Buckley Rediscovers
Immigration? [Juan
Mann]-
12/16/04
William F. Buckley
writes:
"The immigration
problem is the primary unmet challenge of modern times.
It is so because the whole of our political
establishment cringes at any suggestion that the United
States is inhospitable to immigration."
[December 15, 2004]
Does that mean he's going to hire Peter Brimelow back?
Peter Brimelow comments:
Buckley’s comment is of course hilarious, given that he
himself cringingly
purged National Review of immigration
reformers in 1998—it returned to the subject, with
obvious
distaste, some months after 9/11. After careful
study, I have concluded that his opinions are more or
less randomly grouped around his ego needs. We hope to
publish a festschrift in honor of the 80th
birthday of this maker and breaker of modern
conservativism next year.
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Does Mexico
Have Any Shame?
(Don’t Answer!)
[Bryanna Bevens]
-
12/16/04
Today’s edition of the Arizona Republic ran a
story by Chris Hawley, a reporter with their Republic
Mexico City Bureau.
“For the first time,
Mexicans would be able to vote in the United States for
the president of Mexico under a bill nearing approval in
that country's House of Representatives.
If the measure becomes law, it will likely set off a
fierce battle for millions of potential voters in
Arizona and other states and will allow Mexican
presidential candidates to campaign in the United
States.”
[Mexico
may set up voting booths in U.S. December 15, 2004]
You might be wondering how this came about. According to
Hawley,
“The final bill
emerged Tuesday, the last day of the legislative
session, after a week of intense negotiation and
lobbying by activist groups from the United States.”
Yep, activist groups from America.
If passed, Mexican candidates would be able to campaign
in the United States and Mexican nationals would be able
to cast their ballot at a voting booth in their home
town. The Mexican government would consider the ballots
cast from America to be “absentee ballots.”
Absentee? Is that the new term for “undocumented
immigrant”…I mean, illegal alien?
According to one Guadalajara native/Arizona transplant,
this is a good thing.
"’The main reason why
we're all here is because of the Mexican government, the
abuse,’ said Del Campo, who lives in the northwest
Valley. ‘So we ran away. This is a good idea.’"
(Why can reporters always find illegal immigrants when
immigration authorities can’t?)
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