<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->The Wind from the Southâ Anti-White Populism
By Steve Sailer
For several years, we have been pointing out that, despite rosy predictions that Latin American immigrants are "natural Republicans,"<b> a mighty storm is brewing in Latin Americaâand that it will eventually reach the U.S.</b>
Recently, even the Mainstream Media [MSM] has started to notice that something is going on down south.
In <b>"Indian movement seeks 'to expel white invasion,'" </b>Martin Arostegui wrote in the Washington Times (June 24):
"SANTA CRUZ, Bolivia -- A growing indigenous movement has helped topple successive governments in Bolivia and Ecuador and, angered by the destruction of Andean coca crops, now threatens the stability of other countries where Indians are in the majority. Drawing support from European leftists and Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, <b>the long-marginalized Indians are tasting political influence for the first time since the Spanish conquest and beginning to wrest power from South America's white elites. </b>The leader of Bolivia's Movement to Socialism party (MAS), Evo Morales, talks about 'uniting Latin America's 135 Indian nations to expel the white invasion, which began with the landing of Columbus in 1492.'"
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Somebody forgot to send History the memo. Still, Fukuyama wasn't completely wrong:<b> what had changed was that people felt less need to dress up their struggles for power in fine-sounding ideologies. </b>History had reverted to what it always had been before the French Revolution made ideology au courant. As Lenin had said, the eternal question is: "Who? Whom?"
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For the U.S., domestically, the ongoing racial radicalization of the darker-skinned people of Latin America portends difficulties.<b> The immigrant stream from Latin America is increasingly less white, as regions farther south in Mexico are tapped. We are even seeing hundreds of thousands of pure Indians who speak no Spanish. </b>Next year's Mexican election will be closely followed on Spanish-language television by tens of millions of immigrants in the U.S. And then this vast anti-white movement might begin to surface here.
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By Steve Sailer
For several years, we have been pointing out that, despite rosy predictions that Latin American immigrants are "natural Republicans,"<b> a mighty storm is brewing in Latin Americaâand that it will eventually reach the U.S.</b>
Recently, even the Mainstream Media [MSM] has started to notice that something is going on down south.
In <b>"Indian movement seeks 'to expel white invasion,'" </b>Martin Arostegui wrote in the Washington Times (June 24):
"SANTA CRUZ, Bolivia -- A growing indigenous movement has helped topple successive governments in Bolivia and Ecuador and, angered by the destruction of Andean coca crops, now threatens the stability of other countries where Indians are in the majority. Drawing support from European leftists and Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, <b>the long-marginalized Indians are tasting political influence for the first time since the Spanish conquest and beginning to wrest power from South America's white elites. </b>The leader of Bolivia's Movement to Socialism party (MAS), Evo Morales, talks about 'uniting Latin America's 135 Indian nations to expel the white invasion, which began with the landing of Columbus in 1492.'"
..
Somebody forgot to send History the memo. Still, Fukuyama wasn't completely wrong:<b> what had changed was that people felt less need to dress up their struggles for power in fine-sounding ideologies. </b>History had reverted to what it always had been before the French Revolution made ideology au courant. As Lenin had said, the eternal question is: "Who? Whom?"
..
For the U.S., domestically, the ongoing racial radicalization of the darker-skinned people of Latin America portends difficulties.<b> The immigrant stream from Latin America is increasingly less white, as regions farther south in Mexico are tapped. We are even seeing hundreds of thousands of pure Indians who speak no Spanish. </b>Next year's Mexican election will be closely followed on Spanish-language television by tens of millions of immigrants in the U.S. And then this vast anti-white movement might begin to surface here.
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