Prepared by and for the National Policy Institute by Nicholas Stix, Project Director
Introduction
(From NPI's Web site.)
The past 53 years have not been kind to white America. And as white America goes, so goes America.
The following report gives in concentrated form, a statistical and narrative portrait of the war on white America, and thus, on America herself. We at NPI were fortunate in being able to benefit from the contributions of one of today’s most rigorous quantitative researchers, Edwin S. Rubenstein, the president of Indianapolis-based ESR Research Economic Consultants, and one of the most brilliant and elegant writers presently working in the English language, Melbourne, Australia-based historian R. J. Stove (The Unsleeping Eye: Secret Police and Their Victims). SOWA blends journalism and social science, in analyzing and criticizing developments, taking the present day as its point of departure, and reaching back over the past couple of years and the past fifty-odd years.
On May 17, 1954, in the case of Brown v. Board of Education, the U.S. Supreme Court delivered its 9–0 decision outlawing racial school segregation. In the Warren Court’s contempt for constitutional precedent, embrace of fraudulent social science, and casually dismissive attitude towards common sense and tradition, Brown was arguably the worst decision in the Court’s 216-year history.
And things have only gotten worse since. Brown was followed by the 1964 U.S. Civil Rights Act, another unconstitutional action, which was supposed to bring about racial comity and equality. Instead, it immediately inspired race rioting by blacks, and soon enough, quota systems privileging unqualified blacks (and later, Hispanics, and today even illegal immigrants!), at the expense of qualified whites.
The next year saw the enactment of the Voting Rights Act and the Immigration Act, respectively, and Pres. Johnson’s signing of Executive Order 11246, which began affirmative action. The Voting Rights Act was yet another federal usurpation of states’ rights, whose immediate result was yet more black race riots, and whose long-term result was to initiate a regime of federal mischief-making, in rigging elections for the benefit of black, and later Hispanic, candidates.
And then came forced busing.
As terrible as Brown, the U.S. Civil Rights Act, affirmative action, and forced busing were, they wreaked havoc in a nation that was still almost 90 percent white. Thus, although integration and the civil rights movement led directly to the destruction of great cities; and to millions of whites suffering terrible injustices, including assault, robbery, rape and murder, and losing everything they had through the ensuing destruction of their neighborhoods and their property values; the majority of whites were able to escape ascendant black supremacy.
But on October 3, 1965, the Immigration Act changed all that. Although its floor manager, Sen. Ted Kennedy (D-MA), assured voters that the bill would not change America’s ethnic balance, it has in fact brought about the biggest ethnic upheaval in American history, and threatens to abolish America.
A free download of the entire report may be obtained at NPI.
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3 comments:
I just ordered my copy (or should I say, "I gots mines!")
Mr. Actifed
"millions of whites suffering terrible injustices, including assault, robbery, rape and murder..."
Yep; But, you know what Nicholas? Even many parents were too carried away with the whole feel good aspect of it all to see clearly long enough to realize that many of their own children were the victims of the whole race experiment.
It's as if their culture of Feel Good Abstractions started operating as some kind of Absolute and they all just lost their minds to the point where they found things like Reason, Facts, Evidence, etc. beneath them. During those 53 years you speak of our world was slowly turned inside out and upside down.
I got out, barely, but not unscathed; I found whites who refused to listen to reason, or square themselves with what was right in front of them, at first frustrating, then exasperating, and finally shameless and crazy; but it was some transition; because at first I didn't know what to make of it; I grew up in it so it was all I knew. Well, I know better now.
Anyway, I am very glad you are around.
Dedalus
Likewise, Dedalus, likewise.
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