David Horowitz

Activist

David Horowitz was born in Forest Hills, New York, United States on January 10th, 1939 and is the Activist. At the age of 85, David Horowitz biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.

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Other Names / Nick Names
David Joel Horowitz
Date of Birth
January 10, 1939
Nationality
United States
Place of Birth
Forest Hills, New York, United States
Age
85 years old
Zodiac Sign
Capricorn
Profession
Journalist, Non-fiction Writer
David Horowitz Height, Weight, Eye Color and Hair Color

At 85 years old, David Horowitz has this physical status:

Height
Not Available
Weight
Not Available
Hair Color
Salt and Pepper
Eye Color
Not Available
Build
Average
Measurements
Not Available
David Horowitz Religion, Education, and Hobbies
Religion
Jewish
Hobbies
Not Available
Education
MA, UC Berkeley, BA, Columbia University
David Horowitz Spouse(s), Children, Affair, Parents, and Family
Spouse(s)
Elissa Krauthamer (1959–19??; 4 children), Sam Moorman (1984-1985), Shay Marlowe (1990–?; divorced), April Mullvain (current)
Children
Jonathan Daniel Horowitz, Anne Pilat Horowitz, Sarah Rose Horowitz, and Ben Horowitz
Dating / Affair
Not Available
Parents
Not Available
David Horowitz Career

After completing his graduate degree, Horowitz lived in London during the mid 1960s and worked for the Bertrand Russell Peace Foundation. He identified as a Marxist intellectual.

In 1966, Ralph Schoenman persuaded Bertrand Russell to convene his war crimes tribunal to judge United States involvement in the Vietnam War. Horowitz would write three decades later that he had political reservations about the tribunal and did not take part. He described the tribunal's judges as formidable, world-famous and radical. They included Isaac Deutscher, Jean-Paul Sartre, Stokely Carmichael, Simone de Beauvoir, Vladimir Dedijer and James Baldwin. In January 1966, Horowitz, along with members of the Trotskyist International Marxist Group, formed the Vietnam Solidarity Campaign. The Vietnam Solidarity Campaign organized a series of protests in London against British support for the Vietnam War.

While in London, Horowitz became a close friend of Deutscher, and wrote a biography of him. Horowitz wrote The Free World Colossus: A Critique of American Foreign Policy in the Cold War. In January 1968, Horowitz returned to the United States, where he became co-editor of the New Left magazine Ramparts, settling in northern California.

During the early 1970s, Horowitz developed a close friendship with Huey P. Newton, founder of the Black Panther Party. Horowitz later portrayed Newton as equal parts gangster, terrorist, intellectual and media celebrity. As part of their work together, Horowitz helped raise money for, and assisted the Panthers with, the running of a school for poor children in Oakland. He recommended that Newton hire Betty Van Patter as bookkeeper; she was then working for Ramparts. In December 1974, Van Patter's body was found floating in San Francisco Harbor; she had been murdered. It is widely believed that the Panthers were responsible for her murder, a belief also held by Horowitz.

In 1976, Horowitz was a "founding sponsor" of James Weinstein's magazine In These Times.

Following this period, Horowitz rejected Marx and socialism, but kept quiet about his changing politics for nearly a decade.

In early 1985, Horowitz and Collier, who also became a political conservative, wrote an article for The Washington Post Magazine entitled "Lefties for Reagan", later retitled as "Goodbye to All That". The article explained their change of views and recent decision to vote for a second term for Republican President Ronald Reagan. In 1986, Horowitz published "Why I Am No Longer a Leftist" in The Village Voice.

In 1987, Horowitz co-hosted a "Second Thoughts Conference" in Washington, D.C., described by Sidney Blumenthal in The Washington Post as his "coming out" as a conservative. According to attendee Alexander Cockburn, Horowitz related how his Stalinist parents had not permitted him or his sister to watch the popular Doris Day and Rock Hudson movies of his youth. Instead, they watched propaganda films from the Soviet Union.

In May 1989, Horowitz, Ronald Radosh, and Collier attended a conference in Kraków calling for the end of Communism. After marching with Polish dissidents in an anti-regime protest, Horowitz spoke about his changing thoughts and why he believed that socialism could not create their future. He said his dream was for the people of Poland to be free.

In 1992, Horowitz and Collier founded Heterodoxy, a monthly magazine focused on exposing what it described as excessive political correctness on United States college and university campuses. It was "meant to have the feel of a samizdat publication inside the gulag of the PC [politically correct] university". The tabloid was directed at university students, whom Horowitz viewed as indoctrinated by the entrenched Left. In Radical Son, he wrote that universities were no longer effective in presenting both sides of political arguments. He stated that left-wing professors had created an atmosphere of political "terror" on campuses.

