July 14, 2003
Abolishing America, Not Continued; Official
English Will Send A Message
By Sam Francis
It probably occurs to very few Americans that when
they visit an ATM machine or put together some gadget
bought at
K-Mart or
Wal-Mart, they are witnessing the
cultural disintegration of their own country. The
reason is that ATM machines and the assembly
instructions for most mass-marketed products now come in
at least two, maybe more, languages. Ten or twenty years
ago, that wasn't so. Back then, there was only
English—because back then there were only Americans.
Today, thanks to the
mass immigration of the last three decades, there
are plenty of non-Americans here and therefore plenty of
non-English languages—raising the interesting prospect
that some day you may have to wade through assembly
instructions several hundred pages in length. The 2000
Census found that the percentage of "Americans"
speaking a foreign language at home had increased in the
last decade from 13.8 percent in 1990 to
17.6 percent in 2000—close to one-fifth of the
nation. The Census also reported that there are now 329
different languages spoken in the United States.
The linguistic Tower of Babel that the Open Borders
lobby has built is the logical consequence of the
immigration invasion. When there are millions of
immigrants, they form
distinct communities in which
assimilation to American habits, including the
American language, is at least
unnecessary and may even be
counter-productive. It is difficult if not
impossible to maintain a national unity of any kind,
political or cultural, if a common language does not
exist as a means of communication and also simply as a
protective umbrella that covers the whole population.
Hence, a good many people advocate making the English
language the official language of the country. One such
advocate is Rep.
Steve King of Iowa, who has introduced a
bill in Congress to do just that. If passed, it
would require that "all laws, public proceedings,
regulations, publications, orders, actions, programs and
policies" be conducted in English, with some
appropriate exceptions to protect public health,
national security, commerce, etc.
So far the bill has the support of 75 co-sponsors and
of one of the main organizations pushing the concept of
an
"official language," U.S. English. The chairman of
the group, Mauro Mujica, says, "With so much
diversity, we need something that can spread unity"—a
noble sentiment.
I have some problems with the concept of the federal
government imposing cultural unity. The culture that
binds a nation together is supposed to come from the
society itself, not the central state, but it's now
clear that the central state, through its refusal to
control the mass immigration its own laws and policies
(and
non-policies) created, is seeking to impose a
cultural unity radically different from the authentic
American one. Mr. King's bill, if nothing else, will
challenge that act of imposition (really an act of
revolution) and commit the government to protecting the
real civilization of the nation and the language that
helps bind it together.
Just how serious is the threat of linguistic (and
therefore cultural and therefore political) anarchy? Mr.
Mujica, himself an
immigrant from Chile,
notes that the New York Times reports that in
the city of Hartford, Connecticut, where the population
is now 40 percent Hispanic, "half of Hartford's
business owners do not speak English." As the
Times itself
reported, a local baker (himself Hispanic) says,
"In the bank, they speak Spanish; at the
hospital, they speak Spanish; my bakery suppliers
are starting to speak Spanish. Even at the post office,
they are Americans, but they speak Spanish." The
Census Bureau reports that almost half the city's
Hispanic population speaks English
"less than very well." The official web page for
the city is bilingual and a phone call to the mayor's
office after the close of business receives an answer in
Spanish. The mayor,
Eddie Perez, says, "We've become a Latin city, so
to speak. It's a sign of things to come." You bet.
This is Connecticut we're talking about, not El Paso.
The obvious solution to the
Babelization of America is to
stop immigration now, send back the
illegals, take a hard look at least some "legals"
and cleanse the culture of the
Open Borders lobby and its lies and foolishness.
Unfortunately that won't happen this week. In the
meantime, the best recourse is to support Mr. King's
legislation.
If there's any real problem with the King bill, it is
that some will imagine that making English the
nationally official language will solve the problem of
national disintegration. It won't, but it may send a
signal that many Americans and most lawmakers are not in
favor of disintegration. There haven't been too many
such signals in recent years. It's more than time for
the real America to send one and for its elected leaders
to pay attention.
COPYRIGHT
CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.
[Sam Francis [email
him] is a nationally syndicated columnist. A selection
of his columns,
America Extinguished: Mass Immigration And The
Disintegration Of American Culture, is now available
from
Americans For Immigration Control.
Click here for Sam Francis'
website.]