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John McCain, Multiculturalist - Immigration is just one problem
National Review ^
| January 24, 2008
| Mark Krikorian
Posted on 05/20/2008 2:23:36 PM PDT by calcowgirl
We all know John McCain is terrible on immigration. For years he held Americas sovereignty and security hostage to amnesty and increased immigration, and his newfound support for enforcement first is so insubstantial and transparently insincere that it insults our intelligence. Hes so bad that Americans for Better Immigration ranks his performance in office as the worst of all the presidential candidates including Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama. (See the GOP grid
here and the Democratic one
here.) And as Robert Rector of the Heritage Foundation has
pointed out, passage of McCains bill would represent the largest expansion of the welfare state in 30 years.
But his support for de facto open borders is merely one manifestation of a larger problem John McCain is a multiculturalist.
I dont mean he eats tacos at the Cinco de Mayo parade (nothing wrong with that!) I mean hes an ideological multiculturalist. Francis Fukuyama has
described (PDF) the ideology of multiculturalism this way: not just as tolerance of cultural diversity in de facto multicultural societies but as the demand for legal recognition of the rights of ethnic, racial, religious, or cultural groups. At almost every turn over his entire public career, John McCain has supported the
pluribus over the
unum.
Take bilingual education. McCain has been an enthusiastic proponent of this divisive and discredited program for years. He was
honorary co-host of the 1995 convention of the National Association for Bilingual Education; The New Republic reported that he wrote to convention participants that [t]o reject a native language as a tool for teaching as well as enriching our national heritage makes learning all the more difficult and makes us a poorer nation.
In 1998 he said, I have always supported bilingual education programs to help students learn English. Proposals to restrict the use of languages other than English are always divisive. That was the year that California voters approved Proposition 227, English for the Children, which (sort of) abolished bilingual education there.
In 1999 McCain was given the Legislative Friendship Award from LULAC, the League of Latin American Citizens, at which point, in the words of the
Human Events report, he hailed the bilingual education that Californians banned with the successful English for the Children initiative last year. Insulting the motives of California voters, McCain told the LULAC banquet, We dont need laws that cause any American to believe we scorn their contributions to our culture. (The
Los Angeles Times report noted wryly that McCains remarks were all but indistinguishable from those of the vice president
.)
Despite the fact that he mentions the long-discredited transition rationale for bilingual education, McCain has embraced foreign-language maintenance as the real goal, buying into the we didnt cross the border, the border crossed us justification for Hispanic group rights. This is what he means with his frequent references to the historical primacy of Spanish in Arizona.
McCains ideological multiculturalism is also apparent from his longstanding opposition to official status for the English language; as he boasted on
Hardball in 2000,
I have fought against English-only ballot initiatives. He started at least as far back as 1988, when he opposed Article 28, an official-English initiative approved by Arizona voters but thrown out by the courts.
More recently, he voted for the Salazar amendment to his 2006 amnesty bill, which would have codified Clintons Executive Order 13166. That order enshrines official, legally mandated multilingualism, requiring all government agencies and all recipients of federal funds to provide any services in any foreign language requested. (See the text here and more details here and here.) With his eye no doubt on the coming presidential race, he flip-flopped and voted against the very same amendment this past summer during the debate over his most recent amnesty bill.
In last Junes
presidential debate in New Hampshire, when Wolf Blitzer asked if any of the candidates opposed official English, would they speak up McCain spoke up, starting with a weasely I think its fine, then expounding on the language rights of American Indians. Another part of his response was revealing: Everybody knows that English has to be learned if anyone ever wants to move up the economic ladder. That is obvious. True enough, but that begs the question: The source of the public appeal of official English is that it asserts not merely a practical reason for newcomers to learn English but a moral obligation
to do so. Throughout his public life McCain has repeatedly rejected the idea of such an obligation.
Multiculturalism is more than language, of course. McCain has also supported racial preferences and racial-identity politics. As Ward Connerly wrote in
NR:
[In 1996], when a number of Republicans and others in Arizona sought to pass a bill in that states legislature outlawing race preferences, we were told by several Republican legislators that they had received calls from Sen. John McCain urging them not to support such a measure because again, as always it might send the wrong message.
Rick Santorum, in his recent interview with Hugh Hewitt, describes how McCain racialized the immigration issue to his fellow Republican senators:
[McCain] lectured us repeatedly about how xenophobic we were, lectured us, us being the Republican conference, about how wrong we were on this, how we were on the wrong side of history, and that you know, this is important for his . . . because having come from Arizona, knowing the strength of the Hispanic community, that we were going to be seen as racists, and he wasnt going be part of that, that he was not a racist, and that if we were for tougher borders, it was a racist thing.
He did likewise in opposing Arizonas Proposition 200 in 2006, which would have required proof of citizenship to register to vote, and legal status to access certain state benefits, saying that it would result in racial profiling.