In a 2001 column in Salon he described his opposition to reparations for slavery, calling it racism against blacks, as it defined them only in terms of their descent from slaves. He argued that applying labels like "descendants of slaves" to blacks was damaging and would serve to segregate them from mainstream society. In the same year during Black History Month, Horowitz attempted to purchase advertising space in several American university student publications to express his opposition to reparations. Many student papers refused to sell him ad space; at some schools, papers that carried his ads were stolen or destroyed. Walsh said the furor had given Horowitz an overwhelming amount of free publicity.

In 2005, Horowitz launched Discover the Networks.

Horowitz appeared in Occupy Unmasked, a 2012 documentary portraying the Occupy Wall Street movement as a sinister organization formed to violently destroy the American government.

In 2018, Horowitz attracted many critical comments by attacking the Equal Justice Initiative's new National Memorial for Peace and Justice, calling it "a real racist project" showing "anti-white racism". "Lynchings were bad but they weren't mainly about whites yanking blacks off the streets and stringing them up". "A third of the victims of lynchings were white. How many of them do you think this memorial features [sic]."

In the early 21st century, Horowitz concentrated on issues of academic freedom, attempting to protect conservative viewpoints. He, Eli Lehrer and Andrew Jones published a pamphlet, "Political Bias in the Administrations and Faculties of 32 Elite Colleges and Universities" (2004), in which they find the ratio of Democrats to Republicans at 32 schools to be more than 10 to 1.

Horowitz's book, The Professors: The 101 Most Dangerous Academics in America (2006), criticized individual professors for, as he alleges, engaging in indoctrination rather than a disinterested pursuit of knowledge.

Horowitz published an Academic Bill of Rights (ABR), which he proposes to eliminate political bias in university hiring and grading. He says conservatives, and particularly Republican Party members, are systematically excluded from faculties, citing statistical studies on faculty party affiliation.

In 2004 the Georgia General Assembly passed a resolution on a 41–5 vote to adopt a version of the ABR for state educational institutions.

In Pennsylvania, the House of Representatives created a special legislative committee to investigate issues of academic freedom, including whether students who hold unpopular views need more protection.

In 1998 Horowitz and Peter Collier founded the David Horowitz Freedom Center. Politico states that Horowitz's activities and DHFC are funded in part by Aubrey and Joyce Chernick and The Bradley Foundation. Politico stated that during 2008–2010, "the lion’s share of the $920,000 it [DHFC] provided over the past three years to Jihad Watch came from [Joyce] Chernick". Between July 2000 and February 2006 the freedom center provided a total of $43,000 in funding for 25 trips taken by republican senators and representatives including Mike Pence, Mitch McConnell, Bob Barr, Fred Thompson and others. In 2015, Horowitz made $583,000 from the organization.

Horowitz is the editor of the Center's website FrontPage Magazine. It has been described by scholars and writers as right-wing, far-right, Islamophobic, and anti-Islam.

Horowitz is a former Marxist but is now described as being Conservative. Horowitz has described himself as "a defender of gays and alternative lifestyles, a moderate on abortion, and a civil rights activist".

Horowitz opposes Barack Obama, illegal immigration, gun control, and Islam. He has criticized Palestinians, claiming that their goal is to wipe out Jews from the Middle East. He has endorsed Presidents Ronald Reagan, George W. Bush, and Donald Trump.

Horowitz supported the interventionist foreign policy associated with the Bush Doctrine, but wrote against US intervention in the Kosovo War, arguing that it was unnecessary and harmful to US interests. Horowitz supported the 2003 invasion of Iraq. He has written critically of libertarian anti-war views.

During his time in the New Left Horowitz supported the Civil rights movement. Since the 1980s, he has supported anti-black movements, catalyzed by the death of his friend Betty Van Patter, a death in which he believed the Black Panthers to have been involved.

He supported attempts to overturn the 2020 presidential election.

Source

Pentagon's equity chief praised book that labels 9/11 first responders 'not human' and 'menaces'

www.dailymail.co.uk, October 17, 2022
A book describing 9/11 first responders as "not human" and "menaces" was once offered by the military's equity chief. This latest revelation comes as the Pentagon started an investigation into Kelisa Wing's tweets, in which she used terms such as 'Karen' and 'CAUdacity' to describe white people. Wing recommended the 2015 book Between the World and Me by Ta-Nehisi Coates while representing the Pentagon on two occasions, according to Fox News. Wing has been with the DoD for 16 years and was promoted to DEI chief in December 2021. She was described as being "in every facet of DoDEA, from curriculum and assessment to recruiting and professional development," according to a press release announcing her appointment in the Department of Defense's Education Activity section in December 2021. Wing, a US Army veteran, is responsible in part for 'planning, directing, coordinating, and coordinating preschool education for children of Department of Defense service members who otherwise would not have access to high-quality public education.' Coates wrote about how to tell the difference between the police officer who shot and killed Prince Jones in Maryland in September 2000 and others who rushed toward the fires on 9/11. The first responders,' Coates, were not human to me. They were black, white, or whatever; they were natural disasters; they were the fire, the comet, the storm, and without exception.'