SOURCE: Wikipedia, captured 2020-07-07
BuriedTruth classification: disinformation source | see also:
... [Quillette] regularly publishes articles from a strong conservative viewpoint that are anti-feminist, anti-immigration, Islamophobic and anti-transgender, with some articles more controversially supporting racialism and HBD ("human-biodiversity") pseudoscience, popular among white nationalists. It has published an article defending Noah Carl, a pseudoscientist who writes Islamophobic papers in the OpenPsych pseudojournals. ... [Source]
[2020-07-06] Jason Kenney's Energy War Room is Spending Tax Dollars on Ads Casting Doubt on Climate Science. [Alberta's] Canadian Energy Centre spent tax dollars on Facebook ads promoting an article published by the right-wing website Quillette.
... Quillette, which is based in Australia, was created by a former contributor to Rebel Media [The Rebel Media, now Rebel News], has been described as the "voice of the Intellectual Dark Web" and has a troubling history of publishing dubious articles on race. ...
[2019-12-05] Why Racists (and Liberals!) Keep Writing for 'Quillette'. The online magazine of the "intellectual dark web" is repackaging discredited race science.
... magazine that publishes claims that black people are less smart than whites, feminism is harmful, and trans people are a threat to women and children ...
Another fault line on which Quillette is pushing hard is lingering anti-trans views among the left. Like much of the right, Quillette has eagerly welcomed anti-trans feminists. Kathleen Stock, a British anti-trans feminist philosophy professor, has published two articles in Quillette claiming, among other things, that trans women will attack cisgender women if they are allowed into women's bathrooms, locker rooms, and prisons. Honoring trans women's self-identification "puts females in those spaces at risk," she declared.
Quillette has also published other articles hostile to both feminism and trans people, warning, "If society denies biological differences and does not rigidly enforce gender roles, then the way is cleared for transgenderism." Stock told me by e-mail that she was willing to publish in Quillette despite its racist and antifeminist articles, because "few of the left-wing publications toward which I would normally gravitate will touch such issues."
... the magazine tries to divide those disempowered economically by insisting that efforts to promote women, people of color, and queer and trans people somehow hurt the fight for socialism ...
... the publication showcases racist pseudoscience purporting to show that people of color are intellectually and morally inferior to whites. Many of the writers of its race pieces are proponents of the Human Biodiversity Movement (HBD), a euphemistic name for a campaign to advance scientific racism launched in 1996 by Steve Sailer, a blogger for the white supremacist website VDARE. (Sailer famously said that "in contrast to New Orleans, there was only minimal looting after the horrendous 1995 earthquake in Kobe, Japan -- because, when you get down to it, Japanese aren't blacks.")
Quillette contributors Ben Winegard, Bo Winegard, Brian Boutwell, and John Paul Wright have all either said they are part of the HBD movement or used the term to describe their own research. When asked to comment about why she publishes such writers, [Quillette founder Claire] Claire Lehmann said she rejected the premise of the question and did not elaborate further. ...
Quillette is an online magazine founded by Australian journalist Claire Lehmann. The magazine primarily focuses on science, technology, news, culture, and politics; it also publishes two podcasts -- the eponymous podcast Quillette and Wrongspeak. It is associated with the intellectual dark web.
Quillette was originally created in 2015 to focus on scientific topics, but has come to focus on coverage of political and cultural issues concerning freedom of speech and identity politics. Its editorial position was described in 2017 as "libertarian-leaning."
Quillette was launched in October 2015 in Sydney, Australia, by Claire Lehmann. It is named after the French word "quillette" which means a withy cutting planted so that it takes root -- used here as a metaphor for an essay. Lehmann stated that Quillette was created with the aim of "setting up a space where we could critique the blank slate orthodoxy," -- a theory of human development which assumes individuals are largely products of nurture, not nature -- but that it "naturally evolved into a place where people critique other aspects of what they see as left-wing orthodoxy."
Politico called Quillette the "unofficial digest" of the intellectual dark web, and, writing for The New York Times, Bari Weiss called Claire Lehmann a member of the intellectual dark web.
In August 2017, Quillette published an article written by four academics in support of James Damore's "Google's Ideological Echo Chamber" memo. Quillette's website was temporarily disabled. According to Lehmann, this was caused by a DDoS attack after publishing the piece
In a profile of Quillette, Politico reported that Lehmann knew about the Grievance studies affair before it was first reported in October of 2018, and was part of planning how to "fan the flames" of that controversy with the magazine's subsequent story defending the hoax.
In May 2019, Quillette published an article by Eoin Lenihan that alleged connections between Antifa activists and national-level reporters who cover the far-right. According to Shane Burley and Alexander Reid Ross, they and a number of other journalists received death threats after the claims were published.
In August 2019, Quillette published a hoax article titled "DSA Is Doomed" that was submitted to them by an anonymous writer claiming to be a construction worker named Archie Carter who was critical of the organization Democratic Socialists of America. The magazine retracted the article after the hoax was brought to their attention. According to leftist magazine Jacobin, the hoax brought Quillette's fact-checking and editorial standards into question.
In an article for The Outline, writer Gaby Del Valle classifies Quillette as "libertarian-leaning," "academia-focused" and "a hub for reactionary thought." In the Seattle newspaper, The Stranger, Katie Herzog writes that it has won praise "from both Steven Pinker and Richard Dawkins" adding that "most of the contributors are academics but the site reads more like a well researched opinion section than an academic journal." In an opinion piece for USA Today, columnist Cathy Young describes Quillette as "libertarian-leaning." An article in Vice described Quillette as a "libertarian magazine."
Writing for The Guardian, Jason Wilson describes Quillette as "a website obsessed with the alleged war on free speech on campus." Writing for The Washington Post, Aaron Hanlon describes Quillette as a "magazine obsessed with the evils of 'critical theory' and postmodernism." Writing for New York's column The Daily Intelligencer Andrew Sullivan describes Quillette as "refreshingly heterodox." In a piece for Slate, Daniel Engber suggested that while some of its output was "excellent and interesting," the average Quillette story "is dogmatic, repetitious, and a bore." He wrote that it describes "even modest harms inflicted via groupthink -- e.g., dropped theater projects, flagging book sales, condemnatory tweets -- as 'serious adversity'," arguing that various authors in Quillette engage in the same victim mentality that they attempt to criticize.
In a Daily Beast article, Alex Leo described Quillette as "a site that fancies itself intellectually contrarian but mostly publishes right-wing talking points couched in grievance politics."
Quillette publishes two podcasts, including an eponymous podcast that began in 2018. A second podcast called Wrongspeak launched in May 2018. It is hosted by Quillette associate editor Jonathan Kay and Debra W. Soh. Wrongspeak is about "the things we believe to be true but cannot say."
Guests have included transphobe Jordan Peterson, transphobe Meghan Murphy, Coleman Hughes, James Damore, Lindsay Shepherd, Susan Bradley, Ed the Sock, Adrienne Batra, Steven Pinker, Bill Kristol, Michael Shermer, Matthew Goodwin, Irshad Manji, Sir Roger Scruton, Claire Fox, Francis Fukuyama, Peter Boghossian, Douglas Murray, Brian C. Kalt, and David Frum.
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