By A Colleague
sunday, january 7, 2024 at 10:36:19 p.m. est
Review of Immigration Time Bomb
(N.S.: Read review in reverse order.)
Around a million copies were distributed. A revised, updated edition was issued in 1988.
This appeared in The Citizen, November 1985.
Surprised to see Evans was writing that late. He was one of [Robert] Welch's writers who at least telegraphed the importance beyond the candy man's conspiratorial obsessions. [N.S.: Robert Welch was the brilliant, charismatic founder of the John Birch Society, who also founded numerous brilliant publications. Although the JBS still exists, its public influence was neutralized by the jealous William F. Buckley in a goper conspiracy in 1962. Welch was nicknamed "the candy man," because he had earned his fortune with his own company, manufacturing sweets.]
A worthy review of a very worthy book. His metaphor of the storm threat and then some is well taken (though hurricanes stop, and there is opportunity to rebuild—except evidently in places like Haiti).
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2 comments:
1985?"Scarecrow" came out that year.First thing that came to mind.A different world.
--GRA
That immigration bomb exploded a long time ago and it’s only going to continue exploding being dropped from different airplanes and coming down missiles on top of USA constantly from this point forward bombs of an almost unlimited nature we are doomed I tell you doomed
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