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America no longer white, united, English-speaking
The Miami Herald ^ | 02 April 2004 | Patrick J. Buchanan

Posted on 04/03/2004 11:22:26 AM PST by MegaSilver

In 1960, when JFK defeated Nixon, America was a nation of 160 million, 90 percent white and 10 percent black, with a few million Hispanics and Asians sprinkled among us.

We were one nation, one people. We worshipped the same God, spoke the same English language, studied American history and English literature, honored the same heroes, read the same books, watched the same TV shows, went to the same movies and saw ourselves as defenders of Western civilization against the godless communism of the Soviet Empire.

We were confident and proud of who we were. That was yesterday. But due to the Immigration Act of 1965 and the cultural revolution of the '60s, that America is now gone forever. And as one studies the latest projections of the Census Bureau, the America of our grandchildren will be another country altogether, a nation unrecognizable to our parents, a giant Brazil of the North.

In 2050, there will be three times as many people living here as in 1960 -- 420 million. White Americans will be a minority, 49 percent, and falling. Hispanics in the United States, more than 100 million, will be equal to the population of today's Mexico. Our Asian population will be almost as large as our African-American population today.

By countries of origin, America will be a Third World nation. Our cities will look like Los Angeles today. Los Angeles and the cities of Texas, Arizona and California will look like Mexico City.

Writing in Foreign Policy, Harvard Professor Samuel Huntington, author of Who We Are, raises an alarm about the huge infusion of Hispanics into the Southwest, and for many reasons.

Much of this mass immigration is illegal. Vast numbers are coming here only to work. They are not assimilating. They do not want to become Americans. They are concentrating in states bordering Mexico, which is their country and a nation with a historic grievance against us. They are holding on to their language and culture, creating a Hispanic nation within our nation. By 2050, there will be scores of millions of people living here whose loyalty is to a foreign country.

Moreover, as multiculturalism has captured our schools and colleges, immigrant children will have prejudices and grievances against America and the West reinforced as they learn. The academic elite that controls these schools already paints America as a nation with a rancid history of genocide, slavery, racism, oppression and imperialism.

Is the Census Bureau future the future that Americans wish? No. Are they willing to risk it for their grandchildren? No.

Why, then, does that future appear inevitable?

Answer: Though a majority of Americans wish to preserve the land they grew up in for their children, our elites -- political, academic, cultural and corporate -- are either unwilling to conserve that America or indifferent to its disappearance.

Most Americans want immigration cut back and all illegal aliens sent back. Why is the will of the majority, expressed in polls and referenda, not reflected in law or policy? Because we no longer live in a democratic republic; we are ruled by a managerial elite.

America's corporate elites want an endless supply of cheap labor. Our judges throw out popularly enacted laws to which they object. Our academic elites work to see ''white, racist America'' disappear. Our neo-Marxist cultural elites wish to be the gravediggers of the West and of Christian culture. And America's conservative party, the Republican Party, believes that Hispanics hold the key to retention of presidential power and is anxious not to offend Mexican President Vicente Fox.

If, by 2050, the America we grew up in has become a Tower of Babel of squabbling minorities that is falling apart, it will be because of the treason of the elites, and our lack of will to overthrow them.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: aliens; aztlan; balkanization; breakingnews; buchanan; diversity; immigrantlist; immigration; multiculturalism; patbuchanan; patrickbuchanan; patrickjbuchanan; racistpat; sowhat; whoweare
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To: O.C. - Old Cracker
You can't handle the truth!

We can handle the truth; we just can’t handle “the Gift.”

Regards;

DD


1,021 posted on 04/08/2004 2:55:02 PM PDT by William Wallace (Darkdrake Lives!)
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To: cyborg
There are a few other freepers who have jpg sigs.

You'll be seeing a lot more in the next few days. ;-)

Regards;

DD


1,022 posted on 04/08/2004 2:59:37 PM PDT by William Wallace (Darkdrake Lives!)
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To: William Terrell
There is no archaeological or anthropological evidence that settlers of Mexico were American Indians and come from America. The evidence is plain from simple observation of the peoples that they came from South America.
From what you have said, and your obvious support for the illegal invasion of America by Mexicans, I judge your position to be self serving in an attempt to advance the theory that Mexicans are somehow related to and descended form original Americans, a piton in the rock of our national sovereignty.

Such willful ignorance leaves me speechless. Most Mexicans are a mixture of American Indian (ie. "original Americans", and Spanish (ie. Europeans). Another good chunk, about 30% are Indians)

How do you feel about La Raza and similar movements. Support their agenda, do you?

I think they are stupid, although I guess that depends on what you mean by "similar movements". The only race (raza) that I recognize is the human race. Everything else is arbitrary. I do not support illegal immigration, but I would be in favor of some sort of "guest worker" program like we had in the past.

Bah. Bugger off, mate.

Gosh I thought you were a Marine, now you're a Brit?

