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To: GrandJediMasterYoda

Here’s a good interview with her:

What three takeaways would you like readers to leave with after reading your book?

1.) There is no more important issue than who gets to live and vote in America.

2.) Utterly primitive cultures, a thousand years behind America in their concept of freedom, individual rights and respect for women, are being dumped on our country as a result of Teddy Kennedy’s 1965 Immigration Act, which was an attempt to move the country in a leftward direction.

3.) Every elite group in America – the media, the churches, the nonprofits, Washington lobbyists and both political parties — conspire to continue this destruction of the greatest country in the world for their own selfish reasons.

http://townhall.com/tipsheet/christophernmalagisi/2015/06/10/ann-coulter-exposes-the-illegal-immigration-cabal-n2010860


11 posted on 06/10/2015 2:33:28 PM PDT by GrandJediMasterYoda (B. Hussein Obama: 17 acts of Treason and counting.)
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To: GrandJediMasterYoda

That was actually JFK’s bill.

“However, if there is one man who can take the most credit for the 1965 act, it is John F. Kennedy. Kennedy seems to have inherited the resentment his father Joseph felt as an outsider in Boston’s WASP aristocracy. He voted against the McCarran-Walter Act of 1952, and supported various refugee acts throughout the 1950s.

In 1958 he wrote a book, A Nation of Immigrants, which attacked the quota system as illogical and without purpose, and the book served as Kennedy’s blueprint for immigration reform after he became president in 1960.
In the summer of 1963, Kennedy sent Congress a proposal calling for the elimination of the national origins quota system. He wanted immigrants admitted on the basis of family reunification and needed skills, without regard to national origin.

After his assassination in November, his brother Robert took up the cause of immigration reform, calling it JFK’s legacy. In the forward to a revised edition of A Nation of Immigrants, issued in 1964 to gain support for the new law, he wrote, “I know of no cause which President Kennedy championed more warmly than the improvement of our immigration policies.” Sold as a memorial to JFK, there was very little opposition to what became known as the Immigration Act of 1965.”


13 posted on 06/10/2015 2:41:13 PM PDT by ansel12
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To: GrandJediMasterYoda

They will die too. They don’t get it!


15 posted on 06/10/2015 3:02:55 PM PDT by Dr. Ursus
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