May 23, 2006
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05/22/06 - An Arizona Reader
Says Medical Care On The Civil War Battlefield Was
Better Than What Awaits Americans
An Agricultural
Engineer Reader Predicts Bush Amnesty Means “Agrigeddon”
From: Harold Brewer [e-mail
him]
Re: Peter Gadiel’s Column:
An Open Letter To President Bush: Why Are You Bringing
Back Slavery?
I’ve coined a new
word to predict what will happen if
what Gadiel identifies as farm workers/slaves under
Bush’s guest worker program comes to pass: “agrigeddon,”
a combination of “agriculture” and “armageddon.”
The flood of aliens into our
society and the fundamental need for food is a dangerous
combination.
None of our leaders
will use “slaves”
to describe
guest workers but that is what they are.
Humans are addicted
to
slavery and have used it for thousands of years. But
let me offer a good reason to give it up.
People who serve
grow stronger while those served
grow weaker. Bush and his buddies may think they have it
all their way, but history will not be denied.
Illegal immigrants
will eventually become so strong that they will take
over.
It may take
a few generations but in history time
doesn’t matter. The irony is that when the immigrants
dominate, they become masters and
bring in
slaves to serve themselves. And the
slave-to-master-to-slave
cycle starts over.
How many people
recognize the similarity between bringing black slaves
to America to do low skill
agricultural jobs like picking cotton and bringing
brown slaves to do "jobs
Americans won't do" like picking
strawberries?
Black slavery lead
to the Civil War, America’s hellish nightmare.
We can predict that
brown slavery will also lead to a
Civil War. The only question is when.
From servile black
in 1860 to militant black in 1960
was 100 years. So, if our analysis of
slave-to-master-to-slave is accurate, then by 2100 we
will leave another hellish nightmare to our great
grandchildren.
The wolves that
prowl our
border are gobbling us up.
Brewer was born in
Wichita and raised on a farm in central Kansas. He
served in the U.S. Air Force during the Berlin Airlift
and the Korean War. After leaving military service, he
attended the University of California and received
degrees in agricultural engineering from Berkeley and
Davis.
Also by
Harold Brewer, “Give
Us This Day” and “Agribots:
Alternative To Amnesty”