Monday, July 28, 2014

George Will: A Gated Community Organizer




Beltway republicans like George Will really piss me off.  I despise nothing more than a gated community organizer.  What in the hell does this guy know about illegal immigration?  How many illegal aliens does he encounter at work?  Do his children or grandchildren go to underperforming public schools that are infested with illegal alien children who don’t speak English?  I know damn well he’s not standing in line at social services behind Maria and her litter of wailing brats.

Mr. Will believes we can absorb all these eight year olds with teddy bears.  The majority of these invaders are teenagers.  Those who have Care Bears are accompanied by a mother, or picked up by a family member who’s already here.  Does Mr. Will believe these children are here to be adopted by Americans?  Not likely.

Assimilation is difficult when an immigrant lives in a diaspora. It’s even more difficult when their language, culture and traditions are not similar to ours.  It’s near impossible when they don’t want to be Americans.  How many times have we seen Latinos wave the Mexican flag at immigration rallies?  It happens at almost every one of them.





People like Mr. Will love to quote Emma Lazarus.  I’m sure he has to be aware that the United States had quotas for various countries in the early 1900’s.  Some weren’t allowed here at all, particularly the Asians.  Those who did make it here had to meet certain qualifications, or were sent back.  As of now, the United States has no qualifying standards.  We basically have an open border.

The noted scholar Samuel P. Huntington, who is now deceased, warned us about massive immigration from any one country.  In this case he wrote about Mexico, however, I do believe it applies to all of Latin America since these people have a common culture and language.

  As their numbers increase, Mexican-Americans feel increasingly comfortable with their own culture and often contemptuous of American culture.  They demand recognition of their culture and the historic Mexican identity of the American southwest.  They increasingly call attention to and celebrate their Hispanic and Mexican past.  What their growth in numbers has done, according to one 1999 report, “is help ‘Latinize’ many Hispanic people who are finding it easier to affirm their heritage…they find strength in numbers, as younger generations grow up with more ethnic pride and as Latin influence starts permeating fields like entertainment, advertising, and politics.”

We’ve all heard of La Raza and their mythical Aztland.  Well take a look at the map below.  Do you notice what Honduras, Guatemala, and Mexico have in common? 









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