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Race ReplacementWhy the American government wants to elect a new people One of the more extraordinary documents relating to immigration is an essay for the Center for Immigration Studies by the unusual figure Fredo Arias-King, a Harvard MBA, a Sovietologist, and an advisor to Vicente Fox during his 2000 Presidential campaign. He was the first to point out to me that Fox’s first Foreign Secretary, Jorge G. Castanea’s mother, a Soviet woman working a the UN, might have been a Soviet spy. Working for Fox, Arias-King met with 80 members of the U.S. Congress , and discussed immigration in detail with 50. Of those, 90% were enthusiastic about boosting immigration from Mexico. Immigration and Usurpation: Elites, Power, and the People’s Will Fredo Arias-King Americans are aware that their political class may not always act in their best interest. This belief is enshrined in the American character, its laws, and the very philosophy underpinning the U.S. Constitution. The Founding Fathers crafted things so that the “knaves” will be forced to abide by the will of the people, but they warned that their “natural progress” is to find ways to remain in power and increase that power at the people’s expense. They therefore also urged eternal vigilance, spiritedness, and the occasional revolt of the people. Thomas Jefferson, James Madison and others got it right—the knaves have, by and large, behaved, and their actions largely reflect in some way the will of the American people. Americans do not need to engage their politicians in an uncivil way—as happens most elsewhere—since the ballot box, the media, and other constitutional tools largely suffice. Indeed, the American political system works remarkably well. However, there are a handful of topics where the elites do not act in the interests of those they govern. Of these, the most notorious is the contentious issue of immigration. Why are politicians so keen on mass immigration while the common American is not? This has perplexed analysts. When I aided the foreign relations of presidential candidate and president-elect Vicente Fox back in 1999 and 2000, I met with almost 80 U.S. congressmen and senators during numerous trips and at several events. With just over 50 of them, my colleagues and I spoke about immigration in some depth, as it is one of the important bilateral topics. My findings were reported in a Backgrounder published by the Center for Immigration Studies called “Politics by Other Means.”1 It is a dense and academic paper, but the basic finding was: Indeed, American politicians are overwhelmingly pro-immigration, for a variety of reasons, and they do not always admit this to their constituents. Of those 50 legislators, 45 were unambiguously pro-immigration, even asking us at times to “send more.” This was true of both Democrats and Republicans. These empirical findings seemed to confirm what some analysts without that level of access termed as a political “perfect storm” of widespread political-elite support for immigration despite its general unpopularity with the average American. The paradox is that immigration is the only issue (perhaps besides trade policy) that represents a notorious discrepancy between elite and popular opinion in the United States.2 But this contradicts the established conventional wisdom of a representative democracy such as the United States. If mass immigration from Latin America has debatable benefits for the United States as a whole, if a majority of the American people is against it, and if immigrants cannot vote until they become naturalized (which can take years after their arrival), why would nine-tenths of the legislators we spoke with be so keen on increasing Before these encounters, I believed that it was a problem of either diffusion of responsibility, “creeping non-decision,” or collective rationalization with those legislators, but that was dispelled the more of them we met. Most of them seemed to be aware of the negative or at least doubtful consequences of mass immigration from Latin America, while still advocating mass immigration.3 The familiar reasons usually discussed by the critics were there: Democrats wanted increased immigration because Latin American immigrants tend to vote Democrat once naturalized (we did not meet a single Democrat that was openly against mass immigration); and Republicans like immigration because their sponsors (businesses and churches) do. But there were other, more nuanced reasons that we came upon, usually not discussed by the critics, and probably more difficult to detect without the type of access that we, as a Mexican delegation, had. Their “Natural Progress” While Democratic legislators we spoke with welcomed the Latino vote, they seemed more interested in those immigrants and their offspring as a tool to increase the role of the government in society and the economy. Several of them tended to see Latin American immigrants and even Latino constituents as both more dependent on and accepting of active government programs and the political class guaranteeing those programs, a point they emphasized more than the voting per se. Moreover, they saw Latinos as more loyal and “dependable” in supporting a patron-client system and in building reliable patronage networks to circumvent the exigencies of political life as devised by the Founding Fathers and expected daily by the average American. Republican lawmakers we spoke with knew that naturalized Latin American immigrants and their offspring vote mostly for the Democratic Party, but still most of them (all except five) were unambiguously in favor of amnesty and of continued mass immigration (at least from Mexico). This seemed paradoxical, and explaining their motivations was more challenging. However, while acknowledging that they may not now receive their votes, they believed that these immigrants are more malleable than the existing American: That with enough care, convincing, and “teaching,” they could be converted, be grateful, and become dependent on them. Republicans seemed to idealize the patron-client relation with Hispanics as much as their Democratic competitors