Even on trivial matters, McCain adopts the racial-grievance worldview of the multiculturalists. When speaking to LULAC in 2000, the AP reports him saying this:
I am ashamed when demeaning stereotypes of Hispanic Americans substitute in our popular entertainment . . . for honest and realistic portrayals, McCain said. I know that for you to achieve fairer representation in popular media, you will have to achieve a greater representation in the executive suites and boardrooms of corporate media.
Thats not all. McCain also supported the Native Hawaiian Government Reorganization Act, which would have established a parallel government for people of Hawaiian ethnic origin. And on the Kennewick Man controversy, he sided with the American Indian tribes against the scientists.
Its true that McCain has taken liberal stances on other issues greenhouse emissions, free speech, judges and those are all bad. But they dont strike at the coherence of the American nation. We havent heard as much this time around about how McCain is the second coming of Theodore Roosevelt, but a comparison is striking. As John Fonte has suggested, McCain has kept TRs progressivism, which is so unappealing to modern conservatives, but discarded precisely that which made TR attractive his unapologetic assimilationism. Before anyone ever compares him to TR again, just try to imagine McCain saying this, from one of TRs letters:
We have room for but one language here, and that is the English language, for we intend to see that the crucible turns our people out as Americans, and American nationality, not as dwellers in a polyglot boarding house.
At almost every opportunity, John McCain has rejected the crucible and chosen the polyglot boarding house.
Mark Krikorian is executive director of the Center for Immigration Studies
TOPICS: Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 2008; aliens; antirepublican; elections; english; immigrantlist; krikorian; lulac; mccain; mccainsucks; multiculturalism; nowaymccain; racist; santorum
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To: indylindy
“I have had my posts removed 3 times on Ted threads.”
Shoot, I know better. I’d get booted out of here and likely deserve it, richly.
41
posted on
05/20/2008 4:14:37 PM PDT
by
Grunthor
(Juan agrees with Ted Kennedy on Amnesty, Gore on GW & says Hillary'd be a good POTUS)
To: KentTrappedInLiberalSeattle
LOL
In the begining there were no oil refineries and John McCain said “LET THERE BE NUCLEAR PLANTS!” and there were nuclear plants.
42
posted on
05/20/2008 4:14:56 PM PDT
by
cripplecreek
(Voting CONSERVATIVE in memory of 5 children killed by illegals 2/17/08 and 2/19/ 08)
To: indylindy
I have had my posts removed 3 times on Ted threads. I can understand why you avoid them.I know my weaknesses. I'd succumb to temptation in a nanosecond. ;)
43
posted on
05/20/2008 4:15:16 PM PDT
by
KentTrappedInLiberalSeattle
(If McCain really CAN "win without conservatives," then why do you care if I vote for him or not?)
To: bcsco
What those who have called me every name in the book have failed to grasp, is that my opinion could change between now and November. But it wont be their name calling and disparaging remarks that causes that. No, thats up to McCain himself. Im not holding my breath.
Well said. DITTO.
44
posted on
05/20/2008 4:16:31 PM PDT
by
Grunthor
(Juan agrees with Ted Kennedy on Amnesty, Gore on GW & says Hillary'd be a good POTUS)
To: KentTrappedInLiberalSeattle
When it comes to the shriller, more red-eyed and fanatical Team Juan shills, hereabouts: "insulting" their intelligence simply isn't possible! ;)Oh, they were out in force earlier today...
45
posted on
05/20/2008 4:17:00 PM PDT
by
bcsco
(To heck with a third party. We need a second one....)
To: bcsco
Oh, they were out in force earlier today... Tell me about it. Attempting to hold a rational conversation with any of them is like trying to nail a friend egg to the wall, or discussing Boolean algebra with Paula Abdul. ;)
46
posted on
05/20/2008 4:19:39 PM PDT
by
KentTrappedInLiberalSeattle
(If McCain really CAN "win without conservatives," then why do you care if I vote for him or not?)
To: Dante3
Great choice for presidents for us.
A mentally ill sociopath.
A known criminal willing to use every agency of the US government to crush her enemies.
An anti-American foreign operative communist muzzie puke.
Pity poor us.
To: Grunthor
It’s interesting. The only argument Juan’s shills have, is he’s the only hope to stave off a Democrat getting the Presidency. It has nothing to do with his positions or his electability. Nothing.
It would seem a lot of people are succumbing to fear. I see a lot more emotional rhetoric than I’ve ever seen on this forum. Like I said; it’s interesting.
48
posted on
05/20/2008 4:24:44 PM PDT
by
bcsco
(To heck with a third party. We need a second one....)
To: KentTrappedInLiberalSeattle
Teach me oh Yoda...for I have succumbed.LOL!
49
posted on
05/20/2008 4:24:49 PM PDT
by
dforest
(I had almost forgotten that McCain is the nominee. Too bad I was reminded.)
To: samtheman
A mentally ill sociopath.
A known criminal willing to use every agency of the US government to crush her enemies.
An anti-American foreign operative communist muzzie puke.
Deserves repeating. It’s what I’ve been saying for some time. Three really ROTTEN candidates, and no relief in sight.
