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Two
Hoosiers are on my mind this week:
Senator
Richard Lugar and rock and roller Hall of
Famer
John
Mellencamp.
The nominally Republican Lugar has just
distinguished himself
by being
one of five GOP Senators to join the Democrats' muscling
through the
"Hate Crimes" bill
by attaching it to wholly unrelated defense appropriations
legislation—on the same day that he broke ranks to endorse
Sonia
"Affirmative Action baby"
Sotomayor's nomination to the Supreme Court.
But the reason I came to focus on this odd
couple is, as you might guess, immigration.
On
Independence Day (!), the Evansville
Courier and Press
announced that Lugar's staff would host a forum at the
Juan
Diego Center (!!) on July 22nd to explain how
the
DREAM
Act could:
"help young, undocumented immigrants who grew up in the United States to
earn legal status by obtaining an education and completing
national or public service."
[Lugar's
Office to Hold DREAM Act Forum,
by Tom Lovett, Evansville
Courier and Press, July 4, 2009]
Good God! Why doesn't Lugar just invite the
DREAMers over to his house for a
cookout?
And I wonder: When illegal aliens show up at
the Juan Diego Center for an information gathering session
under the guidance of a
U.S. Senator's staff, are they still at that moment
considered to be "in the
shadows"?
Lugar, you may remember, is the RINO and the party's senior ranking member who in March
re-introduced the DREAM Act
(S.
719) only to watch it flounder ever since.
And with good reason. Among its
other
pitfalls, the DREAM Act
would allow "students"
up to age 35 apply and would not require them to produce hard
evidence supporting any statement they make on their
applications—that is, a
"student" can simply say that he has been in the U.S. for
five years (one of the conditions) but never have to prove it.
When I wrote
my
April column, the DREAM Act had 18
co-sponsors; today, three months later, it has 23.
Lugar has always been terrible on immigration.
And he's
getting
worse.
In some ways then, the fact that Lugar will host
a seminar for illegal aliens on how to milk the system isn't the
least surprising.
But in a broader sense, Lugar's advocacy is
incomprehensible.
When a worn out,
feeble-minded crone like
Senator
Dianne Feinstein backs outrageous
pro-alien legislation, you could—if you were
in a generous mood—acknowledge the political expediency of her
maneuvering.
California is, after all,
36
percent Hispanic.
But Indiana is still America having a white and
African American population just
under
95 percent. In Evansville, the white and black
total is over
96
percent.
And in Evansville, the
Hispanic population is only 1.5 percent.
What Lugar is all about
isn't clear. Maybe his immigration advocacy comes from his
goo-gooish
Methodist,
Eagle
Scout rearing?
Lugar apparently doesn't know what I for sure do
know. As one who recently
fled
California because of over-immigration, I'm
here to tell him:
I was reminded just how true this is earlier
this week when I went to the
Bob Dylan Show
starring
Willie Nelson,
John Mellencamp
and
Dylan.
On the night of the concert, after weeks of gray
skies and
rain,
Pennsylvania finally had perfect July summer weather—clear and
warm with just a few passing clouds.
The show's venue was quintessentially
all-American, the
Washington (PA) Wildcat's
minor league baseball park that offered
boiled hot dogs and grilled hamburgers as its
fare.
Fans sitting in general admission seats wore
"Vietnam Veteran"
caps and t-shirts that read
"Al's Cafe Softball."
Nelson and Dylan had joined forces for
ballpark tours in 2004, but in 2009 added
Mellencamp who earlier
partnered with Nelson in 1985 for another all-American event,
the debut Farm Aid festival that has raised over $33 million for
struggling farmers.
The show opened with the 76-year-old Nelson
standing in front of a giant red-white-and-blue Texan flag
dressed in black from hat to boots while he sang his American
classics that included
Whiskey River, Funny
How Time Slips Away,
Night Life, and Always on My Mind. (Watch
here,
here,
here and
here)
But when
Seymour Indiana-native Mellencamp, long famous for his
Americana song book, took
the stage I thought briefly of Lugar and his treasonous plot to
turn America over to the
reconquistadors.
Among Mellencamp's songs were
Pink Houses (see Mellencamp's video performance
here filmed in the
authentic Midwestern town of Austin, Indiana);
Small Town, (watch
the clip with great American imagery
here) and
Rain on the Scarecrow.
Mellencamp's songbook,
although occasionally dark in its outlook, nevertheless
emphasizes American values and traditions. As such, it could
serve as a reminder to our Congress about the things we want to
hold on to instead of so eagerly giving them away to
criminal
trespassers.
I don't mean to
overly romanticize Mellencamp or get too misty-eyed over the
America he sings about.
And I'm certain that
John Kerry/Barack
Obama supporter Mellencamp would no more be on our
side of the national question than
Bruce Springsteen. But music nevertheless serves as a
reminder of what most of America once was and, in some of its
corners like Washington, PA (White and African American
population
more than 98 percent) as
well as
other cities on the ball
park tour, still is.
I want to drive
that point home. As despondent as patriots can become over the
steep uphill climb we always face, our mission is vital to
America's survival.
A few weeks ago, I was invited to address a
patriotic immigration reform organization in
northern Virginia about
California and its future.
A handful of its members are gloomy about our future.
During my
speech, one person in the audience asked me repeatedly—with each
question posed somewhat differently—why I bothered to spend so
much time on our cause since it's obvious to him that inevitably
we will lose.
I replied—repeatedly—that
I don't agree. As far as I'm concerned, although it's maybe
hard to imagine for
northern Virginia or
California residents,
immigration hasn't yet overwhelmed large cross sections of
America.
Now that I live in
Pittsburgh, one of
America's remaining havens, that's why I'll
never give up—and will
fight to the
bitter end to keep my
city and its surrounding areas American.
And if, along the way, my
VDARE.COM colleagues and
I do anything to help preserve America in other cities and
states, so much the better.
Joe Guzzardi [email him] is a California native who recently fled the state because of over-immigration, over-population and a rapidly deteriorating quality of life. He has moved to Pittsburgh, PA where the air is clean and the growth rate stable. A long-time instructor in English at the Lodi Adult School, Guzzardi has been writing a weekly column since 1988. It currently appears in the Lodi News-Sentinel.