did. Curiously, three out of the five lawmakers that declared their opposition to amnesty and increased immigration (all Republicans), were from border states. Also curiously, the Republican enthusiasm for increased immigration also was not so much about voting in the end, even with “converted” Latinos. Instead, these legislators seemingly believed that they could weaken the restraining and frustrating straightjacket devised by the Founding Fathers and abetted by American norms. In that idealized “new” United States, political uncertainty, demanding constituents, difficult elections, and accountability in general would “go away” after tinkering with the People, who have given lawmakers their privileges but who, like a Sword of Damocles, can also “unfairly” take them away. Hispanics would acquiesce and assist in the “natural progress” of these legislators to remain in power and increase the scope of that power. In this sense, Republicans and Democrats were similar. While I can recall many accolades for the Mexican immigrants and for Mexican-Americans (one white congressman even gave me a “high five” when recalling that Californian Hispanics were headed for majority status), I remember few instances when a legislator spoke well of his or her white constituents. One even called them “rednecks,” and apologized to us on their behalf for their incorrect attitude on immigration. Most of them seemed to advocate changing the ethnic composition of the United States as an end in itself. Jefferson and Madison would have perhaps understood why this is so—enthusiasm for mass immigration seems to be correlated with examples of undermining the “just and constitutional laws” they devised. One leading Republican senator over a period of months was advising us, through a mutual acquaintance, about which mechanisms to follow and which other legislators to lobby in order to ensure passage of the amnesty proposal. In the meantime, he would speak on television about the need to “militarize” the border. This senator was recently singled out by a taxpayer’s advocacy group as a leader in “pork”-related politics. Bill Richardson, who had served in Clinton’s cabinet and later became governor of New Mexico, kindly stopped to speak to our delegation at the Democratic National Convention in Los Angeles. He commented favorably to us: “What do Hispanics want? Fully funded government programs!” The Economist mentioned about his state:
Trailer-park poverty combined with a cult of personality, where government initiatives regularly bear the governor’s name, as they would with some Latin American potentate (the governor is half Mexican himself), prevails in a state that is 40 percent Hispanic, including Hispanics already many generations in the United States. Those that have come out supporting amnesty are also associated with other attempts to undermine the Jeffersonian and Madisonian model of democracy. Sen. Arlen Specter, for instance, a leading supporter of amnesty, years ago proposed another bill that would have changed the outcome of elections based on quotas, whereby electoral outcomes could be changed by a federal judge.7 Some legislators had also mentioned to us (oftentimes laughing) how they had “defanged” or “gutted” anti-immigration bills and measures, by neglecting to fund this program or tabling that provision, or deleting the other measure, etc. “Yes, we passed that law, but it can’t work because we also…” was a usual comment to assuage the Mexican delegations. In light of what we learned from speaking to them privately, it is surprising that many legislators have gone public recently with their pro-immigration views, as opposed to simply adding their votes discreetly and imposing a fait accompli. This is another conundrum, but may be explained because legislators also suffer a collective-action problem. My feeling is that if the vote on granting amnesty to the illegal migrants was up for a secret vote, then perhaps we would see a 90 percent vote in favor, coinciding with my random sample from six years ago. One such example of “natural progress” that legislators attempted to impose with no debate was when Pennsylvania state legislators—in the middle of the night before a recess— in July 2005 passed a bill giving themselves a modest pay raise. The civic reaction and spontaneous popular mobilization was such (with effigies of pigs carried by demonstrators calling their legislators “Harrisburg Hogs”), the legislators recanted and, with only one dissenting vote, repealed their pay raise weeks later. To Govern Is to Populate What could be motivating U.S. legislators to do the opposite, that is, to see their constituents—already politically mature and proven as responsible and civic-minded—as an obstacle needing replacement? In other words, why would they want to replace a nation that works remarkably well (that Sarmiento was hoping to emulate), with another that has trouble forming stable, normal countries? Mexicans are kind and hardworking, with a legendary hospitality, and unlike some European nations, harbor little popular ambitions to impose models or ideologies on others. However, Mexicans are seemingly unable to produce anything but corrupt and tyrannical rulers, oftentimes even accepting them as the norm, unaffected by allegations of graft or abuse.8 Mexico, and Latin American societies in general, seem to suffer from what an observer called “moral relativism,” accepting the “natural progress” of the political class rather than challenging it, and also appearing more susceptible to “miracle solutions” and demagogic political appeals. Mexican intellectuals speak of the corrosive effects of Mexican culture on the institutions needed to make democracy work, and surveys reveal that most of the population accepts and expects corruption from the political class.9 A sociological study conducted throughout the region found that Latin Americans are indeed highly susceptible to clientelismo, or partaking in patron-client relations, and that Mexico was high even by regional standards.10 In a Latin environment, there are fewer costs to behaving “like a knave,” which explains the relative failure of most Spanish-speaking countries