"Public Opinion Must Be Told Clearly
That Europe Will Become A Mestizo Area."
"BRUSSELS, July 27 (Reuters) - The
European Union should admit up to 75 million
immigrants over the next 50 years and be
prepared to become a racially hybrid society,
according to a paper to be discussed at an EU
ministerial meeting on Friday."
Social engineers are more upfront in Europe,
where people are used to doing what they're
told. Of course, this astonishing proposal, sent
by French Interior Minister Jean-Pierre
Chevenement to the other European Union
countries and leaked to Reuters, is ridiculous
demographics and absurd economics. It presumes
that the population of Europe is going to fall
because of continued low birthrates (which
nobody knows for sure) and that 75 million
immigrants will be needed to keep the number of
people of working age at the current level as
the native population grows old (which is
fundamentally unnecessary because technology is
a substitute for people).
But it is excellent politics. It means that
the European social democracies can put off
dismantling the various feather-bedding schemes
that have smothered their labor markets,
something that might annoy the featherbeds'
occupants. And it offers a limitless vista of
interventionist opportunities for Europe's
bureaucratic New Class, notably in implementing
their equivalent of Hate Speech legislation to
suppress any patriots who might be distressed at
the abolition of their historic national
communities.
Most un-American line in the Chevenement
proposal: "Public opinion must be told
clearly that Europe, a land of immigration, will
become a mestizo area." (Why mestizo? Even
if the EU needed immigrants, it could get them
from Eastern Europe and Russia. H'mmm...) This
arrogance is quite natural in Europe, where
elites regularly decide things that drive their
populations crazy - for example, abolishing
capital punishment. "(See, surprisingly,
the New Republic http://www.thenewrepublic.com/073100/marshall073100.html.)
Of course, it couldn't happen here. Could it?
No! Here, the Supreme Court would rule that
immigration is a Constitutional right.
H-e-r-e-'s the Supreme Court.....
-- Peter Brimelow