1,023 posted on 04/08/2004 3:33:25 PM PDT by El Gato (Federal Judges can twist the Constitution into anything.. Or so they think.)
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To: William Terrell
This is the 14th amendment. It was proposed before the war and contributed greatly to the hostilities

It was not proposed before the war. There was a proposed amendment just before the war, it was never ratified. It read:

No amendment shall be made to the Constitution which will authorize or give to Congress the power to abolish or interfere, within any State, with the domestic institutions thereof, including that of persons held to labor or service by the laws of said State.

The first drafts of what became the 14th amendment were not written until until Jan 12, 1866, well after the end of the war. It did not pass until June 13, 1866, and was not ratified until 1868. It was written in response to state and local governments in the South infringing upon the rights of the former slaves, most particularly their right to keep and bear arms. The banning of slavery was done by the 13th amendment, which was passed and ratified in 1865. Lee surrendered on April 9th, 1865.

History and fact checking are not your strong suite, are they?

You support this fraud, evidently.

I support the Constitution as written and ratified.

So, I would not say that your allegiance to America is not close to perfect. (Funny the USAF and DoD never questioned it when they granted me some pretty hefty security clearances) Service in the United States Air Force Reserve means nothing to me. Live with that.

I don't really give an ant's ass what it means to you, it means a lot to me, as does my oath of office to support and defend the Constitution against all enemies, foreign and domestic. BTW, I did serve on active duty, as an officer, before becoming a reservist, and have been involved in suppling the US military with the best weapons and equipment I could devise ever since. (Except for the 18 months I spent in grad school)

Did you, and your parents, come to this country legally?

I was born here. My Dad was born in Montana, where his parents had gone to find work in the mines, and my mother was born in Nebraska. I don't know about my paternal grandfather, since he was adopted and since grandma left him after the third child in 3 years was born and I never knew him. He could have been an immigrant as could his birth parents, but it would have been in the 1880s or 1890s if that were the case. I know my maternal grandfather, also "adopted" but only by his stepfather, was born in the US, but not much more about him, although one or both of his parents may have had some Spanish ancestry, since they gave him the middle name of Carlos, but his adopted last name was Kimball, while his birth last name was probably Lamb. My maternal grandmother's family (Kunz) came from Germany in the 1860s and 1870s. Not sure when my paternal grandmother's family (Harrison) came from England, but I know her mother (a Lee) was born in the US as well, and I never heard any different about great-grandfather Harrison, but I know he owned several hundred acres of land in 1890s.

So I'd say your implication was way off base.

1,024 posted on 04/08/2004 4:40:41 PM PDT by El Gato (Federal Judges can twist the Constitution into anything.. Or so they think.)
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To: Cronos
I came upon the posting to me in a brief check of my web affairs from overseas.

I see this is an old thread, but one still active. The essential point is that a people should try to preserve their character. That is a legitimate goal of any people. An immigration policy should reflect this. Any other policy is insane, driven by neurotic impulses, not rational analysis.

For a succinct statement on immigration, see Immigration & The American Future.

Three of my grandparents were immigrants from Eastern European lands. I am not against immigrants. That has nothing to do with the issue. To make it very clear, when my grandparents were accepted into this country, their duty shifted from one to the lands of their births, to America. My duty as an American is to preserve the character of America. That is so clear to anyone who is not driven by some sort of warped agenda, that it should not need further development. And the ethnic character of America, while influenced and in someways enriched by peoples from other lands, was basically defined by the Founding Fathers, whose values understood in depth, reflect the ethnic history of the Anglo Saxon, Celtic and Dutch peoples to a predominant extent, with a bit of Huguenot thrown in.

It is a noble character. Why would anyone want to assail it; why would anyone want to undermine it; why have some such a problem acknowledging it and the centuries of struggle that went into its definition?

William Flax

1,025 posted on 04/09/2004 2:28:24 AM PDT by Ohioan
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To: El Gato
I support the Constitution as written and ratified.

There is a very serious question, whether the "Fourteenth Amendment" was ever validly ratified. The Supreme Court has ducked the question, treating it as political not judicial, but it is hardly something sacrosanct.

You are right that it was not proposed until after the War. It was the cornerstone of the punish the South campaign, launched by those led by the despicable Thaddeus Stevens, and motivated by a combination of hate and an ideology that Karl Marx found appealing.

1,026 posted on 04/09/2004 2:40:31 AM PDT by Ohioan
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To: Ohioan
There is a very serious question, whether the "Fourteenth Amendment" was ever validly ratified. The Supreme Court has ducked the question, treating it as political not judicial, but it is hardly something sacrosanct.

But as I said, the implication is in the original Constitution, without the amendments, that a person born in the US is a US citizen. It's in the qualifications for President section of Article II.

Besides that, just because the 14th amendment has been misued, doesn't mean that it wasn't a good idea in the first place. It's really just an expansion on the original document's guarntee of a "republican form of government" to the states. (Art IV Section 4). At least section 1 of the amendment, which are what has been misued by the courts. They'd have found a way to do what they wanted to do, even absent the 14th amendment.

1,027 posted on 04/09/2004 12:43:13 PM PDT by El Gato (Federal Judges can twist the Constitution into anything.. Or so they think.)
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