in the Hemisphere: Pauperized populations with rich and entrenched knaves. Montesquieu’s separation-of-powers model breaks down in Latin America (though essentially all constitutions are based on it) since elites do not take their responsibilities seriously and easily reach extra-legal “understandings” with their colleagues across the branches of government, oftentimes willingly making the judicial and legislative powers subservient to a generous executive, and giving the population little recourse and little choice but to challenge the system in its entirety. These pathologies are already evident across the border. For example, at the height of the Monica Lewinsky scandal, when even President Clinton’s strongest backers such as Rep. Richard Gephardt were distancing themselves from him and calling on the president to “tell the truth,” the Hispanic Caucus in the U.S. Congress lent its support to the president. Rep. Esteban Torres stated “We’re going to stand by him to the end … no matter what!”11 The case of the “unconditional support” by the Hispanics in Congress to their patron demonstrated why the Montesquieu-Madisonian model had difficulty functioning in the Latin American context. This type of unconditional support seems to be what professional politicians of both parties expect from their Hispanic constituents and allies. When thinking of populating as a way of obtaining power, perhaps these U.S. legislators, rather than from the statesman Sarmiento, took an unconscious cue from another Latin American leader who used migration and ethnic policy for less laudable goals. Mexican President Luis Echeverría (1970-76), who began the cycle of political violence and economic crisis from which the country has yet to recover, pursued a policy of moving hundreds of thousands of impoverished people from the country’s south to the more prosperous and dynamic northern states, where they remain to this day, mostly in shantytowns. His goal was to neutralize those states’ more active civic culture that threatened his power—as these states were at the time the main source of opposition to his dictatorial ambitions. These pauperized and dependent migrants and their offspring would provide a ready source of votes for the ruling party along with a mobilizeable mass to counter (politically as well as physically) the more civic-oriented middle classes of those northern states and “crack” their will to challenge his corporatist regime. Along with other extra-constitutional tools (he almost succeeded in canceling the constitution to remain indefinitely as president), migration from undeveloped areas was used by Echeverría as “politics by other means.” Echeverría, in other words, was the ultimate knave. Do the U.S. legislators have an overt and well thought-out “plan,” as Echeverría did? That is unlikely. Unlike Echeverría, these 45 U.S. legislators (especially the Republican ones) may simply be following a string of what can be called “rational short-termisms,” that seem beneficial now even though they may unwittingly lead to adverse outcomes for them in the end. Like a diet rich in fats and sugar brings a jolt of energy and pleasure in the short run but causes health problems in the longer term, these congressmen still have incentives to allow and encourage mass immigration because of its low political cost for them and the perceived short-term benefits it brings (for them and the special interests that fund them). If these “rational short-termisms” exist within a given individual (where he assumes both the benefits and the costs, such as with an irresponsible diet), they are more prevalent in a country, as those accruing the benefits are not those who pay the costs, and have an incentive to organize themselves to pursue the behavior leading to those outcomes. Because of collective-action problems, those benefiting from mass immigration are better organized, even if they are in the minority and even if they are vaguely aware that “someone else” pays for their largesse. These groups only see the assets, not the liabilities. By nature, legislators should prefer these short-termisms, since the payoffs are immediate and directly attributed to a political figure, whereas the costs can be pushed into the future. The payoffs and benefits of more long-term policies are unlikely to be associated with a particular political figure and become, essentially, public goods. Just as there is a large body of literature on “economic failure,” we should begin to explore a related concept—“political failure,” which could be the Achilles heel of the American and other models of representative democracy. In the end, the result of mass Latin American immigration will not likely present the stark choice of democracy versus non-democracy for the United States, but the quality of democracy may indeed be affected. Acción Directa as a Double-Edged Sword These legislators are probably correct that, by acquiescing to mass immigration, they will eventually “crack” the immigration-control advocates. They do not need to win or even engage in a debate if they can change the terms of the game so decisively. However, they have only taken into account the legal or civilized resistance—from those who write in the papers or volunteer peacefully at the border. In Latin America, people engage in un-civil direct action because they have come to realize that attempting to convince their elites that their antisocial behavior has adverse consequences for the country—and expecting that this will dissuade them from engaging in it—is largely a futile exercise. But in the United States as well, once immigration-control advocates realize they cannot reach their goals through legal means, this could breed a form of resistance that has not occurred yet, but cannot be discounted offhand. The degree of usurpation and neglect of their fiduciary duty by legislators could provoke immigration-reform advocates to engage increasingly in civil resistance, so that instead of influencing political institutions through civic engagement (as Americans traditionally have), they may attempt to politicize individual institutions. Their direct actions are already being reported: