Nick Adams (commentator)

Nick Adams (born Nicholas Adamopoulos) is an Australian-born American conservative political commentator and author.

Adams came to wide public attention on March 3, 2017, when Donald Trump made favorable comments and tweets about his work, notably a tweet promoting Adam's book Green Card Warrior[1] and a second tweet on August 25, 2017 promoting his book Retaking America.[2][3]

Early life and education

Adams survived childhood cancer diagnosed at 16 months of age.[4] Adams went to university at the University of Sydney.[4][3] He was elected as one of the youngest deputy mayors of Ashfield at the age of 21, while still attending university.[4]

Career

Adams was elected to the Ashfield, Australia council in 2004 on the Young Liberals ticket.[5] He was elected under a loophole which allowed Adams as a non resident to run for elections.[6] He was criticized for often missing council meetings because he was traveling the American speaking circuit as a motivational speaker.[5]

In 2009, he was given a six-month suspension from the Liberal Party of Australia for conduct deemed likely to "embarrass or cause damage to" the Party during an altercation with Brett Mason, a journalist for Channel Ten who was filming a report on Mr Adams' absences from the council due to overseas travel when Adams confronted him, stating, "I would just like to say that Brett Mason is a [expletive] good-for-nothing [expletive]. Thank you."[5][7][8][9]

Adams denounced multiculturalism, saying "It creates groups and pockets of people that of course, then feel that there are certain elements of superiority and inferiority and I think that we need to be united."[7]

In addition to appearing on Fox News and other conservative media outlets, Adams has been a columnist for Townhall.com and a "Centennial Institute Policy Fellow" at Colorado Christian University.

Bibliography

  • Adams, Nick (2014). The American Boomerang: How the World's Greatest 'Turnaround' Nation Will Do It Again. WorldNetDaily (WND) Books. ISBN 978-1936488841.
  • Adams, Nick (2016). Green Card Warrior: My Quest for Legal Immigration in an Illegals' System. New York, New York: Post Hill Press,. ISBN 978-1682613054.CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link)[1]
  • Adams, Nick (2017). Retaking America: Crushing Political Correctness. New York, New York: Post Hill Press,. ISBN 978-1682614211.CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link)
  • Adams, Nick; Erikson, Dave (2017). The Case Against the Establishment. New York, New York: Post Hill Press. ISBN 978-1682614747.
gollark: Honestly this is boring, bye.
gollark: What *happened* here?
gollark: bees.
gollark: I mean, normally it's just "random electronics I don't understand", now it seems to be "random chemistry and/or nuclear physics I don't understand much of".
gollark: Ooo, nice cyan color.

References

  1. Lozada, Carlos (3 March 2017). "A not-so-desperate saga about coming to America (book review)". Washington Post. Retrieved 9 May 2019.
  2. Trump tweet on Retaking America, twitter.com (@realdonaldtrump 7:32am EDT 25 August 2017)
  3. Kehoe, John (27 August 2017). "Donald Trump hails Australian activist Nick Adams". The Australian Financial Review. Retrieved 9 May 2019.
  4. "Parker County Republican Party Reagan Day dinner nears". Fort Worth Star-Telegram. 23 January 2018. Retrieved 9 May 2019.
  5. Robertson, James (5 March 2017). "From pigeons to Trump: the rise of Nick Adams". The Sun-Herald.
  6. Grennan, Harvey (Sep 1, 2008). "Loophole lets outsiders nominate". Newcastle Herald. Retrieved Jun 30, 2020.
  7. Wilson, Jason (Jul 14, 2015). "How a would-be pigeon-killer became a Fox News pundit | Jason Wilson". Retrieved Jun 30, 2020 via www.theguardian.com.
  8. "A model protest". Nov 8, 2010. Retrieved Jun 30, 2020 via www.abc.net.au.
  9. "Donald Trump hails Australian activist Nick Adams". Australian Financial Review. Aug 27, 2017. Retrieved Jun 30, 2020.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.