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Saturday, May 30, 2015

Ann Coulter's War

This week, iconoclastic master Ann Coulter released her new book, "Adios, America!"

The book has already been labeled racist by the mainstream left, which fears her argument, and will undoubtedly be marginalized by the mainstream right, which doesn't want to hear it.

Coulter's thesis is simple: Since Senator Teddy Kennedy, D-Mass., rammed through the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965, America's immigration system has transformed from a device for enriching the nation for both native-born and immigrants into a scheme for importing anti-American voters.

What made America America, Coulter argues, was a particular blend of Protestant religion and European civilization that led to the rise of the greatest nation in human history. What will unmake America, she continues, is a deliberate attempt to poison that blend with a flood of immigrants with wildly different values.

Coulter points out that the real number of immigrants currently residing in America illegally far surpasses the 11 million consistently put forth by politicians and media. That 11 million springs from census data, which is notoriously unreliable, given that immigrants here illegally typically don't spend time answering government surveys. The real number, she argues, is far closer to 30 million. And those 30 million immigrants in America illegally drive down wages, shred social safety nets, drive up the crime rate and congeal the American melting pot into a melange of inferior cultural values competing for local dominance.

"The foreign poor are prime Democratic constituents because they're easily demagogued into tribal voting," Coulter points out. "Race loyalty trumps the melting pot. ... The American electorate isn't moving left — it's shrinking. Democrats figured out they'd never win with Americans, so they implemented an evil, genius plan to change this country by restocking it with voters more favorably disposed to left-wing policies than Americans ever would be."

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9 comments:

Anonymous said...

Yes. Inferior cultural values.

Somebody needed to say it.

Anonymous said...

spot on

Anonymous said...

It's no wonder neither party would get behind this testimony. They're both legions of born and bred liars that can't stand the truth.

Anonymous said...

Couldn't agree more. The entitlement nation continues.

Anonymous said...

The final straw will be the Africans from Nigeria, then we are finished!

Anonymous said...

"What made America America, Coulter argues, was a particular blend of Protestant religion and European civilization that led to the rise of the greatest nation...." So this particular blend does not include the blacks brought to this country to build the agrarian south? Or the Chinese immigrants who built our first railroads? Or Mexicans who were part of Texas and the southwest before these were even American states? What absolute rubbish.

Anonymous said...

Anonymous Anonymous said...
Yes. Inferior cultural values.

Somebody needed to say it.

May 30, 2015 at 4:10 PM

why? so you would feel superior? hogwash.

Anonymous said...

So this particular blend does not include the blacks brought to this country to build the agrarian south? Or the Chinese immigrants who built our first railroads? Or Mexicans who were part of Texas and the southwest before these were even American states? What absolute rubbish.

May 30, 2015 at 10:10 PM

of course it does NOT include those groups. you had to be WHITE.

Anonymous said...

"So this particular blend does not include the blacks brought to this country to build the agrarian south? Or the Chinese immigrants who built our first railroads? Or Mexicans who were part of Texas and the southwest before these were even American states?"

I hate to inject a little intellectual honesty in your feel-good rant but the early blacks and Chinese were laborers that were organized to pick cotton and lay railroad track. Contributory - yes. Formative - no. And the early Mexicans in the southwest? They were largely isolated to the outposts that the Apache allowed them. Coulter's views may not appeal to the simplistic and the politically-correct, but there is some historical accuracy in what she says.