Re: Greenspan, a common criminal

From: Les Cargill (lcargill_at_bellsouth.net)
Date: 07/05/04


Date: Mon, 05 Jul 2004 12:09:31 -0400

Johnny Marcos wrote:

> Les Cargill <lcargill@bellsouth.net> wrote in
> news:u1WFc.808$jJ3.419@bignews5.bellsouth.net:
>
>
>>Johnny Marcos wrote:
>
>
>>Because it is not consistent with the principles under which
>>this country was founded.
>
>
> http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0684870533/ref=pd_s
> im_books
> _3/104-0001214-8783907?v=glance&s=books
>
> The author seeks at length to prove that the American Creed,
> which he
> defines as a Protestant-influenced ideology modeled on the
> British
> system, was the founders' original intent and remains America's
> best
> course
>
> Immigration when combined with assimilation is good, but
> Mexican-American immigration has created problems due to lack of
> assimilation, lack of shared values including the Calvinist ethic
> and
> failure to consider themselves American rather than Mexican.

My observation cannot be considered comprehensive, but I've
seen nothing but very nearly absolute assimilation.

> According
> to Huntington, some of this is due to deliberate actions of the
> Mexican
> government in an attempt to export their unemployed to the U.S.
> and to
> import at least some of the wages those exported receive to
> Mexico.

Which has been highly effective, for both parties.

> Also, in Huntington's view Mexico is using their expatriate
> community to
> influence U.S. policy to the benefit of Mexico. Some of his data
> is
> disturbing. For example he documents a decline in college
> attendence for
> third and fourth generation Mexican-Americans

This is largely true of anything-Americans ( as per
The Bell Curve )

>as well as a
> corresponding
> lack of their movement into the professions. 4. Elites,
> cosmopolitans,
> deconstructionists, one-worlders, academics, and governmental
> authorities are out of touch with the views of "average'
> Americans who
> still view the world in terms of nationality and believe in the
> 'American dream'. He sums up with comments reflective of his
> earlier
> "The Clash Of Civilizations And The New World Order" saying that
> we have
> a choice about America's role in the world- cosmopolitan,
> imperial,
> national.
>

Deconstructionists can go pound sand. I'm speaking of
who will actually *work* out there.

<snip>
> I think the charges of
> xenophobia by some reviewers are entirely specious.
>

Bosh. It's pure xeonphobia, of the stripe "invented"
by the Hearst Newspapers.

> http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/1893554732/ref=pd_s
> im_books
> _2/104-0001214-8783907?v=glance&s=books
>
> Dr. Hanson is sympathetic to everyone affected by this except the
> multi-culturalist professors who promote the "Aztlan movement" (a
> return
> of the U.S. Southwest to Mexico). These professors will have
> apoplexy
> over this book.
>

There are still Seperatists in Mississippi, too.

> Few people in this country are aware of the strong feelings that
> Hispanic professors and legal and illegal aliens have about
> turning this
> part of our country into a kind of branch of Mexico.
>

In many ways, it *will* be. Demographics are like the
tide.

<snip>
>>
>>He pays his taxes, shows up on time and pays his
>>bills.
>
>
> A little bit of penicillin is good for you - too much and you
> die.

Which is why Vincente Fox is trying to actually improve the
domestic economy of Mexico.

The impied reading of Gibbon that Rome fell because
of some racial dispurity among the cohorts is plainly false.

That's an effect, not a cause. And it may not even be
relevant to America. I cannot say a cat who is Mexican
in origin is not every bit as American as I am.

--
Les Cargill


Relevant Pages

  • Is Univision Programmed by David Duke?
    ... North American prejudice against "miscegenation," usher in a new era ... Mestizo nations like Mexico and mulatto ... in Mexico racial segregation is worsening. ... the corruption of Mexican political life ...
    (rec.audio.opinion)
  • Re: Technical and Spiritual Development
    ... he would have been able to take all of Mexico. ... >>did have a lot of American support. ... You'd think the showing of the Mexican Regulars against an unorganized ...
    (sci.space.history)
  • First India, now Mexico
    ... Seniors head south to Mexican nursing homes ... AJIJIC, Mexico - After Jean Douglas turned 70, she realized she couldn't ... Mexican nursing home managers expect more American seniors to head ...
    (rec.sport.pro-wrestling)
  • Re: A Renewed Mexican-American War
    ... > Arizona, and New Mexico. ... As far as the Mexican government is ... > This has major implications for American politics. ... > to twelve million illegals living among us and using our schools, ...
    (sci.econ)
  • Re: Pinko de Mayo
    ... Communist Mexican Monday or Communist Enemy Alien Monday. ... AFSCME, the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees ... taken or wages depressed by illegal aliens, ... every illegal alien household in America on average ...
    (soc.retirement)