April 09, 2007
NOTE: PLEASE say if you DON'T want your name and/or
email address published when sending VDARE email.
04/08/07
- A Reader Experiences Censorship
An Hispanic Reader Worries That
We're Seeing The Dawn Of Hispanic Supremacy
From: Malena Mueller
[e-mail
her]
I have been out of the workforce
since the birth of my daughter and contemplating
returning to it on a part-time basis, so when I saw that
our local credit union was hiring, I decided to put in
an application.
The online application process was
pretty standard. Although I found it vexing that the
application for a job at an American service institution
could also be completed in Spanish, everything nowadays
is bilingually available so, I didn’t give it a second
thought—until I came to the affirmative action section.
Before I left the workforce I worked for 12 years so I
have filled out my share of
affirmative action forms; this time what struck me
as very odd was that instead of being asked to check my
race/ethnicity, the first question asked was "Are
you Hispanic?" If the answer was "no" then I
was to check the corresponding (non Hispanic) race.
Is this the beginning of Hispanic
supremacy? Don’t get me wrong, I have nothing against
Hispanics (I am one myself) but seeing this blatant
preference for Hispanics over every other American is
extremely disturbing. So much for the melting pot!
The message to Hispanics is clear:
"don’t
assimilate"—"stay
segregated"—"it’s to your
benefit NOT to acculturate with the mainstream."
And why should they? Polarization
and victimization have so far worked wonders to
intimidate, guilt out and silence Americans who would
otherwise express the majority opinion that this Third
World colonization of our country is very bad.
One more thing: it seems to me the
first question asked by employers should be "Are you
an American citizen?" [VDARE.com
note: At the moment, it is illegal
to
ask this.]
This way Americans could (as they
should if they are qualified) get first dibs on any and
all jobs available. But I suppose it would be too
prejudiced and xenophobic to propose such a notion.
Mueller, who came to the U.S. in the mid-1970s, lives in
the Tucson area where she is "raising two children to
be Americans in an English-only household." Her
previous letter is
here.