Thursday, May 17, 2007

The Death Knell Of America : Immigration "comprimise' reached.

I am old enough to remember a similar 'reform' 20 years ago that was supposed to end all illegal immigration. The law was ignored and the problem actually mushroomed, under Clinton-Gore who sought to fast track immigrants (even those with felony records) because they realized that people on public assistance make great democrats.

So it will be with this - amnesty will be granted (itself an insult to those who have been waiting to immigrate here legally), of course, but all serious efforts at enforcement ignored. Why? Because the super-elite want open borders and an end to the nation-state. No this is not conspiracy theory - its well documented in books by Samuel P. Huntington and even advocated on the pages of the New York Times and Wall Street Journal.

It should be common sense, and perhaps it still is but it cannot be discussed in our post-PC world. Government is the result of culture. Change the people and the culture change. Change the culture and government changes. That is why those seeking a strong, centrally controlled government in Europe and America are so eager to replace the people of Europe and the US- the people are in the way and they figure that poor uneducated welfare dependent immigrants make better subje- err citizens.

Make no mistake about it. America as sovereign state is an obstacle to the goals of our so called leaders and I sincerely doubt the constitution or our present borders will last my lifetime.

The constitution with its right to bear arms, freedom of religion and expression are definate obstacles that must be 'done away with '. Its no accident that people like Mayor Bloomberg are doing just that.




Reference:
Who are We

Samuel Huntington’s new book forces a debate on immigration and American destiny.

By John O’Sullivan

Samuel Huntington’s book was notorious even before the page proofs were sent out to magazine editors for the pre-publication of extracts. Rumors had circulated for at least a year beforehand that the author of The Clash of Civilizations and other distinguished works of political theory was about to produce a book on immigration that was not wholly in favor of it. In fact, while Who Are We? deals in detail with current immigration to the U.S., the book as a whole is about the wider and more important topic of national identity. As we shall see, that is making it more controversial rather than less. Still, the first intimations of controversy were inspired by the astounding prospect of an anti-immigration book from one of the nation’s most respected political scientists and a fully paid-up member of the American establishment. If Sam Huntington broke ranks, then elite support for high levels of immigration might fracture at the very moment that the Bush administration was proposing an open-borders policy. And that would be high politics as well as intellectual controversy.

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