USA 2020 Elections: Thread

grarpamp grarpamp at gmail.com
Sat Feb 5 18:08:57 PST 2022


What Matters Most To Nations And Peoples?

https://buchanan.org/blog/what-matters-most-to-nations-and-peoples-159049

Speaking in Conroe, Texas, last weekend, former President Donald Trump
accused his successor of allowing millions of migrants to enter the
country illegally across our Southern border.

    “The most important border … for us is not Ukraine’s border but
America’s border,” thundered Trump.

    “Before Joe Biden sends any troops to defend a border in Europe,
he should be sending troops to defend our border right here in Texas.”

Thus did Trump not only frame a compelling issue for the fall
election; he has framed an issue that touches on one of the great and
deepening divides of our time.

Which matters more — the defense of our country from an invasion of
migrants from the Third World, or the defense of the borders of
distant nations that have little or nothing to do with the security or
survival of the United States?

Why should who rules the Russified Donbas be America’s concern?

This “border issue” feeds into other Republican issues.

For the border crossers seen on national TV appear to be mostly young
men, who will likely contribute to the crime crisis of shootings and
killings plaguing America’s cities.

Illegal immigration is also the ways and means by which illegal drugs
enter the United States. Last year, 100,000 Americans, most of them
young, died of overdoses, with two-thirds of these Americans
succumbing to fentanyl that is produced in China and comes through
Mexico.

Trump’s framing of the issue as between the foreign borders we defend
and America’s border that we do not also divides the GOP.

The interventionist wing of the party seeks a confrontation with
Vladimir Putin’s Russia, while America First nationalists urge a
refocus of U.S. troops and resources to our own bleeding southern
border.

And illegal migration is rising as an issue not only in the United
States but across Europe.

In France, the four leading presidential candidates — incumbent
Emmanuel Macron, nationalist Marine Le Pen, the center-right candidate
Valerie Pecresse and the far-right candidate Eric Zemmour — are all
making the invasion of Europe an issue, and taking a tougher line.

Over the same weekend that Trump spoke in Texas, the leaders of two
NATO nations that border Ukraine headed to Madrid for a gathering
titled “Defend Europe.” The threat that brought them to the Spanish
capital was not Russia’s military presence on Ukraine’s borders.

Reports The New York Times:

    “Instead of tackling the Russian threat to Europe’s eastern
frontier, the meeting attended by the prime ministers of Poland and
Hungary, Mateusz Morawiecki and Viktor Orban, focused on what the
populist leaders cite as their most pressing threats: immigration,
demographic decline and the European Union … ”

    “France’s far-right presidential candidate Marine Le Pen, an
outspoken fan of the Kremlin, was also at the two-day conclave … ”

    “A declaration issued after the Madrid gathering made no mention
of Ukraine. … It instead stressed the need to form a united front in
favor of ‘family policies,’ Christianity and keeping out immigrants.
The European Union, the statement said, had become ‘detached from
reality,’ leading to ‘demographic suicide.'”

In brief, while Western elites are alarmed about the borders of
Ukraine and Kremlin encroachments, much of Europe is more concerned
about its own moral, cultural and demographic decline — abortion, LGBT
rights, low birth rates and the death of Christianity.

Europe is in danger of dying, these people believe.

These Europeans are concerned that the nations and peoples their
ancestors and fathers knew are going out of existence. Their greater
fear is not of Putin’s Russia but of an EU superstate whose dominance
leads inexorably to the decline and disappearance of distinct ethnic
nations.

To the leaders of Hungary and Poland and the traditionalist and
populist right-wing parties of Europe, nationality matters more than
political systems.

Hungary’s Viktor Orban, for example, does not regard Putin’s Russia as
an enemy of his country, and provides economic incentives for
Hungarian families to have more children.

Consider. If the birth rates of the ethnic groups that historically
have made up the nations of Europe are now below replacement levels,
2.1 children per woman, these peoples will become minorities in their
own countries and eventually die out.

Extinction beckons.

Why should the inhabitants of these nations care about the borders of
other countries, if their own countries are slowly passing away?

And why should the future inhabitants of Europe from Africa and Asia
in year 2100, who will inherit, populate and rule these lands, care
about the old borders created by the history of yesterday’s Europeans?

As the peoples of Europe are divided between those who fear
demographic death in the long run and those who fear autocratic
Russian dominance in the near term, so, too, are Americans divided.

Our ruling class, to whom the world struggle is between autocracy and
democracy, are willing to fight for the triumph of the latter over the
former.

The other half of America is more concerned with the character and
composition of their own nation, present and future, which also
appears to be passing away.


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