GOP Regents To Defend White America At Minority-Occupied Smithsonian Museum!
[Yao’s] appointment of course is a vicious insult to the probably thousands of better qualified white women, particularly of Founding Stock origin. They might reasonably have expected to head this major institution, which if it has any intellectual integrity at all, has to be primarily about the activities of their ancestors.
Could this be a victory for VDARE? I am aware of no one else who raised the topic.
Of course I am sure that there is no chance of the Smithsonian’s repulsively Woke stance being changed: How the Left Captured the Newest Smithsonian Museums [by Mike Gonzalez, The Daily Signal, August 14, 2023].
The Smithsonian announcement says:
Babcock holds a Bachelor of Music in music education and Bachelor of Arts in psychology from Northwestern University and earned her master’s and doctoral degrees in anthropology from Indiana University.
As Sam Francis explained in Franz Boas – Liberal Icon, Scientific Fraud
Boas … a Columbia professor from 1899 to 1942 … virtually created modern anthropology … decided what his conclusions would be before he finished the research and then ”shaded”—i.e., cheated on—the data to make them support the conclusion he wanted.
Apparently, this process, rather than any particular qualifications In History, is what the Smithsonian thinks is needed at their American Women’s History Museum.