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December 31, 2007
2007 In Review—An Interesting Year
Looking through our archives
for 2007, we see that it was an…interesting year.
It was the year of Obama:
In addition, check out Steve
Sailer's American Conservative piece
Obama’s Identity Crisis, March 26, 2007, which
the
Washington Monthly and
George Soros tried
to suppress.
The Year
Tom Tancredo ran
for President…and
won!
The Year of Don Imus
It was the year of the Virginia Tech
Shooter, the year's biggest "killings by an
immigrant" story.
(Various people,
including me, who pointed out that it's better to
fight back in
such situations than to cower under desks were
denounced. I recommend the late Jeff Cooper's book Principles Of Personal Defense ).
It was the year James D. Watson was
fired for saying what
most scientists say about average IQ differences
between races.
But most of all, it was the year
that
George W. Bush almost got his amnesty through
Congress—and the year he was defeated.
This is important, because if
amnesty had passed, all state and local actions to
protect Americans from the problems of immigration would
immediately have become illegal. As I
wrote in commenting on the fact that
John Podhoretz seems never to have heard that
legal immigration is a problem, there's
“…a huge civil rights bureaucracy, originally designed
to protect Americans, which would come down on towns
like
Hazleton like a hammer if they tried to
defend themselves in any way, shape, or form.”
At the moment, immigration means
immigration from Mexico, and that's not good, for
reasons you read about here in 2007, and not in the
MainStream Media:
Here's some of our coverage of the
amnesty fight—it was a hard fight, but the good guys
won, with a lot of support from us:
We survived the Bush-Kennedy
Amnesty/Immigration Surge Bill, we survived most of
another Bush Administration.
And,
with your help, we hope to be here again next year.
Happy New Year! |
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