50
posted on
05/20/2008 4:26:10 PM PDT
by
Cicero
(Marcus Tullius)
To: SoConPubbie
I’m in total agreement with your list, and this is why I plan to vote for Chuck Baldwin of the Constitution Party as a protest vote against McCain. If the U.S. is truly going to be screwed up for the long-term no matter who the next POTUS is along with the next Congress truly being a super-majority of leftists, then I truly have no interest anymore in the idea of “the lesser of two evils” approach to voting. It will truly be the leftists in Congress with all of the political power and who will really be in control of the future of the U.S. as a country. Just look at the last fifty years and counting in the state of Massachusetts to truly see what’s coming for the entire U.S. politically between the R’s and the D’s. The R’s in Massachusetts have been almost non-existent for over fifty years and counting, and the dominating D’s in the Massachusetts state legislature have been the entity with all of the political power, even during the eighteen straight years that the R’s were Governor/Lt. Governor in Massachusetts.
51
posted on
05/20/2008 4:27:32 PM PDT
by
johnthebaptistmoore
(Vote for conservatives AT ALL POLITICAL LEVELS! Encourage all others to do the same on November 4!)
To: KentTrappedInLiberalSeattle
Yeah. I called Juan a RINO and I was taken to task for name calling. And it was twisted to where I was accused of calling his supporters RINOs when I specifically wrote about he and other politicians (
"Go ahead and vote for the RINOs as much as you like."). That was my one remark about RINOs.
It's getting wacko out there...
52
posted on
05/20/2008 4:30:15 PM PDT
by
bcsco
(To heck with a third party. We need a second one....)
To: calcowgirl
There is no way I will every vote for McCain. I am just trying to decide how hard I should work to defeat him.
53
posted on
05/20/2008 4:33:04 PM PDT
by
Jay Redhawk
(Maybe I should start an organization called "Peckerwoods Against McCain")
To: bcsco
Hell, they don't even have that. Ultimately they wrap themselves in the flag and proclaim
they're the ones who care about the Troops. Yet time and again when cornered about McCain's stance on global warming, when they're asked about what kind of world they're voting for the Troops to come home to, they're silent.
The clothespins have shut off the oxygen to their brains.
54
posted on
05/20/2008 4:34:31 PM PDT
by
JoJo Gunn
(Help control the girly-man population. Have the McCainiacs spayed or neutered.)
To: indylindy
Teach me oh Yoda...for I have succumbed.LOL!Well... just as a f'rinstance, mind: I may have mentioned, now that I think about it, my fervent desire that Teddy "strives to remember, even during this time of shadow and extremis, that it is never, ever polite for a gentleman to keep a lady waiting."
'Cause... see: it sounds all respectful, and stuff... ;)
55
posted on
05/20/2008 4:34:33 PM PDT
by
KentTrappedInLiberalSeattle
(If McCain really CAN "win without conservatives," then why do you care if I vote for him or not?)
To: bcsco
The only argument Juans shills have, is hes the only hope to stave off a Democrat getting the Presidency. It has nothing to do with his positions or his electability. Nothing.Nailed it!
56
posted on
05/20/2008 4:39:27 PM PDT
by
KentTrappedInLiberalSeattle
(If McCain really CAN "win without conservatives," then why do you care if I vote for him or not?)
To: JoJo Gunn
Ultimately they wrap themselves in the flag and proclaim they're the ones who care about the Troops.You mean like...
"How are you going to look a soldier in the face and tell them that you didn't see any difference between McCain and the Democrat while they were off in another country doing their job? Do you think the average soldier doesn't see any difference between McCain and a Democrat? Are you finally starting to see something here?" The Change America Deserves>
Like that?
57
posted on
05/20/2008 4:44:40 PM PDT
by
bcsco
(To heck with a third party. We need a second one....)
To: calcowgirl; Liz; Calpernia; indylindy; pissant; SoConPubbie; E. Cartman; Dr.Zoidberg; Grunthor; ...
Ooh! Ooh! A brand new campaign donation solicitation arrived in the mail just now, from the
McCain RNC Victory 2008 people... and with another fun fun
fun POSTAGE PREPAID RETURN ENVELOPE, to boot!
Time for me to print up another three or four of these here babies for the mailin', I'm thinkin'!!!
Anybody here want me to slip an extra one in the envelope on their behalf, as a fondly admiring "Good Luck, Big Guy!" sort of thingie...? ;)
58
posted on
05/20/2008 4:51:18 PM PDT
by
KentTrappedInLiberalSeattle
(If McCain really CAN "win without conservatives," then why do you care if I vote for him or not?)
To: KentTrappedInLiberalSeattle
Hey, yeah, slip one in for me. We got a solicitation the other day but threw it away. If I’d had these I’d have sent some in.
59
posted on
05/20/2008 4:52:56 PM PDT
by
bcsco
(To heck with a third party. We need a second one....)
To: bcsco
60
posted on
05/20/2008 4:54:43 PM PDT
by
KentTrappedInLiberalSeattle
(If McCain really CAN "win without conservatives," then why do you care if I vote for him or not?)
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