|
Communities in Crisis California cities, towns, and counties suffering under corruption, crime, foreign influence or economic loss |
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#12
|
||||
|
||||
Don, I'm reposting this so you don't miss it by going to the last post on the last page
*** Quote:
The first is a complex American social problem which can't be legislated away or deported. So, what is your solution? You can't wish it away or bitch about it ad nauseam without being part of the problem. And in the second, judging from many of your previous posts, just who is a part of "the Mexican invasion"? Just who is who by your definition in the so called "Latino community" and how much of the "problem" is deportable? This is difficult to sum up in a few words. There was a long history in America which culminated in the civil rights movement, and Rosa Parks became much more than a tired woman on a bus who didn't move to the back of the bus as dictated racial pecking order. Likewise, there were no illegal aliens who suddenly woke up on a Thursday morning in Los Angeles in 1958 and suddenly decided to become race baiting "Latino activists" on a playful whim. On the one hand you are correct about the racial pendulum swinging past the civil rights goals of equality and equal opportunity and there are way too many "activist" who are to young to even remember the seventies busy getting even with the wrong people for a whole litany of real and fabricated pre 1960 wrong doing, and I believe for the most part that contemporary allegations of racism and class animosity are largely bullshit and used as justifications for either failure or a minority drive for racial supremacy. However there are still complex social problems. Do you any solutions besides: Quote:
__________________
Freibier gab's gestern Hay burros en el maiz RAP IS TO MUSIC WHAT ETCH-A-SKETCH IS TO ART Don't drink and post. "A nickel will get you on the subway, but garlic will get you a seat." - Old New York Yiddish Saying "You can observe a lot just by watching." Yogi Berra Old journeyman commenting on young apprentices - "Think about it, these are their old days" SOMETIMES IT JUST DOESN'T MAKE SENSE. Never, ever, wear a bright colored shirt to a stand up comedy show. |
|
|