Ceding Our Nation
By Fred Gielow
A short time ago I finished reading Pat Buchanan's latest book, State of Emergency - The Third World Invasion and Conquest of America. I think it should be read in every highschool in the country. Heck, it should be read in every home! Here are just a few excerpts:
"[T]he crisis of Western civilization consists of three imminent and mortal perils: dying populations, disintegrating cultures, and invasions unresisted;"
"What the Danube and Rhine were to Rome, the Rio Grande and Mediterranean are to America and Europe, the frontiers of a civilization no longer defended;"
"This [influx of immigrants into America] is an invasion, the greatest invasion in history. Nothing of this magnitude has ever happened in so short a span of time. There are 36 million immigrants and their children in the United States today, almost as many as came to America between Jamestown in 1607 and the Kennedy election of 1960. Nearly 90 percent of all immigrants now come from continents and countries whose peoples have never been assimilated fully into any Western country;"
"Against the will of a vast majority of Americans, America is being transformed. As our elites nervously avert their gaze or welcome the invasion, we are witness to one of the great tragedies in human history. From Gibbon to Spengler to Toynbee and the Durants, the symptoms of dying civilizations are well known: the death of faith, the degeneration of morals, contempt for the old values, collapse of the culture, paralysis of the will. But the two certain signs that a civilization has begun to die are a declining population, and foreign invasions no longer resisted;"
"What can be said for a man who would allow his home to be invaded by strangers who demanded they be fed, clothed, housed, and granted the rights of the firstborn? What can be said for a ruling elite that permits this to be done to the nation, and that celebrates it as a milestone of moral progress?"
"We are witnessing how nations perish."
Pretty strong words. Pretty frightening words. Will enough people take them to heart?
See biography for Fred Gielow
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