October 06, 2003
Bustamante Aims For America’s New Ruling Race
By Sam Francis
[Click
here to
order Sam Francis' new monograph, Ethnopolitics:
Immigration, Race, and the American Political Future]
If
recent polls on the
California gubernatorial race are at all accurate,
Lt. Gov. Cruz Bustamante will not win the election, but
he will certainly come closer than most other
candidates. That's because Mr. Bustamante enjoys an
advantage most other candidates, including the (still)
likely winner,
Arnold Schwarzenegger, don't—namely racial
solidarity.
Because Mr. Bustamante is Hispanic and exploited that
identity in the campaign and because, thanks to the mass
immigration the
Open Borders lobby has helped import into the state,
some 14 percent of the
California electorate today is Hispanic, and because
Hispanics in California (and most other states) vote as
a racially solid bloc, Mr. Bustamante is slated to win
their support by an overwhelming margin.
A
Washington Post story last week made clear
that the lieutenant governor "has three times more
support among Latino voters than any other major
candidate in the election." That may not be
enough—this time—to elect him governor, but it puts him
well ahead of most of his rivals.
The
story also makes clear, though it doesn't quite say so,
why Hispanic voters are so keen on Mr. Bustamante. It's
because they think of themselves as a unit—"we"—and of
Mr. Bustamante as "one of us." [
For
Latinos, Recall Is a Rare Opportunity | Bustamante
Strongly Favored in Community, By Rene Sanchez,
Washington Post, September 30, 2003]
"It's a chance we've never experienced before,” one
Hispanic lawyer told the Post. "We've never
been this close."
Another Hispanic voter bubbled happily at the prospect
of racial power Mr. Bustamante's campaign offered:
"We're
no longer the minority in California, but I still
feel like we're 20 years behind everyone else."
With
the exception of
black voters, there is no other sizable ethnic group
in the state or the country that identifies as "we"
more strongly.
What
the Hispanic "we" feels is not at all the same
thing
Irish Americans, for example, felt when John F.
Kennedy was elected (if "elected" is quite the right
word for the
way Kennedy became president). Americans of Irish
descent who felt joy at Kennedy's victory did not plan
to take over the country or claim the country was now
"theirs." But that's exactly what Hispanic voters in
California seem to express.
As
the Post reports, "In Latino communities across the
Central Valley, some activists are preoccupied with
promoting Bustamante's candidacy, not saving [Gray]
Davis. They are going door-to-door and deluging voters
with phone calls in the hope that will spur a huge
turnout at the polls."
It
would be stretching to claim that most Hispanic voters
share the bizarre anti-Americanism of the
Voz de Aztlan, the
racial nationalist newspaper supporting
MEChA, the Chicano Student Movement for Aztlan, that
has just endorsed Mr. Bustamante and whose endorsement
he has
not rejected.
Nevertheless, its language is worth quoting.
"Next Tuesday October 7, Nuestra Raza
[Our Race] will have an unprecedented and
outstanding opportunity to elect one of our own as
Governor of Alta California. It has been a very long
struggle since the invasion of our territories and this
election will not be handed to us in a silver platter.
We must do everything humanly possible to bring out our
gente to vote on October 7. Every community committee
and MEChA Chapter throughout the state must work
diligently and tirelessly next Tuesday to bring out the
vote on behalf of Cruz Bustamante. Remember 'Dump Davis
- Elect Bustamante.'"
"Throughout the recall campaign, Cruz Bustamante has
proven himself to be a loyal soldier for La Raza,"
the editorial exults.
And
indeed so far Mr. Bustamante has said and done nothing
to suggest he is not a
loyal soldier for his race.
No
other candidate in this campaign or, except for most
black candidates, in the rest of the country enjoys the
kind of
racially driven voter support that Mr. Bustamante
possesses, nor does any other court political support on
the basis of race as brazenly. No white group of any
kind supports Mr.
Schwarzenegger or his rival
Tom McClintock because he is believed to be "a
loyal soldier for his race."
And
no white candidate could receive an endorsement from a
white group because of race without being forced
immediately to reject the endorsement and denounce the
group. White racism or even the
hint of it is enough to get
Rush Limbaugh canned.
Anti-white racism is
OK.
That's one lesson the Bustamante campaign ought to drive
into the feeble minds of whites dumb enough to have
welcomed the
mass immigration that now begins to
swallow them.
But
another lesson of the anti-white racial nationalism now
nearing triumph at the polls is what it means for the
dwindling numbers of whites in the state.
What
it means, to put it as bluntly as possible, is cultural
and political subordination to the new "we" now
emerging as California's—and eventually the
country's—ruling race.
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.]