Conservative Punk

Website promoting conservative views in punk subculture From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Conservative Punk was a website that promoted conservative views in the punk subculture. It was created by Nick Rizzuto in 2004.[1]

Type of site
Political
CreatedbyNick Rizzuto
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Conservative Punk
Type of site
Political
Created byNick Rizzuto
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History

Nick Rizzuto, a publicist for KROCK, a New York City radio station,[2] created the website partially in response to the left-liberal group Punkvoter, which was created by NOFX lead singer Fat Mike (aka Mike Burkett).[3] The Conservative Punk website received significant press coverage during the 2004 presidential election.

An early contributor to the site was Dave Smally of the band Down by Law.[4] The site also received contributions from talk radio personality Andrew Wilkow and former Misfits singer and Gotham Road frontman Michale Graves.[3] Dorian Lynskey [Wikidata] of The Guardian wrote about Rizzuto: "To his critics he's a crank bringing punk's good name into disrepute – but to his supporters he's the fearless voice of a formerly silent minority."[1]

In early 2010, Nick Rizzuto, without notice, stopped paying the hosting fees for Conservativepunk.com, causing the website and discussion forum to become inaccessible. Longtime members and regular posters created a replacement site, ConPunk.com, in order to maintain the community. However, that site went offline in May 2013, in favor of a Facebook group; as of 2014, the Facebook group had also closed.[citation needed]

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