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Post a Comment On: Steve Sailer: iSteve

"My new VDARE.com column:"

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Anonymous Proofreader said...

A companion book to Manent's would be Guillaume Faye's: "La Colonisation de L'Europe".The book is a landmark for which the author was duly fined.
Let me summarize his main points on fighting inmigration:

MEASURES TO BE IMPLEMENTED
A) Measures in agreement with International Rights:

1) supression of “jus soli” in favour of “jus sanguinis”.

2) No work permits issued to non-europeans (Faye means here just “EU citizens” which I don´t agree with).

3) Legal aliens of non-european blood aren´t allowed to work or benefit from Social Security.

4) Visas are only valid for one non-renewable year.

5) Foreign felons are automatically deported and barred from further visits to the country.

6) Illegals are deported on sight; illegal felons are deported when they finish their time.

7) Aliens no longer will benefit from public services not generally available to citizens.

8) Restriction of visas issued to African and Asian countries.

B) Measures not in agreement with International Rights (or with the Universal Declaration of Human Rights for that matter)

(Faye states that sooner or later, drastic measures will have to be undertaken in order to save Europe from its alien depredators. Better to be kicked from the UN than perish, in other words)

1) Retroactive abrogation of citizenship to aliens (Faye uses the French: “allogènes")

2) Subsidized policy of gradual repatriation for these aliens. Unlike current similar measures, repatriation here is to be understood as mandatory, i.e. deportation.

3) Muslims would be given the same treatment as Christians in Muslim lands: that is, fully legal discrimination on a reciprocal level.

4) Positive discrimination (Affirmative action) will be replaced by negative discrimination in favour of natives.

There´s more here, and the book is free to download:

http://www.geocities.com/colonisationdeleurope/index.html

9/10/07, 4:52 AM

Anonymous Mark said...

What will Europe's immigration policies lead to? Well maybe something like this:

"All seven candidates said they would work on changing immigration laws during their first year in the White House.

"Clinton criticized the immigration bill proposed in the last Congress, dominated by Republicans. That legislation would have penalized those who help illegal immigrants. "I said it would have criminalized the good Samaritan. It would have criminalized Jesus Christ," she said.

"Richardson, one of two candidates who speak fluent Spanish, objected to the debate rules that required all candidates to answer in English. The rule was designed to make sure that no candidate had an advantage in appealing to the Spanish-speaking audience.

"I'm disappointed today that 43 million Latinos in this country, for them not to hear one of their own speak Spanish, is unfortunate," Richardson said.

Dodd, who served in the Peace Corps in the Dominican Republic, also speaks Spanish fluently. He called for more U.S. engagement with Latin America, including a lifting of the trade embargo against Cuba.

"We're allowing a Hugo Chavez to win a public relations effort in Latin America because we don't invest enough in Latin America," he said."

"Invest," of course, is code for "give billions away to."

Europe's headed there. America already is there. Our new demographic reality pretty much already assures that a genuine conservative will never get elected, and that genuine reform of our immigration laws is all but impossible. From here on out, large scale immigration is a given.

The only thing that could stop it is some serious catastrophe - probably a major recession. The inability to buy stuff is the only thing that ever really shakes Americans out of our shopping-induced stupor. Given the size of our trade deficit, our consumer debt, and the mortgage disaster that may happen sooner than we think.

9/10/07, 5:23 AM

Anonymous chrysoperil said...

Moreover, the French language may be more conducive to lucid rationality than any other tongue.

Why? The question of genetic influence on language is a very interesting one, however, and so is the reverse.

9/10/07, 3:57 PM

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