Defunct Newspapers Journals TV channels Websites Other Congressional caucuses Economics Gun rights Identity politics Nativist Religion Watchdog groups Youth/student groups Social media Miscellaneous Other Imprimis was founded in 1972 by Clark Durant and George Roche III[3] as a free alumni service.
[citation needed] Imprimis's content consists almost entirely of edited transcripts of speeches delivered by conservative movement leaders at Hillsdale-sponsored events.
[7][8] Contributors to Imprimis have included Jeb Bush,[9][10] Ward Connerly,[11][12][13] Dinesh D'Souza,[14][15] Milton Friedman,[16] Victor Davis Hanson,[17] Jack Kemp,[18][19] Irving Kristol,[20] Rush Limbaugh,[21] Bjorn Lomborg,[22] David McCullough,[23][24] Richard John Neuhaus,[25] Sarah Palin,[26] Ronald Reagan,[27] Jason L. Riley,[28] Margaret Thatcher,[29][30] Clarence Thomas,[31][32][33] and Tom Wolfe.
"[35] In contrast, Mark W. Powell, writing in the Toledo Blade, criticized Imprimis for eschewing fact-checking and failing to issue editorial corrections, which he described as part of a pattern of "cavalierism with facts to drive political points.
[2] Kevin D. Williamson at National Review argued that speech transcripts ordinarily aren't fact-checked or verified for the truth of their claims.