Monday, March 13, 2006

Stalemate?

The Center for Immigration Studies is of the opinion that based on the divide between the corporate American elites, whom the Senate want to help, and the Average Citizen whom the House has been scared into paying heed. That's a pretty good assessment at this point, while I still hold out hope for the efforts of the grassroots to prevail.

Divide is too deep for immigration reform


Christian Science Monitor


"The Senate is still working on legislation. But proposals include a guest-worker program that would include what Mr. Camarota regards as amnesty in disguise for illegals living here now.

In rich nations, no program of guest or temporary workers has ever led to such workers going home after their time was up. To think they will is 'just silly,' Camarota says. In Germany, most Turkish 'guest' workers have remained. The same is true of South Asians in Britain and North Africans in France."
Look, when other Western nations are having crises with multiculturalism, it is prudent to project those difficulties upon our own status quo.

We fail to learn at our own risk from cars burning in Muslim communities in France, the sharia-law-inspired executions in Denmark and the Islam-inspired bombings in Britain and Spain. While most of our illegal aliens do not originate from Muslim lands, the cultural disparity between third-world Latin America and the US has the same potential for being counter-productive to future generations of Americans.

Any alien cultural group that any nation imports en-mass is a threat. Screw the multiculturalists who hope that we don't notice the deadly problems that are sure to come if their dreams are realized.

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