August 22, 2006
Powell, Raspail: Prophets Without Honor?
By
Patrick J. Buchanan
In April 1968, only days after Dr.
King had been assassinated and
riots had erupted in 100 American cities, there
arose in England to raise the alarm on the explosive
issue of immigration from the Third World a hero of the
war and scholar of the classics, the
Tory shadow minister of state for defense, Enoch
Powell.
"The
supreme function of statesmanship,"
Powell began, "is to provide against preventable
evils. ... The discussion of future grave but, with
effort now, avoidable evils is the most
unpopular and at the same time the most necessary
occupation for the politician."
"Only resolute and urgent
action," said Powell, could avert the "horror"
unfolding on the far side of the Atlantic. As he spoke,
the immigrant flow into Britain from the Commonwealth
nations of
Africa,
Asia and the
Caribbean was 50,000 a year, a trickle compared to
the 1.2 million legal and illegal aliens who have been
entering the United States every year for a generation.
Powell warned that if stern action
were not taken to stem the tide, by 2000, 5 million to 7
million Third World people would be there.
"It is like watching a nation
busily engaged in heaping up its own funeral pyre,"
Powell thundered. Then he spoke the words that ended his
brilliant career: [
Peter
Brimelow says:
NO NO NO!]
"As I look ahead, I am filled with foreboding;
like the Roman, I seem to see 'the River Tiber foaming
with
much blood.'"
Powell was instantly gone from the
shadow cabinet, dropped by Edward Heath for what that
future prime minister called a speech
"racialist in tone, and liable to exacerbate racial
tensions."
Five years after Powell's
"Rivers of Blood" speech, French writer Jean Raspail
stunned Europe with his allegory, "Le Camp Des
Saints."
Raspail described a
"Last Chance Armada" of a million diseased and
destitute from the
hellholes of Calcutta who embark aboard a fleet of
leaky and decrepit ships and steer round the Cape of
Good Hope to Europe – to be taken in, or die. As the
armada enters the Mediterranean and reaches the Riviera,
the French government, awash in humanitarian liberalism,
refuses to repel the invaders and invites them in.
Around the world, the wretched of the earth watch the
television reports, and wait. When the Last Chance
Armada triumphs, its passengers emerge in an orgy of
looting,
rape and
pillage to overrun the fat rich lands of the West,
"the Camp of the Saints."
Though many reviewers were
repelled,
the novel was a smashing success, with some
comparing Raspail's work to
Camus' The Plague and Swift's
Gulliver's Travels.
"One of the most chilling books of this generation,"
wrote
James J. Kilpatrick. "Our children and
grandchildren may soon discover that Jean Raspail wrote
not
fiction, but fact."
In 2004, Raspail
surfaced in Le Figaro to accuse the French
elite of treason. "
La
Patrie Trahie par la Republique," the title
of his essay, translates,
"The Fatherland Betrayed by the Republic."
By "the Republic," Raspail
meant not just the
Fifth Republic of Mitterand and Chirac, but France's
ideology of inclusiveness rooted in the Revolution's
ideology of
"liberte, egalite, fraternite." Alluding to the
waves of immigrants from Africa, the Middle East, the
Caribbean and Asia, Raspail grimly asserted: "The
deed is done. ... All of Europe
marches to its death."
Raspail recalled the
1974 threat of Algerian President Houari Boumedienne:
"No
amount of atomic bombs will be able to dam up the tidal
wave comprising human beings in their millions which one
day will leave the southernmost and poor part of the
world, to swamp the
relatively open spaces of the wealthy Northern
Hemisphere, in search of survival."
Europe denounced and dismissed both
men as racists. Now we learn that 19 of those captured
plotting to blow up 10 airliners over the Atlantic were
British-born Pakistanis.
The suicide bombers of the London subway were
British-born Asians. Richard Reid's
father was Jamaican. Alienated, he was drawn to an
ultra-radical mosque before
attempting mass murder over the Atlantic.
Race riots have
since plagued the industrial cities of Northern
England. In France last summer, thousands of
French citizens of North African descent rioted and
pillaged in the
banlieus of Paris
and 300 other cities, until President Chirac, after 12
days, finally declared a national emergency. Zacarias
Moussaoui, the "20th hijacker," was a
French citizen. The
Madrid bombers were immigrants or the children of
immigrants, as was the daylight murderer of Dutch
filmmaker Theo van Gogh.
The 9-11 terrorists plotted mass
murders
in Munich, Arizona and Delray Beach, Fla. President
Bush says they hate democracy.
No, Mr. President, they hate us.
Powell and Raspail were ostracized
for what they said and wrote. Their stories are related
in my new book,
State of Emergency: The Third World Invasion and
Conquest of America. Time to revisit the
question: Were these men false prophets rightly
reviled—or prophets without honor in their own
countries?
Patrick J. Buchanan needs
no introduction to VDARE.COM
readers; his new book
State of Emergency: The Third World Invasion and
Conquest of America,
can be ordered from
Amazon.com.