Talk:Walter E. Williams
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[edit] White Leader Clarification
Walter E. Williams does not call himself the "White Leader" parodying black leaders, he calls himself that to make fun of former President Bill Clinton who called himself the first black president.
The Walter Williams that created Mr. Bill should really be mentioned on a separate page. At first my jaw dropped because I thought the stodgy economist had actually been the one who created Mr. Bill.
Prof. Williams is no longer GMU's econ chair.
He refers to himself as "Walter E. Williams" to avoid confusion with the other Walter Williams, perhaps moving this entery from Walter_Williams to Walter_E_Williams would be appropriate to avoid confusion?
[edit] Potential New Category
Does anyone else think it would be worthwhile to make a category of (or list of notable) black conservatives? I had the idea not to make the Republican Party look better (I'm pretty liberal myself), just because they are relatively few of them. It might be nice to have a page with links to Williams, Thomas Sowell, Deroy Murdock, etc. However, I realize this may not be favorable in some aspects. Anyone care to discuss their ideas? --BDD 01:52, 9 Apr 2005 (UTC)
Well, there isn't a catagory for notable white conservatives, so why should there be one for notable black conservatives? -Anon
- That's understandable if most conservatives are white. I think that would be a good category.--Nectar 19:46, 20 May 2006 (UTC)
[edit] suggested improvements
The article could really use a picture, such as the one at http://www.gmu.edu/departments/economics/wew/images/williams2.jpg or http://www.townhall.com/columnists/BIOS/cpwalter.gif
Williams is an occasional substitute host for Rush Limbaugh's radio show, where he often brings Thomas Sowell on as a guest. Williams sometimes refers to himself as a "white leader", parodying black liberals who claim to speak for all black Americans. I think he may have also done a column about it...Rast 16:43, Jun 15, 2005 (UTC)
I took out the misleading note on his recent town hall article, in which he states " I'm not suggesting that we rush to use our nuclear capacity to crush states that support terrorism. ". The note starts out that williams advocates nuclear weapons against the middle east, which would lead me to believe the previous editor didn't finish reading the article.
[edit] August 27th Article
I removed the last portion of the article seeing how it has no significant relevance to Dr. Williams other than to portray him advocating the use of nuclear arms. It was clearly a partisan attack on Williams and served no useful purpose.
[edit] Outspoken?
Are there standards for calling one's ideas outspoken? I read it as a subtle way to skew the reader into believing Williams doesn't know what he's talking about (and this may just be *my* bias here, not the article's). I did look up some other famous people and organizations who agree with Willams and might be considered outspoken (Milton Friedman, Friedrich Hayek, the Cato Institute) and none of them used this terminology. I think to be on the safe side we should keep to the norm and let people who may be in the minority have their views :)