moonbattery.gif


« Moonbat Pinup | Main | Just Because It's Obvious Is No Reason to Stop Saying It »


April 19, 2006

How Moonbattery Caused the Illegal Immigration Crisis

Posted by Dave Blount at April 19, 2006 2:41 PM

Rabbi Aryeh Spero explains:

What makes citizens of a country submit to the demands of people who are not even citizens? What is it that makes people here for decades and centuries cower in front of those here illegally, arriving only yesterday? What is it that makes people unwilling to lay claim to their own land and country?
It is guilt. It is fear. It is a brainwashing that has convinced so many that every member of the world is entitled to U.S. constitutional and welfare "rights." It is a society that no longer believes in itself as a specific culture or even a sovereign country. Worse, it is a society so emotionally weak that it will accept disease, terrorism, crime, bankruptcy and the disintegration of its own chosen laws rather than being called racist, even though such charges are false.
Forty years of sick liberalism has created a public so unsure of its own legitimacy yet so sure of every other culture's and nation's goodness that it cannot say "no" to anyone perceived outside the mainstream. Being an outsider proffers today a nobility and entitlement to "rights" that is beyond the scope and hope of those viewed as merely regular Americans.

Implications for the War on Terror go beyond the fact that you can sneak whatever you like across our undefended border:

Watching America fold to La Rasa and other race mongers, how afraid of America can the jihadist enemy be, knowing that Americans will not protect themselves if by so doing they are accused of "Islamophobia," the latest concocted form of "racism." To think, a great and powerful nation brought to its knees not by a power stronger militarily but simply because it was afraid of being called a name, simply because it craved its enemy's validation over its own security.

The illegal immigration and Islamic terrorism crises are making it ever harder to avoid a question that every culture has to answer affirmatively in order to survive: Do we believe we deserve to exist?

mexicas_continent.jpg
They are asking us to stop existing.