Atlas
01-03-2006, 02:02 PM
As Whites grow in racial consciousness, media savvy, and organization, eventually a deportation program like this will be possible again.
by Ann Hendon
THE SACRAMENTO Bee has finally caught up with The Truth at Last and National Vanguard in reporting on the huge -- and hugely successful -- deportation program instituted during the Hoover administration, through which over 2 million Mexicans were removed from the United States.
They fail to mention, however, the similar large-scale non-White removal program conducted in the 1950s under the non-PC name "Operation Wetback."
'It was 1931. The administration of President Herbert Hoover backed a policy that would repatriate hundreds of thousands of Mexican-Americans, more than half of them United States citizens.
'Amid the economic desperation of the Depression, Latino families were viewed as taking jobs and government benefits from "real Americans." In Los Angeles County, a Citizens Committee for Coordination for Unemployment Relief urgently warned of 400,000 "deportable aliens," declaring: "We need their jobs for needy citizens."
'On Sunday, Senate Bill 670—the so-called "Apology Act for the 1930s Mexican Repatriation Program"—becomes official. It acknowledges the suffering of tens of thousands of Latino families unjustly forced out of the Golden State that was their home.
'"The state of California apologizes … for the fundamental violations of their basic civil liberties and constitutional rights during the period of illegal deportation and coerced emigration," the act reads....
'Up to 2 million people of Mexican ancestry were relocated to Mexico during the 1930s, even though as many as 1.2 million were born in the United States. In California, some 400,000 Latino United States citizens or legal residents were forced to leave.'
The Bee also fails to mention that these supposed "citizens" were such based on very questionable grounds: The Naturalization Act of 1790 was in indubitably in force until 1952 (and, arguably, the act repealing its racial provisions was itself illegal), and it strictly limited the granting of citizenship to Whites only. This law, sadly, had been ignored by profiteers and politicians on some occasions.
There is no fundamental difference between these historic acts to preserve America's racial integrity under the Eisenhower and Hoover administrations and what we would have to do today to achieve the same ends. Removal of 20 million, with our higher technology and our larger military and government infrastructures, in fact, would be much easier than the removal of 2 million was 50 or 70 years ago.
http://www.nationalvanguard.org/story.php?id=7366
by Ann Hendon
THE SACRAMENTO Bee has finally caught up with The Truth at Last and National Vanguard in reporting on the huge -- and hugely successful -- deportation program instituted during the Hoover administration, through which over 2 million Mexicans were removed from the United States.
They fail to mention, however, the similar large-scale non-White removal program conducted in the 1950s under the non-PC name "Operation Wetback."
'It was 1931. The administration of President Herbert Hoover backed a policy that would repatriate hundreds of thousands of Mexican-Americans, more than half of them United States citizens.
'Amid the economic desperation of the Depression, Latino families were viewed as taking jobs and government benefits from "real Americans." In Los Angeles County, a Citizens Committee for Coordination for Unemployment Relief urgently warned of 400,000 "deportable aliens," declaring: "We need their jobs for needy citizens."
'On Sunday, Senate Bill 670—the so-called "Apology Act for the 1930s Mexican Repatriation Program"—becomes official. It acknowledges the suffering of tens of thousands of Latino families unjustly forced out of the Golden State that was their home.
'"The state of California apologizes … for the fundamental violations of their basic civil liberties and constitutional rights during the period of illegal deportation and coerced emigration," the act reads....
'Up to 2 million people of Mexican ancestry were relocated to Mexico during the 1930s, even though as many as 1.2 million were born in the United States. In California, some 400,000 Latino United States citizens or legal residents were forced to leave.'
The Bee also fails to mention that these supposed "citizens" were such based on very questionable grounds: The Naturalization Act of 1790 was in indubitably in force until 1952 (and, arguably, the act repealing its racial provisions was itself illegal), and it strictly limited the granting of citizenship to Whites only. This law, sadly, had been ignored by profiteers and politicians on some occasions.
There is no fundamental difference between these historic acts to preserve America's racial integrity under the Eisenhower and Hoover administrations and what we would have to do today to achieve the same ends. Removal of 20 million, with our higher technology and our larger military and government infrastructures, in fact, would be much easier than the removal of 2 million was 50 or 70 years ago.
http://www.nationalvanguard.org/story.php?id=7366