July 29, 2003
To Deport, or Not To Deport?
[VDARE.COM
note: Many readers
continue to object
vehemently to Robert Locke’s
suggestion that the Palestinian problem be solved by
deportation. Israel definitely has a PR problem, at
least with internet users. From our point of view, the
article was not about Middle East but about the concept
of deportation. David Yeagley explores this concept
further, in an American context, from the unusual
perspective of a conservative American Indian.]
By David A. Yeagley
Does a nation have the right to
determine who its citizens are, and who may live
within its borders?
I thought this was a no-brainer.
I’ve taught ancient and modern humanities courses at
Oklahoma State University (Oklahoma City campus), the
University of Central Oklahoma, and at the University of
Oklahoma, and I know of no nation in world history that
has ever existed without the authority to determine its
constituents.
In fact, when a nation doesn’t have
this basic sovereignty, it declines. It may disappear
under foreign conquest, or in the case of
hopeless multiculturalism within some
over-extended empire, like ancient Greece, or Rome,
that nation may absorb into a cultural malaise.
But aside from the historical view,
it’s common sense that any nation, like any club,
church, or organization, must have power to define its
membership.
Yet, many American politicians and
theorists say there’s an actual question whether a
nation—that is to say, the American nation—should
have self-determination. They imagine a moral issue in a
nation’s claim to
sovereignty, but it’s a superimposed, irrelevant
question. It’s like asking whether parents have the
right to raise their children.
America has certainly exercised
sovereignty in the past.
America locked Indians into
land reservations, as separate people. That was so
white people could expand and develop their nation
without being killed by warring Indians. (I’m writing
here as a direct descendant of Comanche warriors.)
America once denied citizenship to
Negroes, and disallowed their participation in the power
structure of white society. That was because most
leaders didn’t think the Negroes were capable of
comprehending higher concepts of social existence, and
would bring nothing but degradation and crime into white
society.
America incarcerated some 113,000
Japanese-American citizens during WWII as a “homeland”
security measure. That was because there were
known networks of Japanese
spies and saboteurs among them, all along America’s
west coast.
America once refused to let
936 Jewish refugees enter America in 1938, in order
to maintain neutrality toward Europe. That was because
America was not then prepared for war with Hitler. The
Jews were
sent back to Europe, where some ended up in gas
chambers.
America’s early 1950’s “Operation
Wetback” deported over a million
illegal Mexican laborers from Texas. That was
because the illegal Mexicans disrupted the agricultural
economy, and brought crime, disease, and illiteracy to
America. Mexican migration was bad for everyone except
the greedy white employers who paid the Mexicans less
than half the wages of the American workers.
Of course, today America’s internal
enemies severely condemn all these measures. These
traitors prefer that America have no boundaries or
definitions. They say the United States government was
morally wrong to have exercised such basic authority
as to protect its own citizens.
Due to the influence of this
treason lobby, America today hosts an estimated
seven million illegal immigrants within its borders.
Nearly three-quarters of them are Latinos, over half of
those Mexican, and over 40% of those live in California.
President Bush and Karl Rove want to work out some sort
of amnesty for these millions.
Advocates of amnesty no doubt fear
the dreaded moral accusation of “racism,”
“bigotry,”
or “prejudice,”
if they don’t make all
illegal immigrants fully welcome and legal.
American national sovereignty is
regarded as
an immoral use of power, peremptorily denying anyone
in the world the right to a house, a Cadillac, and a
college education. America’s enemies say America is
morally obligated to not only provide full privileges to
anyone who makes it across the line, but also
to help him across.
This ideology has never existed
before. The American idea of
equality is totally usurped. It now means taking
from the achievers and giving to the incompetent, from
citizens to foreigners. Such “equality” has thrown
capitalist America into a social
autolysis.
But there’s an elixir within
America’s own history. American Indian history, rightly
understood, provides a very powerful example of
“national” self-preservation.
In the face of
intrusive foreign culture, Indians preferred
segregation and isolation, rather than surrendering our
identity.
We sacrificed our place in the new
society, to maintain our own values.
Even after American Indians were
declared U.S. citizens in 1924, we still preferred
being Indian. Indians are protective of our identity.
And thus we still have it.
Today, the American government’s
moral obligation is to protect the American identity—and
not to rob and abuse its citizens to appease its
enemies.
Deporting America’s enemies is not
just a right, but a
duty.
Dr.
David A. Yeagley [email
him] is an enrolled member of the
Comanche Nation, Elgin, Oklahoma. His articles
appear in
TheAmericanEnterprise.com, FrontPageMagazine.com
and on his own Web site
BadEagle.com and he is a regular speaker for
Young America’s Foundation.
His
composition for the American Indian flute and classical
orchestra, "Clouds passing over the Setting Sun" was
recorded this March by the Polish National Radio
Symphony and will be on an album to be released by Opus
One Recordings this fall.
David Yeagley is the author of Bad Eagle: The Rantings of a Conservative Comanche
.