Saturday, January 30, 2016

Destroying America

From:  http://www.snopes.com/politics/soapbox/lamm.asp   

Illustrated by "Lee Puniisher"

In the United States, there is a feeling of remorse among the citizens of the deep south about losing the Civil War. In many southern states, you can still buy artifacts, memorabilia, confederate money etc. Memorials have been built with faces carved in stone similar to Mount Rushmore, i.e. Stone Mountain Georgia.

In Mexico, there is an elite class of over 1,000 families who control most of the wealth. I think it would be naive to believe, that in a corrupt nation like Mexico, they have forgotten or forgiven the United States for the Mexican-American war.

Mexico is approaching us in a passive-aggressive way abetting millions of their poorest citizens to set up camp in our country, depleting our entitlement system with ex-patriots who refuse to speak English and much more...

Please read on.

Destroying America


Dick Lamm served as the Governor of Colorado. In that context, his thoughts are particularly poignant. In 2005 there was an immigration overpopulation conference in Washington, DC, filled to capacity by many of America's finest minds and leaders. A brilliant college professor by the name of Victor Davis Hansen talked about his latest book, "Mexifornia," explaining how immigration - both legal and illegal - was destroying the entire state of California. He said it would march across the country until it destroyed all vestiges of The American Dream.

Friday, January 29, 2016

The Necessity of a new Chinese Exclusion act.


Historical perspective
Yellow Peril (sometimes Yellow Terror) was a color metaphor for race that originated in the late nineteenth century with Chinese immigrants as coolie slaves or laborers to various Western countries, notably the United States.
The term refers to the skin color of East Asians, and the fear that the mass immigration of Asians threatened white wages and standards of living and that they would eventually take over and destroy western civilization, their ways of life and values.

Chinese Exclusion Act
The Chinese Exclusion Act was a United States federal law signed by President Chester A. Arthur on May 6, 1882. It was one of the most significant restrictions on free immigration in U.S. history, prohibiting all immigration of Chinese laborers. The act followed revisions made in 1880 to the U.S.-China Burlingame Treaty of 1868, revisions that allowed the U.S. to suspend Chinese immigration. The act was initially intended to last for 10 years, but was renewed in 1892 and made permanent in 1902.

The Page Act of 1875 (Sect. 141, 18 Stat. 477, 1873-March 1875) was the first federal immigration law and prohibited the entry of immigrants considered "undesirable."The law classified as "undesirable" any individual from Asia who was coming to America to be a forced laborer, any Asian woman who would engage in prostitution, and all people considered to be convicts in their own country.

"They were called racial slurs, were spat upon in the streets and even brutally murdered," she said.

They were known as the "Mongolian horde," and on April 17, 1882, the House passed the Chinese Exclusion Act, signed by President Chester Arthur.

Size Matters: A black and white America



America demographic composition is so diversified, mainly composed of white European, slaves descendants, remain of native Americans, an influx of immigrants post WW2 made the American society even more diversified, but in the USA 2 major groups still the main composition and the 2 ends as long as racial screening goes, Blacks and whites, Hispanics with their recent huge vague of immigration start to gain a status of a larger minority group mostly in the west coast, but when it comes to racial issue, the 2 groups concerned are black and white, especially it is due to the history related to both groups...Whites as masters dominating Blacks and using them as slaves for more than 400 years, and Blacks as Slaves descendants living with the scare of history and the slaves' descendants status.
Naturally, beyond a homogeneous society promoted by divers bureaucratic procedures, an invisible shared past hunt both groups...

One of the issues existing between black and white is the black male sexual superiority and the tendency of white females to prefer black men, it's a social phenomenon in the USA, the interracial sex is one of the major concern in American society and culture, homosexuality and cuckolding large wide existence in USA are just examples of the consequences of the black and white difference, the superior black male's penis created a serious, even a social crisis in America of penis envy...it's especially among white males, Hispanics also tend to feel the power of the black penis in their females attitude, Asians....for an asian male, it's just desperate to start a penis size discussion, they know they are microscopic in America, maybe they can compare their penises sizes back in China.

Wednesday, January 27, 2016

The Take Over: Evil Prevails in America

“Obama’s America Is Planet Of Apes”

Glenn Beck compared Obama’s America to “the damn Planet of the Apes,” Thursday during a rant against the president’s praise for the AFL-CIO.
Beck made the comparison while trying to blame union support of strong pensions for the nation’s high unemployment rate. He doesn't like that former SEIU president Andy Stern sits on the president’s panel on deficit reduction.


The racial politics behind 'Planet of the Apes:
From the very beginning of movies, with D.W. Griffith's racist propaganda film The Birth of a Nation there have been racist themes and images in mainstream movies. For much of the 20th century, black audiences endured blackface, coons and with the exception of a few dignified Sidney Poitier roles in the 50s and 60s -- barely any representation at all. When the blaxploitation genre broke through in the 1970s it did give more African-American talent a chance to shine but these films largely glorified violence and crime, as well as brutality towards women.

The original Planet of the Apes, starring screen legend Charlton Heston, released in 1968, served as sort of a cinematic version of John Howard Griffin's 1961 book Black Like Me, where Griffin experienced life as a black man by darkening his skin and reported back on his findings. It's a "what if the shoe was on the other foot?" type scenario where white men experience the type of discrimination usually reserved for black people.
Apes imagined a fictional world 2,000 years in the future where monkeys, gorillas, and other primates take on human features including the sort of racism that the Civil Rights Movement was addressing at the time, only directed at human beings. It's about how power corrupts and can be used unjustly but one isn't always aware of the injustice until they experience it for themselves.
The Rise of the Planet of the Apes, a “re-imagining” of the classic Planet of the Apes movies, prove that the racial politics and stereotypes that have long fueled the franchise and are still very present in Hollywood.

Monday, January 25, 2016

From Karma to Punishment: God's Justice awaiting executioners



Karma:
Karma means destiny; A concept of karma (along with samsara and moksha) may originate in the shramana tradition of which Buddhism and Jainism are continuations. This tradition influenced the Brahmanic religion in the early Vedantic (Upanishadic) movement of the 1st millennium BC. This worldview was adopted from this religious culture by Brahmin orthodoxy, and Brahmins wrote the earliest recorded scriptures containing these ideas in the early Upanishads. Until recently, the scholarly consensus was that reincarnation is absent from the earliest strata of Brahminical literature. However, a new translation of two stanzas of the Rig Veda indicates that the Brahmins may have had the idea, common among small-scale societies around the world, that an individual cycles back and forth between the earth and a heavenly realm of ancestors.Some traditions (i.e., the Vedanta), believe that a supreme being plays some kind of role, for example, as the dispenser of the 'fruits' of karma or as exercising the option to change one's karma in rare instances. In general, followers of Buddhism and many followers of Hinduism consider the natural laws of causation sufficient to explain the effects of karma.Another view holds that a Sadguru, acting on a god's behalf can mitigate or work out some of the karma of the disciple.
"God does not make one suffer for no reason nor does He make one happy for no reason. God is very fair and gives you exactly what you deserve."

 The Punisher:
The Punisher is a fictional character, an antihero that appears in comic books published by Marvel Comics. The character was created by writer Gerry Conway and artists John Romita, Sr., and Ross Andru, with publisher Stan Lee providing the name. The Punisher made his first appearance in The Amazing Spider-Man #129 (cover-dated Feb. 1974).