Why VDARE.COM / The White Doe?
The Role of VDARE.COM After 9/ll: It's The Immigration,
Stupid...
A Reader Asks, Standing Athwart History?
By
Peter Brimelow
Why VDARE? Well, we thought
about
MSDARE, but we didn’t want an antitrust suit.
I have always been
fascinated by the story of Virginia Dare. She was the first
English child to be born in the New World, in August
1587, shortly after the founding of what was to become known
as "The Lost Colony" on Roanoke Island off the North
Carolina coast. It says something about the mettle of those
settlers that any pregnant woman would cross the Atlantic, the
equivalent of a lunar expedition at that time—and Virginia’s
mother Elenor was no less than the daughter of John White, the
colony’s governor.
Perhaps you have to have a
daughter yourself to appreciate what White must have felt three
years later, when he finally returned from a supply trip to
England, much delayed by the
Spanish Armada. The smoke he took at first to be proof of
occupation turned out to be brushfires. The settlement stood
abandoned. Over a hundred settlers, his daughter and
granddaughter among them, had vanished. He would never see them
again. (For more information about the Lost Colony,
click here...)
Today, Virginia Dare seems
to be vanishing from
American education too. But she was a fixture for
earlier generations. Even
Franklin D. Roosevelt felt free to
give a speech commemorating the
350th anniversary of her birth. At one point, I planned to
pay homage by bestowing her name on the heroine of a projected
fictional concluding chapter in
Alien Nation, about the flight of the last white family
in
Los Angeles. It seemed . . . symmetrical.
I was dissuaded.
But
multiculturalists will be happy to know that there is always
the possibility that the colonists survived, merging with the
local
Indians. There are fables that Virginia Dare as a young
woman got involved in a love triangle with a warrior and an
angry medicine man, who
transformed her into a white doe. And there have been
serious suggestions that The Lost Colony is the answer to the
historical problem of the
Lumbee Indians of Robeson County, North Carolina, an
English-speaking group of unclear origin.
(Anthropologists call such
groups
"tri-racial isolates." Significant of the times, and
perhaps of federal subsidies, the Lumbees seem recently to have
been emphasizing their claim to pure Indian status. For example,
click here...
For more on the white
doe legend,
click here...)
So Virginia Dare could be
symbolic of the
coming racial nirvana that immigration enthusiasts are
forced to start fantasizing about when you compel them to look
at the statistical consequences of current policy.
Or perhaps not. The actress
Heather Locklear (Melrose Place, etc.) is claimed as
a prominent Lumbee. But if, through some miracle of genetic
recombination, Virginia Dare is reborn in
Ms. Locklear’s beautiful face, John White might well have
recognized her.
VDARE has come into
existence because many great and developing issues of the day
are no longer covered in the
Establishment Media—whether
liberal or
"conservative."
However, you can sometimes
see them naively reported in the local press. Thus Long Island’s
Southampton Press (Donna Giacontieri, Is Town Seal
Offensive? September 24, 1999) has carried a story about a
local version of the Virginia Dare phenomenon: the local
"Anti-Bias Task Force" called on the town to abolish its
seal, which depicts a Pilgrim and the words
"First English settlement in the State of New York."
The grounds: it "features
an offensive representation of one gender, one race and one
historical period . . ."
"One historical
period . . ."?
Yeah. It’s called America.