Most Commonly Spoken Languages Other Than English and Spanish by State

Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer

May 20, 2014

Just to give you some idea about the scale of the invasion of the hordes, which goes far beyond merely Mexicans, here is a map of the third most spoken languages in each state.

We are being cut up like a colony by these hordes
We are being cut up like a colony by these hordes

I’m happy to see German in Ohio, though I would have thought it would be either Somali or Urdu.  I don’t meet many Germans who are close enough in lineage to still speak German.  I suppose it might be the Amish who are responsible, but I think they speak Dutch.  Maybe Slate doesn’t know the difference.  I wouldn’t blame them.  I have only recently understood the difference between German and Dutch (Dutch is much softer).

New York being Chinese is a slight shocker, but the rest of it is to be expected.

Here is a companion map I created for your consumption, showing which states have a White European language as a third language and which have a non-White language as a third language.

What will this look like in ten years?
What will this look like in another ten years?

It is quite disturbing that not only are we being invaded and conquered, but the various sub-sets of hordes are colonizing specific areas to use for their own specific ethnic purposes.

Finally, here is an outdated map from the 2000 census, which shows the languages spoken at home other than English, but including Spanish, county by county.

census us languages
In 2000, the Mexicans were the main problem. Now that the vast majority of Mexican poor are already occupying America, the colonization has escalated beyond them.