local officers taking it upon themselves to detain illegal migrants, sit-ins at immigration offices, vandalizing of Mexican restaurants, threatening calls to the Hispanic mayor of Los Angeles, etc. Once these types of mobilizations begin, they will be difficult to stop. Some Americans may take a cue from Spanish/Latin American culture itself and engage in what Spaniards call acción directa, or “direct action.” A Spaniard once lamented that “In this country, nobody votes, but everyone protests.” Immigration advocates should not be surprised if Latin American immigrants and their offspring continue their tradition of direct action and ignoring laws and institutions—as the recent mass protests in cities across the country demonstrate. But they should also not be surprised if Americans also learn to pursue acción directa. An interesting test for the U.S. political class will be how they respond to Americans utilizing direct action, since they seem to tolerate and even encourage it for Latin American immigrants and their offspring. So far, their reaction has been predictable—accusing peaceful volunteers of being “vigilantes” and labeling critics as “racist,” while backing down in the face of mass protests by the illegal immigrants. There were even reports that the U.S. government had handed over to the Mexican government the names of the “Minutemen” critics and border-control volunteers. Moreover, those who challenge through extra-legal means the extra-constitutional and fait accompli pro-immigration methods of the elites would, paradoxically, be abiding more by the spirit and even letter of the U.S. Constitution than the political class being targeted by them. The Federalist Papers are replete with this philosophy. If they do so effectively, the reaction of the U.S. Congress may be the same as it was for the Pennsylvania legislature in the aftermath of the pay-raise scandal. Both policies are difficult to defend openly and publicly with an engaged citizenry. If Americans do indeed take up civil disobedience and acción directa, hopefully they would realize that targeting Mexicans will not solve their problem, because even if for some reason they could “neutralize” Mexico as a source of mass immigration, soon they would be targeting Indonesians or Africans or South Americans. But that would be attacking the symptoms and not the root cause of their malaise. Realizing this, what other events could turn the tables in favor of moderate and civic-minded immigration-reform advocates? One, if these politicians begin to realize that the consequences of mass immigration for them are not what they expected—when the string of “rational short-termisms” crashes in the rocks of failed electoral campaigns or mass mobilization by critics of immigration against their political careers. Perhaps that is why three of the five lawmakers critical of mass immigration we met with are from border states. They perhaps have already come to realize that their “fantasy constituents” were different than expected. But this realization is unlikely to come any time soon to the remaining lawmakers. Two, if a critical mass of Americans of Mexican and other Latin American descent take the lead in opposing the openly partisan and irredentist leaders mobilizing the illegal immigrants and the Latino citizens, since it is those types of leaders and provocateurs, not average populations at large, who start ethnic conflicts, as in Yugoslavia and Northern Ireland.12 But this is also unlikely because of the collective-action problem. American Latinos who criticize mass immigration tend not to organize, as they are especially targeted by the pro-immigration Latino “leaders.” A third peaceful way to close the gap between elite and popular opinion on the immigration issue is to pass certain political reforms that would help to assuage lawmakers’ concerns for their political and financial stability. Increasing their (already-high) salaries may be a small price to pay to reduce their proclivity to find solutions for their “natural progress” elsewhere, such as with immigration. However, in this case the medicine may be worse than the illness. A fourth way would be for a political entrepreneur to successfully use popular discontent with mass immigration to reach power. This is essentially what happened in Denmark. There, the antisocial behavior of Middle Eastern and other immigrants was largely ignored by both main parties and the press, both also displaying an elite consensus against the population’s antipathy for immigrants and for further immigration. The parties had even agreed between them not to make immigration an issue in campaigns or on television debates. Eventually, a political entrepreneur named Anders Fogh Rasmussen used the immigration issue to capture power inside his party, and then go on to win the general elections in 2001. As prime minister he enjoys popular support for his tough immigration and law-and-order policies, which also coincided with other reforms against big government and the welfare state. He was reelected in 2005, and even the opposition Social Democrats have dropped their prior position and now largely agree with Rasmussen’s views on immigration. Bilateral Codependence Rather than rational and mutually beneficial, U.S. bilateral relations with Mexico (as it was with Russia in the 1990s before NATO expansion) can instead be called “codependence,” which is defined by the Gale Encyclopedia of Psychology as “silent or even cheerful tolerance of unreasonable behavior from others,” or even a pathology of trying to fix things for other people and rescue them, which in turn encourages a certain behavior from the object to be rescued. These sacrifices and concessions (with countries as with people) produce a sense of entitlement and an unending string of additional unreasonable demands. The IMF also engaged in a form of codependence with Moscow in the 1990s—the more money that was lent to the Kremlin, the fewer reforms it implemented, and the more anti-U.S. and anti-Western rhetoric it engaged in, with much of that money going to finance the war in Chechnya, for its weapons industries, and for its political class.13 During