Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
May 4, 2014
The ridiculous goof-trooper Jeb Bush took the occassion of illegal Mestizo invaders being granted rights to attend universities in Florida as an opportunity to attack everyone who disagrees with his invasion agenda.
From the LA Times:
“Florida succeeded in doing what the federal government has failed to do — take real steps to address our nation’s serious immigration challenges,” Bush said in a statement after the final vote.
Bush’s comments were in keeping with his outspokenness on immigration as he mulls a 2016 presidential run — testing his ability to win over the conservative elements of his party who dominate the early state primary and caucus contests.
Similar legislation has faltered in the Florida Legislature for years. So Bush joined other leaders in making a push to advance the Republican-sponsored bill when it became hung up due to opposition by some Senate leaders.
The bill had strong bipartisan support — including from Gov. Rick Scott and his Democratic opponent, Charlie Crist. And it has been cited by some Republican leaders nationally as a bright spot for the GOP as they try to make inroads with Latino voters, who favored President Obama over Mitt Romney 71% to 27% in the 2012 election.
Once Scott signs the measure into law, Florida students will be able to pay in-state tuition rates regardless of their immigration status, as long as they have attended a Florida high school for three years and enroll within two years of graduation. They will now simply have to provide their high school transcript, rather than proof of a parent’s residency, a requirement which had been impossible for some families in the country illegally.
In his statement, Bush said the change was “the right thing to do” and would help Florida capitalize on its talent, “making our future workforce more globally competitive than ever.”
Though the U.S. Senate passed a sweeping immigration reform bill last year, the legislation has stalled in the U.S. House because of resistance from some lawmakers. The White House has kept the pressure on, and Speaker John A. Boehner recently drew heat for mocking fellow lawmakers who have complained that the politics of the immigration overhaul were “too hard.”
If Bush decides to run for president in 2016, his advocacy for immigration reform and his tone on the issue could become one of his biggest hurdles with conservative Republican voters. In his book published last year, “Immigration Wars,” Bush advocated for “a path to permanent legal resident status” for the millions of immigrants in this country illegally — but not citizenship. Democrats pounced, noting that the former Florida governor had in previous interviews expressed himself open to a path to citizenship.
A long time ago in a galaxy far, far away, lobbying for the “rights” of invading populations of subhumans was the exclusive domain of the “liberal” establishment. Yay, but no more.
The Republicans are a party ostensibly based on a marriage of conservative social policy and liberal economics. Over the last decades, the liberal economics have come to outweigh the conservative social policy, and eventually make the latter completely irrelevant.
Big business wants more Mexicans, because even if they do nothing but live on welfare and commit crimes, capitalists still make money of the occupation, through healthcare scheming, free housing and other forms of systematic fraud.
At the same time that the corporate establishment has collapsed the moral imperative of the Republican party, the drive of social conservatives to preserve the racial and cultural make-up of the US has waned in the face of ever-rising media pressure, and thus the loss of the moral imperative has gone largely unnoticed.
Silently, the Republican party has become Democrat light on virtually every major issue. Technically, the Republicans still spout rhetoric against abortion and gay marriage, but that will go too in time.
American politics are simply two sports teams competing with each other for the championship title.
It is time for a new political force to rise in America, one capable of truly representing the interests of White America.