Erick-Woods Erickson was born in in, moved to when he was five, and returned to Jackson when he was fifteen. Erickson attended the, previously known as the Jumeirah American School. His father worked for Conoco Oil as an oil company production foreman. Erickson received a bachelor's degree from in, and a law degree from Mercer’s. He is an inactive member in good standing of the. Macon city council Erickson was elected on November 6, 2007 to a four-year term as a member of the Macon, Georgia.
He resigned his office on February 16, 2011, partway through his first term to pursue a job with radio in; The noted his poor attendance as a council member before his resignation. While he was in office, Macon police officers considered forming a.
To counter it, Erickson urged that the police department be dissolved. Political commentator. RedState Erickson joined the conservative blog RedState in 2005. He later served as its editor-in-chief. Erickson was CEO of RedState, Inc. While working at RedState, Erickson developed a reputation as one of the most influential American conservatives. Erickson's 'Morning Briefing' e-mails grew from 498 subscribers when they began in February 2009 to nearly 70,000 by January 2010.
Desarrollo posterior de la personalidad adulta; Erik- son (1970) denomina a este. Etapas tempranas constituyen un aspecto esencial para el desarrollo de la.
Noted that 'The ability of a single e-mail to shape a message illustrates the power of the conservative network.' The article described Erickson as one of the American conservative movement's 'key national players'.
Erickson wrote the 'Confessions of a Political Junkie' blog and is former editor-in-chief of the 'Peach Pundit' blog. His first book, Red State Uprising: How to Take Back America (co-authored with Lew Uhler), was published by in September 2010. Later that month, Erickson said that growing up his parents refused to serve 'Asian food' on December 7, the anniversary of the. Erickson's mother appeared to deny the claim to a journalist.
Erickson criticized the report, citing his mother's age. In 2014, RedState was sold by RedState, Inc. In December 2015, Erickson left his position at the site to focus on his radio show.
Television and radio From 2010 to January 2013, Erickson was a political contributor at CNN. Erickson later joined as a contributor. In January 2011, Erickson began hosting a local radio show on, replacing.
Erickson eventually moved to the slot vacated by when he announced his 2012 presidential bid. In 2014 and 2015, Erickson guest-hosted the national broadcast of on numerous times.
Toward the end of Erickson's career at RedState he began to increase his focus on his radio show, which was owned. He eventually quit the site to work on it full-time. The Resurgent In January 2016, Erickson launched the conservative website The Resurgent. Political views and controversies. The of London put Erickson on its 'List of Most Influential US Conservatives', giving him a rank of 69th most influential in 2007 and 65th in 2010.
According to the 2007 newspaper article: 'Erickson epitomises the new power of the internet. A small-government and based in the south, he taps into and influences the Republican 'base' that the GOP’s 2008 candidates are courting.' According to The Atlantic, Erickson's conservatism is more traditional (as opposed to libertarian) and 'deeply informed by his evangelical faith'.
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Erickson emphasizes small government, strong national defense, and the primacy of the traditional family. Donald Trump On August 7, 2015, Erickson disinvited from a RedState gathering held in Atlanta. During a interview after a hosted by on August 6, 2015, Trump had said that the Fox News anchor and debate co-moderator had “blood coming out of her eyes, blood coming out of her wherever” while questioning him during the debate.
According to Erickson, Trump's remark 'was a bridge too far” and that even 'blunt talkers and unprofessional politicians should not cross' certain lines, including decency. The following day, Trump released a statement stating that Erickson had a history of making controversial statements for which he has had to apologize, and that he, Trump, was an outsider who did not fit into Erickson's agenda. Gender In 2013, Erickson was criticized for saying in an interview on that males dominate females in the 'natural world' and it was only 'science' for men to be the breadwinners for their family. Guns In December 2015, Erickson posted a picture of a bullet ridden copy of that he had shot at. That day's edition contained a front-page editorial in favor of.
Erickson spread a false story by RedState which claimed that 17-year old survivor David Hogg was not actually at the Parkland school when it was attacked. He later described Hogg as a 'bully' after Hogg called for an advertiser boycott of right-wing Fox News host Laura Ingraham when she mocked him for not getting into a number of universities. LGBT rights In 2017, Erickson signed a manifesto which condemned homosexuality and transgender identity, saying that homosexual and transgender identity was not according to God's plan. Attacks on public figures In April 2009, Erickson described retiring on his Twitter account as 'the only goat fucking child molester to ever serve on the Supreme Court”. In an appearance on, Erickson said the statement was 'not my finest hour.' Erickson called Texas state senator “Abortion Barbie.” In a blog post, Erickson considered whether President Obama was “shagging hookers” and wondered whether Michelle Obama (whom he called a “marxist harpy”) “would go Lorena Bobbit sic on him should he even think about it.” Erickson argued that President Obama won the Nobel Prize because of an “affirmative action quota.” Erickson compared the Obama administration's health care communications director Linda Douglass to Nazi propagandist Joseph Goebbels.
Augusto Pinochet In November 2018, Erickson tweeted that to, and would be more effectively spent installing ' types' in these countries. He added that the US should 'support strong leaders who support reforms and promote economic stability, even if with a heavy hand'.
When challenged on this proposal, Erickson replied 'I'm hoping for some helicopters in this plan', a reference to in during Pinochet's regime. Kathryn Sikkink, a professor in International Relations at the Harvard Kennedy School, responded to Erickson's remarks. She noted that 'Pinochet was a Chilean dictator who committed massive human rights abuses,' and that Erickson got the 'facts exactly backward.
Recent history and social science don’t show that authoritarian regimes stop people from fleeing across borders. They show that they make more people want to flee.' . Grim, Ryan (June 11, 2007). Retrieved November 17, 2010.
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Retrieved 2016-11-03. Young, Matt (December 7, 2015). Pereira, Alyssa (December 7, 2015). Retrieved 2018-10-28.
Kludt, Tom. Retrieved 2018-10-28. Savransky, Rebecca (2018-02-26). Retrieved 2018-10-28. CNN, Ralph Ellis. Retrieved 2018-11-05.
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Sikkink, Kathryn (2018). Washington Post. Erickson, Erick-Woods (September 30, 2017). External links.