the 18 months when I aided Fox’s foreign relations, in those meetings with what became the new Mexican elite I do not recall so many discussions about “what can we do to make tough decisions to reform Mexico,” but rather more “how can we get more concessions from the United States.” Indeed, Fox largely continued governing the country as his predecessors did, even appointing as head of the federal police agency an Echeverría loyalist who was allegedly involved in a deadly extortion attempt against a museum owner in 1972. According to several leading world rankings on corruption, quality of government, development, and competitiveness, Mexico actually worsened during Fox’s presidency.14 Lacking internal or external pressure, the Mexican elites have taken the path of least resistance, which is not the best outcome for the country. Paradoxically, as happens in co-dependent relations, a firm but polite defense of American interests by Washington would force the Mexican elites to act and in the end (surely after a brief period of acrimonious recriminations) would be beneficial for Mexico, much as the European Union’s tough accession laws force elites in lesser-developed aspiring members (Spain in the 1980s and Central European countries in the 1990s) to adopt painful and otherwise politically unfeasible reforms that affect special interests but that benefit average citizens. After all, the gap between elite and popular aspirations in these countries is wider than in the United States, and on a broader range of issues. This co-dependence is perhaps nowhere more evident than the personal relations of the political classes of Mexico and the United States. When speaking to these congressmen, we noticed an affinity toward the corrupt party we were attempting to overthrow in Mexico. Several had visited Mexico and apparently enjoyed lavish treatment from their hosts, even mentioning how some of the things they enjoyed in Mexico would not be possible at home. Even though the Mexican political class is notoriously corrupt, they can often count on stronger support in Washington than can several more worthy world leaders who are genuinely attempting to reform and improve their countries. The history of the Bush family is symptomatic. While snubbing pro-American reformers in the newly liberated Eastern Europe, George H.W. Bush did go out of his way to accommodate Mexico and its leader Carlos Salinas. Then-vice president and presidential candidate Bush openly endorsed Salinas after the latter’s fraudulent election in 1988, a favor that Salinas returned four years later when he met only with Bush and snubbed his Democratic rival, Bill Clinton. As presidents, Salinas and Bush crafted NAFTA, and then Bush assisted Salinas in joining the OECD (though Mexico was not qualified) and was even attempting to promote him to head the WTO before Salinas’s political star collapsed amid a torrent of corruption and political murders. Whereas Lech Wa?esa—the slayer of communism and harbinger of democracy for Poland and the rest of east-central Europe—publicly scolded his fellow former president George H.W. Bush in a Prague meeting in 1999 for having done much less than expected for the transformation of his country and the region as a whole, Salinas remains a close friend and admirer of Bush Sr. to this day. While Bush Sr. went out of his way to help Salinas, other deserving reformers besides Wa?esa also complained of having been ignored by Bush Sr., even in countries more important to U.S. security and prosperity than Mexico. For example, Bush Sr. repeatedly refused to give even a modicum of assistance (moral or financial) to the Russian government of acting Prime Minister Yegor Gaidar during the risky and painful reforms launched to dismantle the Soviet legacy and attempt to put Russia on a reform and democratic path. Bush’s lackadaisical and lukewarm relations with such figures have been widely criticized, and seem counterintuitive. Gaidar’s failure can largely be traced to the lack of political and financial support from the West, and the United States in particular, for his reforms. In April 2000, candidate George W. Bush followed in his father’s footsteps when he tacitly but unambiguously endorsed the candidate of Salinas’s ruling party against a then little-known opposition figure named Vicente Fox, perhaps believing that the official-party candidate, the former secret-police chief Francisco Labastida, would engage in a quid pro quo as president. Labastida himself could not receive the honor in person on April 7, 2000, since he had been fingered by the U.S. press as a possible target of the Drug Enforcement Administration because of his record as governor. Instead, he sent his wife to meet with Bush. Florida governor Jeb Bush knew for many years and apparently also received lavish treatment from Salinas’s brother Raúl, before Raúl was arrested on corruption and murder charges and spent the next decade in a Mexican high-security prison. Bush Sr. had a long friendship and business relations with Jorge Díaz Serrano, then director of the Mexican oil monopoly pemex, before he was also arrested in a power struggle and accused of embezzling over $50 million. The long-time politicos of the Hank Rhon family, who were suspected of laundering drug money and who continue to win elections in Mexico, were also reported to have contributed money to the gubernatorial campaigns of George W. Bush from a Texas bank they own.15 To their credit, no overtly illegal practice has been proven against the Bush family in their dealings with Mexico, but the appearance of admiration toward its ruling classes cannot be easily discounted. Though similar stories involving lesser politicians do not make headlines, several lawmakers we met also had a special, giddy mystique of Mexico as a place where moneyed leaders coexist with tame, grateful citizens. It would seem that the American political class has a special affinity for their colleagues south of the border. The appeal of their lavishness and impunity seems to strike a positive chord in the American politicians, who perhaps resent being held accountable by their citizens, who cannot become wealthy from politics, and who may be removed from power “unfairly” and without warning. Conclusion The Founding Fathers also prescribed a cure for usurpation. Hopefully the American people will not apply it so literally, for the sake of those Posted by Svyatoslav Igorevich on Wednesday, August 16, 2006 at 12:53 PM in Demographics, Immigration Comments:2
