NASHVILLE, Tenn. -- Just shy of her 80th birthday, elegantly dressed
in silver jewelry and a pencil skirt, retired Vanderbilt professor
Virginia Abernethy doesn't appear a likely contender for emerging leader
of the nation's white supremacist movement.
But the Anti-Defamation League described her as an "unabashed white supremacist."
The
Southern Poverty Law Center calls her a "full-fledged professor of
hate" and added Abernethy to its list of 30 new leaders to watch on the
radical right.
This year, Abernethy is on the ticket as a vice
presidential candidate of the obscure American Third Position Party, or
A3P. The whites-only political party was formed "to represent the
interests of White Americans," according to its website. It has run a
handful of candidates for offices as varied as the Mesa, Ariz., City
Council and the New Hampshire governor's office. Republicans in New
Hampshire called A3P the party of "despicable racists."
Abernethy calls all the attention misguided but amusing.
"I
think it's hilarious," said Abernethy, speaking from the corner office
on the Vanderbilt campus that is hers for life as a professor emerita of
anthropology and psychiatry. "I'm 104 pounds exactly. I'm punching
above my weight, to hear the SPLC tell it."
She politely would like to set the record straight.
Abernethy is not a white supremacist, she said.
She's
an environmentalist and a scientist. She opposes most immigration.
She's a feminist who helped put an end to Vanderbilt professors calling
female medical students "girls." She's a Christian and a
European-American.
She is also an "ethnic separatist," she said.
"Separatism
says, 'Birds of a feather flock together,' " Abernethy said. "I say,
'Let them.' What I see is rampant racial discrimination against
European-Americans. And I am not in favor of discrimination.
"I
see African-American groups and Asian-American groups, and I feel that
we should respect our identity as European-Americans as well.
"I do not see anything whatever wrong with that."
Abernethy
appears on the Tennessee ballot as running mate to Gatlinburg,
Tenn.-area filmmaker Merlin Miller, who is running for president of the
United States. The party was founded by neo-Nazi skinheads in California
in 2010 in response to the recession and Barack Obama's election. The
A3P, according to the SPLC, is the "most important hate group in America
at the moment."
Views 'repugnant'
Abernethy is
unusual among American white separatists, said Heidi Beirich, director
of the SPLC's "intelligence project," which has tracked Abernethy's
affiliations, speeches and writings for more than a decade.
Abernethy's
academic credentials, which include a Harvard doctorate, a Vanderbilt
master's in business administration and 20 years as a Vanderbilt Medical
School professor, have long lent credibility to her position on
immigration, which Abernethy strongly opposes with the exception of
Europeans, Beirich said.
But Beirich has traced a marked shift in Abernethy's focus and
affiliations in recent years. Where Abernethy once worked with more
mainstream immigration-reform groups, now her affiliations are with
neo-Nazis and white supremacists, groups that have benefited from
Abernethy's credentials, Beirich said.
"Because of her background,
she elevates these horrible views and these racist organizations,"
Beirich said. "She provides cover to them and lends them an academic
veneer to views that are repugnantly anti-Semitic and racist."
The
A3P party is a prime example, according to Beirich. The group was
founded by California corporate lawyer William Johnson, who once sought a
constitutional amendment to deport any American with an "ascertainable
trace of Negro blood."
Fellow board members include James Edwards, host of the "pro-white" radio show The Political Cesspool; Don Wassal, publisher of The Nationalist Times, which SPLC calls a racist newspaper; and James Kelso, a former aide to Ku Klux Klan leader David Duke.
"How
does a professor emeritus end up hanging around with people who want to
throw out people with a drop of 'Negro' blood?" Beirich said. "There's a
difference between being concerned about our immigration policies and
overcrowding in schools and being involved in organizations that say
non-whites should not be in this country."
However, Abernethy said she doesn't subscribe to the idea of deporting African-Americans.
Where she and Johnson do agree is on the platform of the American Third Position Party, she said.
"The
American Third Position Party believes that government policy in the
United States discriminates against white Americans, the majority
population, and that white Americans need their own political party to
fight this discrimination," the party's platform says.
"We are
constantly seeing reports about African-Americans being discriminated
against," Abernethy said. "Why are we not reading about white Americans
who are also being discriminated against?"
Born in Cuba to
American parents and raised in Argentina, Abernethy said her life
outside the United States has made her more patriotic.
'Ethnic separatist'
In
her two decades as a Vanderbilt professor - she retired in 1996 -
Abernethy was perhaps best known within academia as the author of the
"fertility-opportunity hypothesis."
