November 29, 2004
Why Immigrants Kill
By Sam Francis
Just exactly how many murders will
it take to convince the Open Borders lobby, whose leader
now seems to be President Bush, that mass Third World
immigration is not such a good idea?
Up in Wisconsin, a gentleman named
Chai Soua Vang, a 36-year-old Hmong immigrant, just blew
away six people, apparently because they threw him out
of their privately-owned deer stand he had
decided to take over for his own use.
Ten years ago immigration expert
Roy Beck wrote
a
path-breaking article in the Atlantic Monthly
about the Hmong immigrants in Wausau, Wisconsin, a
discussion he repeated in his later book,
The Case against Immigration.
"The
number of Southeast Asians burgeoned, and the city's
ability to welcome, nurture, accommodate, and assimilate
the larger numbers shrank. Most immigrants were unable
to enter the mainstream of the economy. Residents
resented the social costs of caring for many more
newcomers than anybody had been led to believe would
arrive. Inter-ethnic
violence and other tensions proliferated in the
schools and in the parks and streets of a town that
formerly had been virtually free of social tensions and
violence."
That's only a selection, but what
Mr. Beck described is the predictable result of the mass
immigration of
a radically different people into a homogeneous
community.
Obviously, not all or even most
immigrants turn out to be spree killers, and obviously
there are plenty of home-grown ones—Charles Manson, Ted
Bundy, Jeffrey Dahmer, et al.
But in recent years immigrants, and
especially those from non-Western and non-white parts of
the world, have contributed
more than their fair share to the annals of
atrocity crimes.
The most obvious is the
World Trade Center in 2001, but well before that
Jamaican immigrant
Colin Ferguson murdered six passengers on a commuter
train on
Long Island in 1993.
Pakistani immigrant Mir Aimal Kansi
murdered two people outside
CIA headquarters in the same year, which was the
year after aliens
first tried to blow up the World Trade Center.
In 1997 immigrant
Ali Abu Kamal shot up the tourists at the Empire
State Building, and later
two more immigrants were arrested for trying to
blow up the New York subway system.
There are a number of other cases
that made national news at the time.
Are they all just coincidences? Not
exactly.
The link between immigration and
violence is that the aliens lack roots in the society
and civilization into which they import themselves. The
people they see aren't their people, and their moral and
social norms aren't theirs either. Being strangers in a
strange land, they feel little obligation to it or its
members.
For immigrants on the fringe, the
resulting tensions can overflow, and it's not easy even
for those not so fringe.
Thus, the Washington Post,
not exactly a hotbed of
nativist bigotry, offers this editorializing in its
news article about the Wisconsin killings.
"Rules
and etiquette on American hunting passed from generation
to generation have proved unfamiliar to many Hmong, who
come from Laos, where
hunting is a practiced skill. The Lao mountains are
among the wildest and least populated areas of the
world. There are no regulations about what, where or
when to hunt. Conservation officers and property owners
in several states have reported conflicts with the Hmong
over their hunting practices, often because they
did not understand American traditions. Four years
ago, Minnesota's Department of Natural Resources hired a
Hmong officer to teach the community about local
hunting and fishing rules." [In
Deer Country, a Puzzling Shooting Spree, By
Peter Slevin and Kari Lydersen, November 23, 2004]
Well, I guess maybe the Department
of Natural Resources didn't do such a bang-up job, and
who can blame it?
Why should we need government
bureaucracies to explain our traditions and values to
masses of aliens who have no business coming here at
all?
The "conflicts with the Hmong"
the Post mentions so demurely are
not just about hunting, and the conflicts are not
confined to the Hmong.
The exact same kinds of conflicts
are obvious to anyone who deals with Third Worlders on
any large scale.
Will the Wisconsin mass murders of
which Mr. Vang is accused lead the dominant culture to
start rethinking immigration and its social
consequences?
Not a bit. Here's what ABC News
found to worry about in the incident:
"Vang's
arrest left some Hmong citizens in his hometown fearful
of a backlash. About 24,000 Hmong live in St. Paul, the
highest concentration of any U.S. city. And the shooting
has already provoked racial tension in an area of
Wisconsin where deer hunting is steeped in tradition." [Hunting
Death Suspect's Relatives Shocked, ABC News, (AP)
November 24, 2004]
That's the real problem, you see,
not immigration but the racial "backlash"
that
may or may not come about from the white people
whose friends and neighbors Mr. Vang slaughtered.
Maybe the Department of Natural
Resources can send in a team to teach them about racism.
COPYRIGHT
CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.
Sam Francis [email
him] is a nationally syndicated columnist. A selection
of his columns,
America Extinguished: Mass Immigration And The
Disintegration Of American Culture, is now available
from
Americans For Immigration Control.
Click here
for Sam Francis' website. Click
here to order his monograph,
Ethnopolitics: Immigration, Race, and the American
Political Future.