Posted by Svyatoslav Igorevich on August 16, 2006, 01:33 PM | #
That is the problem, in a nutshell. The First Estate, the media, is supposed to check these problems by informing the public, but of course the 1st is in the hands of hostile aliens. 3
Posted by James Bowery on August 16, 2006, 01:58 PM | # It would have been most interesting if the Founders had had the foresight to place a national origins restriction on immigration in the Constitution, or at least restriction on ownership of “the press” (which would have obviously included mass media) to only those who qualified as “our posterity”. Obviously, in retrospect, to not do so, and then to admit Jews to the US, was suicidal. I’m not sure such constitutional restrictions could have survived the presence of Jews anyway but it would have at least given the Republic a chance. 4
Posted by Nick Tamiroff on August 16, 2006, 03:39 PM | # Svy-A chilling article;But I don’t blame the opportunistic Jews-WE let it occur,while we were the vast majority.And now we are paying the price for complacency.First the Socialists,then the Communists,then the NEA,ACLU,NAACP,JDL,etc.,have taken control of our lives via unelected bureaucrats,who do not go away with a change of government.Most of our Academic corps of shit-heads needs to spend time in a gulog where they can pontificate amonst themselves the values of liberalism.I dbout if one person out of twenty knows the U.S. is a Republic-NOT the frail democracy Madison and Franklin derided-justifiably so.Whoever said"first,kill all the lawyers"left out the invisibles-AKA bureaucrats.WE are fucked ,my friends,unless we get some balls. Testosterone shots for ALL! SEMPER Fi ! 5
Posted by Svyatoslav Igorevich on August 16, 2006, 05:18 PM | #
So if someone leaves his property out in the open and someone steals it, you don’t blame the thief, just the owner? That strikes me as odd. Don’t worry though, if you attempt to awaken your folk to the goings-on, jewry won’t reciprocate. They will blame you, vilify you, and attempt to break you. Uncle Toms are complicit. Jews are complicit. Race-replacing immigrants are complicit. Couch-potato whites are complicit. Why let anyone off the hook? 6
Posted by Guessedworker on August 16, 2006, 05:38 PM | # Very true, Svi. In a war for survival the complacent aid the other side. Best to make the point now rather than when it is too late - always assuming it isn’t already too late. 7
Posted by James Bowery on August 16, 2006, 06:11 PM | # Remember that in an immune-suppressed patient, there are “opportunistic infections”—which are to be distinguished from the immune-suppressive disease itself. Now, if we carry this analogy to our present situation, which ethnicities have been most prominent in “genes don’t matter”, “thinking about race is evil”, etc? Those are NOT “opportunistic”—they are immune suppressive. Got it? 8
Posted by Al Ross on August 16, 2006, 07:24 PM | # I think Nick’s point about a degree of self-blame is valid because if the Founding Fathers had read the Old Testament more closely (other than for the purposes of plundering the ethnically exclusive narrative for characters to be included in the absurd concoction of Masonic ritual) they would have observed a pattern of predatory, rapacious and racially supremacist behaviour exhibited by the Jews and validated by the favourite-playing deity in whom they professed to believe. 9
Posted by Svyatoslav Igorevich on August 16, 2006, 07:46 PM | # James, my new word for the whole ball of wax is “psyops.” That seems to encompass the vast majority of jewish political endeavors - psyops. 10
Posted by Amalek on August 16, 2006, 10:07 PM | # Further reading for Mr Al Ross
“In whatever country Jews have settled in any great number, they have lowered its moral tone; depreciated its commercial integrity; have segregated themselves and have not been assimilated; have sneered at and tried to undermine the Christian religion upon which that nation is founded, by objecting to its restrictions; have built up a state within the state; and when opposed have tried to strangle that country to death financially, as in the case of Spain and Portugal. “For over 1,700 years, the Jews have been bewailing their sad fate in that they have been exiled from their homeland, as they call Palestine. But gentlemen, did the world give it to them in fee simple, they would at once find some reason for not returning. Why? Because they are vampires, and vampires do not live on vampires. They cannot live only among themselves. They must subsist on Christians and other people not of their race. “If you do not exclude them from these United States, in their Constitution, in less than 200 years they will have swarmed here in such great numbers that they will dominate and devour the land and change our form of government, for which we Americans have shed our blood, given our lives our substance and jeopardized our liberty. “If you do not exclude them, in less than 200 years our descendants will be working in the fields to furnish them substance, while they will be in the counting houses rubbing their hands. I warn you, gentlemen, if you do not exclude Jews for all time, your children will curse you in your graves. “Jews, gentlemen, are Asiatics, let them be born where they will nor how many generations they are away from Asia, they will never be otherwise. Their ideas do not conform to an American’s, and will not even thou they live among us ten generations. A leopard cannot change its spots. Jews are Asiatics, are a menace to this country if permitted entrance, and should be excluded by this Constitutional Convention.” -Benjamin Franklin, 1787, at The Constitutional Convention, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania- remarks recorded in the diary of Charles Cotesworth Pinckney of Southern Carolina “I am a