Abernethy's theory says that as women have access to more economic opportunities, they have more children, rather than fewer.
The
theory runs counter to a prevailing hypothesis that says when women
become better educated and more affluent, they have more access to
contraception and tend to opt for fewer children.
Abernethy said
her theory is behind her opposition to sending food aid to developing
countries to avoid contributing to overpopulation.
Outside
academic journals, Abernethy's theory drives her anti-immigration
activism. In 2004, Abernethy was asked to lead Arizona's Proposition 200
campaign. The measure, which passed, required proof of legal residence
for voting and to access public benefits.
When Abernethy described
herself as an "ethnic separatist" during the campaign, she got national
attention - most of it negative. A non-public figure before that
election, Abernethy said she was called out by international news
outlets for not having politically correct views.
"There is a
level of hostility some people have toward scientists who describe the
world as they think it is instead of how it ought to be," Abernethy says
now.
Abernethy concluded from the Arizona experience that "some
people favor mass immigration. The divide is between people who want
European-Americans to become a minority and those who do not."
Kathy
McKee, an Arizona anti-immigration activist who worked with Abernethy,
said Abernethy, like herself, drew charges of racism for simply
advocating for reasonable immigration limits.
But McKee said she
grew concerned when she learned Abernethy served as an editorial adviser
to the Council of Conservative Citizens, a group that has referred in
its written materials to African-Americans as a "retrograde species of
humanity."
"When I found out she was affiliated with this group, I
called her and said, 'It sounds terrible - have you looked at their
website? Because they're a bunch of nasty racists,' " McKee said. "She
resigned immediately. You don't meet many people her age or my age who
have said, 'Maybe I have made a mistake and will change.' I respected
her for that.
"I think her views that people of European ancestry -
that there's a concerted effort to discriminate against us - that's not
my issue, but what she says certainly seems factual to me," McKee said.
Intellectuals lend legitimacy
Abernethy
joined the board of the American Third Position in 2011. Shortly
afterward, she agreed to join the ticket of the A3P party, which sprang
from the organization.
"Parts of our beautiful country now
resemble Third World communities in Latin America, Africa and Asia," the
party platform says. "White people are already a minority in many
cities and counties, along with several states, both large and small.
Without constructive political action, within a few decades we will
become a minority across the entire country. Enough is enough! The
American Third Position Party believes that we should put America
first!"
Abernethy doesn't actively campaign, except to send out a
steady stream of emailed commentary daily to several hundred people on
her mailing list about world events.
Running mate Miller, 60, is a
filmmaker who left Hollywood to found Americana Pictures in his
hometown, Gatlinburg, Tenn. The company's goal is "to develop, produce
and market quality motion pictures, which promote fresh talent and the
best of traditional European-American ideals."
Miller said
criticism of Abernethy - and himself - is driven by "Zionist power
background, including the mainstream media, which is controlled by
Zionist influences in my opinion."
Those same interests helped
spur his candidacy, which Miller said he uses as a platform to spread
the message that European-Americans have lost representation
politically.
"For the most part, Virginia and I are in agreement
on various platforms," he said. "She is forthright and doesn't pull any
punches. She has incredible credentials. We both believe
European-derived Americans have not had representation politically. I
believe diversity can be a very good thing, but look at Ireland,
Germany. They're unique in their national character. But America is
different, and global elites want a borderless world and they don't want
American sovereignty."
A white supremacist movement led by
professionals in law, film, academia or other areas represents a new
vehicle for extremism that hate watch groups such as the Anti-Defamation
League are keeping a close eye on.
"They're not this old image of
rednecks in the backwoods," said Marilyn Mayo, co-director of the
Anti-Defamation League's Center on Extremism, which monitors right-wing
extremism "What makes this party different is it's made up of a number
of people who are intellectuals and well established in their fields. It
gives this party a form of legitimacy. They're of concern because
they're a party that's organizing to get some kind of power in this
country."
Retired for more than 20 years and now a
great-grandmother, Abernethy makes the trip from her home in
Hendersonville, Tenn., to her office on the Vanderbilt campus three days
a week.
"All emeritus in good standing are permitted use of space
within the Medical Center's Emeritus Professors' Office," Vanderbilt
University spokeswoman Amy Wolf said. "As an emeritus professor, faculty
are permitted access to shared office space that is to be used for
academic and scholarly pursuits."
The Tennessean