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・ Peter Breuer
・ Peter Brewis
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・ Peter Bridgewater
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Peter Brimelow
・ Peter Brinckerhoff
・ Peter Brinsden
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・ Peter Broadbent
・ Peter Broadbent (footballer)
・ Peter Broadbridge, 3rd Baron Broadbridge
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・ Peter Brockman
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Peter Brimelow : ウィキペディア英語版
Peter Brimelow

Peter Brimelow (born October 13, 1947) is a British-born American writer. Prior to founding the webzine VDARE, Brimelow was a writer and editor at ''Forbes'', the ''Financial Post'', and ''National Review''.
Brimelow founded the Center for American Unity in 1999 and served as its first president but is no longer affiliated with the organization. Brimelow is a paleoconservative. Until September 2012, he was a columnist for Dow Jones' Marketwatch.〔http://www.marketwatch.com/Journalists/Peter_Brimelow〕
==Life and career==
Brimelow was born in 1947 in Warrington, Cheshire, England, the son of Bessie (Knox) and Frank Sanderson Brimelow, a transport executive. Brimelow (and his twin brother) studied at the University of Sussex (BA, 1970) and Stanford University (MBA, 1972.)〔 Brimelow subsequently emigrated to Canada. After a brief stint as a securities analyst, he settled in Toronto, becoming a business writer and editor at the ''Financial Post'' and at ''Maclean's'' magazine. From 1978–80, he was an aide to senator Orrin Hatch in Washington D.C..
In 1980, he moved to New York, working mainly for Barron's and Fortune. Brimelow was senior editor of ''Forbes'' magazine from 1986 to 2002. He was married to Maggy Laws Brimelow (1953–2004), a Canadian, until her death following an eight-year battle with breast cancer. He and his first wife had two children, a son (Alexander Brimelow) and a daughter (Hannah-Claire Brimelow). He married Lydia Sullivan, a 22-year-old Heritage Foundation intern, in 2007; they had their first child, Felicity Deonne Brimelow, in August 2010. Their second child, Karia Sybil Nancy Brimelow, was born on June 13, 2012. Their third daughter, Victoria Beauregard Brimelow, was born on February 6, 2015.〔(【引用サイトリンク】website=VDare.com )
In 1986, Brimelow published ''The Patriot Game: National Dreams and Political Realities'', a book inspired partly by Goldwin Smith's ''Canada and the Canadian Question'', published in 1891. Brimelow's book helped galvanize the founding of the Reform Party of Canada in 1987 and inspired a number of individuals who now work in the government of Stephen Harper.
Brimelow's later books include the national best-seller ''Alien Nation: Common Sense About America's Immigration Disaster'', ''The Wall Street Gurus: How You Can Profit from Investment Newsletters'', and ''The Worm in the Apple: How the Teacher Unions Are Destroying American Education.'' ''Alien Nation'' deals with immigration policy and the influx of illegal aliens as well as legal immigrants. ''The Worm in the Apple'' discusses public education and teachers' unions, considering unions "highly destructive." Among views in ''The Worm in the Apple'': "to attempt so far-reaching a goal as universal high school education is foolish." Ilana Mercer and John O'Sullivan praised the book. For the Hoover Institution journal ''Education Next'', public policy consultant George Mitchell wrote: "Brimelow...demonstrates how collective bargaining for teachers has produced labor agreements that stifle innovation and risk taking. He makes it clear that the dramatic rise in influence enjoyed by the teacher unions has coincided with stagnant and unacceptable levels of student performance." However, in the same journal article, education consultant Julia E. Koppich took a more critical angle: "...Brimelow uses a variety of linguistic devices to drive home his points. But his over-the-top language soon grates on the nerves...His argument is not that teacher unions are destroying American education, but that they labor long and hard to preserve the status quo...But this book contains so little about education-virtually nothing about classrooms, schools, or districts-even that point gets lost." Koppich called the book "an anti-public school polemic."
He has appeared as a guest on ''The Political Cesspool'', a "pro-white" talk-radio show. Following the 2008 elections, Brimelow advocated that to win elections, the Republican Party should focus on "white votes".〔(Southern Poverty Law Center: VDARE: GOP Should Concentrate on Whites )〕 His website VDARE has been rated by the Southern Poverty Law Center as a white nationalist hate group.〔(Splcenter.org )〕〔
〕 Brimelow responded by applying what he considered their loose standards of definition to themselves, saying "VDARE.COM has just been named a Hate Group by the Southern Poverty Law Center, the notorious Treason Group".
Brimelow appeared on a panel discussing multiculturalism during the 2012 Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC 2012), and gave a talk titled "The Failure of Multiculturalism: How the pursuit of diversity is weakening the American Identity." In the face of condemnation from MSNBC and PFTAW, Al Cardenas of the American Conservative Union denied knowing him or his reputation.

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