real Christian, that is to say, a disciple of the doctrines of Jesus, very different from the Platonists, who call me infidel and themselves Christians and preachers of the Gospel, while they draw all their characteristic dogmas from what its author never said nor saw. They have compounded from the heathen mysteries a System beyond the comprehension of man, of which the great reformer of the vicious ethics and deism of the Jews, were he to return on earth, would not recognize one feature.” -Thomas Jefferson, alleged philosemite: letter to Charles Thomson, January 9, 1816 “They (the Jews) work more effectively against us, than the enemy’s armies. They are a hundred times more dangerous to our liberties and the great cause we are engaged in… It is much to be lamented that each state, long ago, has not hunted them down as pest to society and the greatest enemies we have to the happiness of America.” -George Washington (“Maxims of George Washington”) 11
Posted by Al Ross on August 16, 2006, 11:24 PM | # Thank you, Amalek, for reminding me of these invaluable quotes. 12
Posted by Desmond Jones on August 17, 2006, 12:55 AM | # Amalek, Do you know where one might view the the diary of Charles Cotesworth Pinckney? Apparently, U.C. San Diego’s copy of the “Maxims of George Washington” confirms Washington’s words, however, does not mention Jews. Is there a source that confirms Washington was referring to Jews? 13
Posted by Amalek on August 17, 2006, 10:44 AM | # Desmond: Some say that Washington was referring to financial speculators (who are never Jews, of course not, perish the thought) as the ‘black gentry’ undermining the Revolution. No doubt if he spoke thus delphically, today he would immediately be denounced by Abe Foxman for ‘coded’ antisemitism, and by Je$$e Jack$on for using ‘black’ as a pejorative;-) Washington was more Jew-friendly than most of the Founders, and so here’s another oft-quoted passage: “It is now no more that toleration is spoken of as if it were the indulgence of one class of people that another enjoyed the exercise of their inherent natural rights, for, happily, the Government of the United States, which gives to bigotry no sanction, to persecution no assistance, requires only that they who live under its protection should demean themselves as good citizens in giving it on all occasions their effectual support.” (letter to the Hebrew Congregation of Newport, Conn., August 1790) Now, with 200 years’ experience under their belts, let Americans consider whether American Jewry has ‘demeaned’ itself (18th century meaning: comported itself) at all times with undivided attention to the national interest, and whether they have furnished their ‘effectual support’ through, for example, enthusiastic participation in the armed forces in time of war. 14
Posted by Matra on August 17, 2006, 11:28 AM | # Do you know where one might view the the diary of Charles Cotesworth Pinckney? Its very existence has been questioned. It became a major historical issue in the 1930s but when the great Charles Beard and a few others investigated and found nothing to indicate Franklin being hostile to Jews the quote was deemed a forgery. Given that Jewish leftists have been at the forefront of the public relations war against the Founding Fathers (they seem to prefer Lincoln and America’s “Second Republic” as the French would’ve called it) they would not mind such remarks about Jews being known to the present-day PC American if true. (It’s not as if American worship these men anymore). To the Left in general such quotes would just be more evidence that the nation’s founders were a bunch of bigoted dead white males thus providing another excuse for removing the names of slaveholders Washington and Jefferson from public institutions and spaces. 15
Posted by Desmond Jons on August 17, 2006, 11:44 AM | # Amalek, Very well old chap, this colonial will give you the benefit of the doubt. Still, it leaves one wondering, whether ol’ Ben actually spoke those words. 16
Posted by Svyatoslav Igorevich on August 17, 2006, 01:32 PM | # If there’s no good paper trail for those quotes I say drop ‘em. 17
Posted by Rnl on August 17, 2006, 04:38 PM | # “the United States ... requires only that they who live under its protection should demean themselves as good citizens in giving it on all occasions their effectual support.” Which of course they haven’t done, as Amalek points out. The whole quote is also misleading. In its key phrases Washington was repeating to the Hebrew Congregation of Newport the words that they had already used in the letter to which he was replying, viz. “we [i.e. the Hebrew Congregation, or perhaps American Jews in general] now, with a deep sense of gratitude ... behold a government ... which to bigotry gives no sanction, to persecution no assistance.” Those are not Washington’s own words. He may have agreed with them, but he didn’t think them up. He just repeated them in his reply. Washington was more Jew-friendly than most of the Founders We can forgive him for that. He was a tolerant man. He lived before the misnamed Russian Revolution. He never could have imagined the 1965 “reform” of immigration law. He couldn’t see Abe Foxman working busily to promote multiculturalism, which the Founders would have interpreted as an especially dangerous brand of factionalism. He couldn’t see the extraordinary “entanglement” of Israeli interests with American Mideast policy. He saw, in 1790, only a small religious minority that wanted to practice its peculiar religion, and as a man of the Enlightenment, he correctly believed that small religious minorities shouldn’t be persecuted simply on the basis of their religious beliefs. The descendants of these eighteenth-century Jews, along with the East European Jews who arrived later, repaid the tolerance that Washington endorsed and the tolerance which the United States has historically practiced not with loyalty to the nation from which they received so much, and not even with “a deep sense of gratitude,” but with a deliberate attempt, extending over many decades, to transform their tolerant Euro-American benefactors into a feeble minority within the nation that their forefathers created. If George Washington were alive today, knowing what we know now, he’d be running National Vanguard. 18
