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“Immigration Studies” The Next Propaganda Push For American High Schools
In a normal
country, citizens attend school to learn about their proud heritage and
how to be more effective and productive citizens. In America, the
purpose of education is to learn how to be a professional victim and how
to confiscate money from those Americans who are not fortunate enough
to belong to one of the privileged classes. [Burn Down The Colleges, by Gregory Hood, Radix, May
20, 2014] Entire departments, from Black Studies to Gender Studies,
churn out graduates that make all of our lives worse by the sheer fact
of their existence.
What’s coming next is immigration studies. Dan-el Padilla Peralta [Twitter] a quasi-celebrity in his own right because he violated American law to inflict us with his presence, outlines how high school students are to be indoctrinated in the New York Times when he called for immigration studies in high school.
Peralta gives the game away near the end of his essay when he explains why this kind of curriculum is important.
My response:
What’s coming next is immigration studies. Dan-el Padilla Peralta [Twitter] a quasi-celebrity in his own right because he violated American law to inflict us with his presence, outlines how high school students are to be indoctrinated in the New York Times when he called for immigration studies in high school.
High school students should also be looking at ethical and philosophical questions about identity and citizenship: How have cultural and religious traditions around the world, from antiquity to the present day, reckoned with migration? Are there moments and circumstances that justify the sidelining or ostracism of certain groups of immigrants?As Jose Antonio Vargas wanted to do with his project, Peralta’s objective is to deconstruct America. A central truth we see from the immigration experience is that America isn’t rewarded for its generosity in admitting so many people. Instead, it’s mocked for its weakness. Many immigrants come here and then seek to punish and destroy us for the mistake of admitting them.
[How to Incorporate Immigration Studies into High School Curriculum, September 12, 2016]
This kind of curriculum has never been more important because whatever happens this fall, Trumpism is here to stay. Those of us who are immigrants and or who advocate on behalf of immigrants face a twofold task. We will need not only to fight for immigration reform but to educate our fellow Americans on the intrinsic worth and merits of the immigrants who arrive here; the long history of immigration to the United States; the racialized targeting, mistreatment, and marginalization of immigrant groups; and the global history of immigration, with a particular emphasis on the pressures that drive immigrants across regional and national borders.Translation: We need to re-educate Americans on why their country doesn’t actually belong to them, it belongs to everyone else. After all, as Hillary Clinton so spitefully told us, we are “irredeemable” and “not America” [Irredemable, by Gregory Hood, Radix, September 12, 2016]
My response:
Those of us who are Americans and/or who
advocate on behalf of Americans face a twofold task. We will need not
only to fight against amnesty for illegals but to educate our fellow
Americans on the intrinsic worth and merits of history, culture and
identity; the long history of immigration patriotism in the United
States; the radicalized targeting, mistreatment, and marginalization of
the historic American nation and the Anglo-American ethnic core, and the
global phenomenon of mass Third World immigration, with a particular
emphasis on the threat it poses to Western Civilization and the
nefarious elites which push Third Worlders across regional and national
borders.
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