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On Thanksgiving Day, after an Afghan opened fire on National Guardsmen in Washington, Donald Trump unleashed a mighty blast against immigrants that ended with these words: “I will permanently pause migration from all Third World Countries . . . and remove anyone who is not a net asset to the United States . . . deport any Foreign National who is a public charge, security risk, or non-compatible with Western Civilization. . . . Only REVERSE MIGRATION can fully cure this situation.”

He might as well have said, “I’m going to make America white again.” Before Mr. Trump’s second term, if a US President had said those words, I might have thought it was time to retire.
But even though the White House “Rapid Response” account said it was “one of the most important messages ever released by President Trump” — and added “Read every word” — his message didn’t raise much of a stink, for reasons both good and bad.

The New York Times wrote that Mr. Trump was “furiously demanding limits on migration,” but mostly stuck to what he said. The Washington Post just dropped an AP story into the paper with a bland headline about “pausing migration from poorer countries.” National Public Radio ran the same matter-of-fact story. Later, WaPo mentioned the President’s comments in passing in an article about the decision to end asylum and visas for Afghans.
The Wall Street Journal tut-tutted about “collective punishment” against Afghans. It quoted a refugee cheerleader saying that one Afghan’s attacks “do not reflect the sacrifices Afghans made during the war in Afghanistan,” but it also noted that “many prominent Democrats restricted their remarks to condemning violence and calling the shooting a tragedy.”
Back in 1984, the Journal wrote that the US Constitution needed a new amendment: “There Shall Be Open Borders.” Big change.
Only Vox seemed genuinely upset. In an article called “The alt-right won,” it worried that “ideas that were toxically controversial less than a decade ago are now officially proclaimed from the highest offices in the country.”
That’s true. And during a cabinet meeting a few days after his Thanksgiving message, Mr. Trump unloaded on Somalis: He added that the US is at a tipping point, and we could go the wrong way if we keep letting in Somalis and other people he called “garbage.”
Reuters couldn’t get very excited about that either, writing only that “Somalis condemn Trump’s insults, though some say he spoke the ‘truth’.”
The New York Times did rouse itself to call the President’s remarks “unapologetic bigotry” and “a xenophobic tirade,” and was upset that “JD Vance banged the table in encouragement.”
Nothing daunted, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt called Mr. Trump’s Somali comments an “amazing final answer” and an “epic moment.”
When Donald Trump said the US is at a “tipping point,” and that “reverse migration” of “garbage” is the only solution, it astonished and encouraged white nationalists everywhere. The most important person in the world sounds an awful lot like us, though in cruder language.
And DHS said, “The stakes have never been higher, and the goal has never been more clear: Remigration now.”

It sounded just like Martin Sellner.
A few Dems are yelping — but not all that many — and I looked for, but couldn’t find, a single Republican official who said the President went too far.
More people than ever seem to understand what some of us have been saying for decades: Non-white immigration is crushing the West.
That is beyond wonderful. However, for his opponents, Mr. Trump’s very nature takes some of the sting out of his remarks — and for his supporters, some of the urge to celebrate. Will he decide Indians are OK? Or that Chinese are good for the economy? Or will some pal in agribusiness convince him America needs more brown stoop workers?
For now, he’s operating under Section 212(f) of the Immigration and Nationality Act, that says if the President “finds that the entry of . . . any class of aliens into the United States would be detrimental” he can keep them out “for such period as he shall deem necessary.”

Now, you can’t even come as a tourist from any of these 19 countries, and the administration is considering expanding the travel ban to 30 countries.

I think a hundred is a nice, round number, but 30 is not bad.
Naturally, I wish the President would not just let fly off the cuff. He ought to take a position and stick to it: America was founded by white people for white people. Until 1965, immigration policy deliberately kept the country white. Changing that policy was a catastrophe. Whites have every right to be the permanent majority, and non-white immigrants are therefore “detrimental” — to use the word in the law — to cultural and, yes, *racial* unity. We want no more of those people.
That would be a whole lot better than calling Somalis “garbage,” and maybe in what’s left of his term, the President will put Stephen Miller in charge of drawing up a calm, confident assertion of the vital interests of white people.
Credit Image: © Francis Chung – Pool Via Cnp/CNP via ZUMA Press Wire
In the meantime, President Trump has laid down an important marker. He has come a lot closer to saying what needs to be said than any president in 100 years. Not since Calvin Coolidge wrote “Whose Country Is This?” in Good Housekeeping in 1921. Look at that lovely Valentin’s Day cover, by the way.

Coolidge wanted white immigrants:
“There are racial considerations too grave to be brushed aside for any sentimental reasons. Biological laws tell us that certain divergent people will not mix or blend.” He called the United States “a complete blend of varied strains in the same ethnic family.”

This message was next to ads for “Morning Frocks—with a New Charm!”

Three years later, we got the Johnson-Reed act that kept the country white for another 40 years.

Will we get a new Coolidge — or do we already have — a Coolidge in the White House? In the meantime, more power to our crude, erratic, impulsive, and sometimes brilliant President.
The post Has Donald Trump Turned the Corner on Race? appeared first on American Renaissance.
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