Posted by Al Ross on August 17, 2006, 07:39 PM | # America’s preponderantly Masonic Founding Fathers, being products of an Enlightenment which, ironically(given the anti-Jewish sentiments of Voltaire and Diderot) contributed to a lessening of overt Jew-hatred, would seem unlikely ‘anti-Semites’. This is because the Masonic ritual of which they were literally masters is derived from various Old Testament tales of the Jews (in which the main characters are venerated) and centred on the building of King Solomon’s temple. 19
Posted by Amalek on August 17, 2006, 08:48 PM | # Alexander Hamilton was rumoured to be Jewish on his father’s side. Pop’s name was Lavien, which might have been a variation of Levine. Hamilton grew up on Nevis, which had a rich Jewish mercantile community, and attended a Jewish-run school, learning Hebrew. He was philosemitic throughout his life, and his penchant for centralised banking and hostility to states’ rights make him seem like a proto-neocon. 20
Posted by Amalek on August 17, 2006, 09:01 PM | # On further investigation I think the Franklin passage is *probably* a hoax; but I’m somewhat consoled for my impetuosity by seeing the ADL having to pray Charles Beard in aid as an ‘eminent historian’. If Beard had had his way, the USA would have sat out WW2. He is one of Devorah Lipstadt’s historical hate objects in her miserable little monograph, ‘Denying the Holocaust’. 21
Posted by On Holliday on August 18, 2006, 08:02 AM | # It cannot be overstated how important this essay is. More important than any other factor in white decline is the simple fact that the white elites have abandoned the white masses - no, worse than that, the white elites are openly hostile to the white masses. This is unique, one is hard-pressed to think of any other group in which the leadership is hostile to the continuity of the group and prefers members of other groups to their own. This is an important key as to why whites are in a death spiral. All other groups have leaders looking out for their interests; in the ‘game’ of group competition, Chinese or Hispanic or black leaders are on the side of their group, working for ‘victory’ for their group, for whites, the elites are traitors openly working for white defeat and collaborating for colored victory. Why this is so can be debated (KMacD has some interesting observations), but the fact that this is so cannot be denied. And that is what makes the idea of a “white dominated society” such a joke, for all the physically white politicians in America and Europe do *not* represent white interests. They’ve thrown their lot in with the others. I have to laugh, where Senator Obama was bristling about being labeled a “black leader” (which he is, but that may stand in the way of presidential success), and asked, ‘who are the white leaders?’ He submitted some possibilities - all aracial liberals like Bill Gates, he who spends his fortune on schemes to boost coloreds. That’s the equation: colored leaders look after the interests of coloreds *and* white leaders look after the interests of coloreds as well. In other words, alone of all groups, white leaders do not represent the interests of their group, but openly disavow such interests and pursue the interests of others. If some of these elites can be reformed, fine, but it would seem we need a new white elite, a new leadership cadre. Of course, the existence of “right-wing conservatism” stands in the way, as the “conservative” wing of the traitor class is a distraction for people who otherwise may wake up to the facts. The existence of such an attitude by the elites is yet another reason why “citizenism” is a dead-end for whites. With no leadership to defend their interests and with “white leaders” actively working against white interests, the idea of “what’s good for Americans” will always be constructed in a way as to harm white interests. America itself has been deconstructed and reconstructed as to mean “multiculturalism.” Only the explicit defense of white interests can, in the long run, actually defend those interests, for “squik ink” methods to do so will be sabotaged by aracial elites who can hide their anti-white agenda behind flag-waving aracial patriotism and “conservatism.” And, without a true leadership class, the white masses, like lemmings, will follow that to oblivion. 22
Posted by Nick Tamiroff on August 18, 2006, 10:45 AM | # On Holliday-What a chilling and correct essay-Iwish it could be written where all White Americans could read it.I used to consider myself a"conservative Republican"in the Reagan days,but now ,oil and water have been homogenized,to the point that all we have left is slime.I appreciate your term"aracial”,for to me,it indicates color-blindness,whichhas been foisted upon us for the last 30 years,in direct contridictation to reality.Black /Hispanic crime is not reported,demographics are skewed to suit the beholder,and"All is well in the USA”.We are FUCKED,friends and fellow Whites,unless someone with balls[Tancredo?]stirs the pot of complacency. Testosterone shots for all.Cheers&Semper Fi! 23
Posted by Nick Tamiroff on August 18, 2006, 10:55 AM | # Ya’ll-please excuse my typing errors-I’m not as dumb as I sometimes appear to be -I’m a one finger typist ,and at 67 will never get any better.LOL 24
Posted by Svyatoslav Igorevich on August 18, 2006, 03:57 PM | # Nick, I don’t know what it’s like to pick up new skills in one’s 60s, but I know picking up typing in my late 20s was trivial. If I recall correctly it took only a few lessons, adding up to probably not even a full day’s work. Next entry: The jihadists are using Israel to distract and lull the West Previous entry: Officials: Japanese Are Suffering Due To Western Business Practices |
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Posted by Svyatoslav Igorevich on August 16, 2006, 01:24 PM | #
This senator was recently singled out by a taxpayer’s advocacy group as a leader in “pork”-related politics.
Byrd and Stevens spring to mind but I’m sure an MRnik has the inside track - to whom is he referring?