February 12, 2007
U.S. Chamber Urging Country On Rome’s Path To
Disaster
By Steve Smith
I find it ironic that the US Chamber of Commerce is
promoting a report "America's Perfect Storm: Three
Forces Changing Our Nation's Future," [PDF]
(press release
here). The report, by
ETS's Policy Information Center, contends that the
convergence of three forces—inadequate
literacy skills among large segments of our
population, the continuing evolution of our economy and
the nation's job structure, and an ongoing shift in the
demographic profile of our country driven by the
highest immigration rates in
almost a century—will have “dire consequences for
America”.
Dire consequences for America?
Translation:
bankruptcy or
civil war or both.
The report’s executive summary is here. [PDF.]
Summarized and sanitized for political correctness,
the report in layman’s terms is here. [Coming
US challenge: a less literate workforce,
by Amanda Paulson,
Christian Science Monitor,
February 06, 2007]
The ETS report’s three factors are really one factor:
immigration.
The irony:
US Chamber of Commerce is America’s biggest advocate
of immigration, both
legal and
illegal. Senior Vice-President and Counselor to
the President of the Chamber of Commerce,
Arthur J. Rothkopf, appeared at the ETS press
conference and his name is
on the press release. Strange, they put out a report
warning of dire consequences for America because of
their own immigration policies—which they continue to
advocate. [VDARE.COM note:
Not surprisingly, The
Chamber of Commerce seems not to want you to email it,
but its snailmail address and phone numbers are
here].
This gem of a quote from the press release really
cracks me up:
"Our nation is at a
crossroads and must determine whether to continue on a
path that could turn the
American dream into an
American tragedy, or invest in new policies that
will help reduce the impact of the storm and allow us to
grow together."
They can’t even state the obvious: WE NEED TO CUT
IMMIGRATION—not continue on the path to our own
destruction. Instead, they recommend even more
"investment" i.e. taxpayer spending on their
members’ immigrant workforces (as if
$9 trillion in debt isn’t enough) and no change in
immigration policy. (Wow, talk about not noticing
the
800LB gorilla standing in the room.)
Even more ironic is that the report is merely a
reiteration of the Alan Greenspan’s November 3, 2005
(two years ago) "State of the Economy" speech
available on video here I bought a copy, I thought
it was the most important speech in my lifetime.
Greenspan must feel like
Cassandra, knowing what’s in our future warning
everybody of the peril yet unable to stop it.
Mr. Greenspan was coincidently asked by Congresswoman
Loretta Sanchez (the former member of the Socialist
Mexican invasion caucus who
left because they
called her a whore and
then lied about it) if "more investment was
needed". (Always looking for
more money for "her people"!). He paused,
stumbled, carefully thought, then replied "NO"
and diplomatically said we’re already wasting far too
much on education now, we don’t need any more
investment, we need to dump the current wasteful
union-mired public education system. (My words)
No place in the speech did Mr. Greenspan specifically
mention "immigrants or illegal immigrants", he
just mentioned their characteristics, numbers and
projections.
This is all old news. We’re just following the path
of the Roman Empire (except they lasted about 1000
years). Coincidently their empire began its decline in
Mesopotamia (modern
Iraq/Iran) under Emperor Valens (a
legacy leader like George II).
Valens was also an
advocate of
diversity, immigration and amnesty—right up until
the moment his own hubris killed him at battle of
Adrianople, when those he gave amnesty turned on his
army and killed him.
Bush, I mean Valens, was looking for a military
victory, trying to outshine his nephew—just like
Bush with his dad.
You can still find
coins today with Valens’ image—they’re relatively
cheap in spite of their 1600+ year age.
They must have made a lot.
We too have a lot of coinage I wonder if 1600 years
from now historians will refer to Bush as emperor? Nah,
they probably won’t even know his name.
Steve Smith (e-mail
him)
is a VDARE.COM reader. This is his first column for us,
although he's written
letters.