Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
June 11, 2017
It’s time for democracy, my Ricans.
It’s time to let our colony, Puerto Rico, go.
They’re all grown up.
And it’s time to give them freedom.
When Puerto Ricans vote Sunday on the political future for the U.S. territory, Gov. Ricardo Rosselló is confident most will choose statehood.
“It’s unfortunate U.S. citizens here don’t have the same power,” he said. “We need to take action.”
But in some ways, the timing couldn’t be worse. With a political divide on the island, a deepening economic crisis and — critically — a lack of congressional support to become the 51st American state, experts say the vote seems unlikely to result in any real change.
“Now is the worst time and the worst manner to deal with the issue,” said Federico de Jesús, a Puerto Rico native and the former deputy director of the Governor of Puerto Rico’s Washington, D.C., office, under former Gov. Alejandro García Padilla, a member of the Popular Democratic Party who opposes statehood. “All parties agree that the current system needs to be modified, but this is definitely the wrong course of action.”
Sorry, friend.
It seems you don’t understand freedoms.
It’s time that like other brown shitholes, such as Iraq, you get up to speed and adopt democracy.
This will be the island’s fifth referendum asking Puerto Ricans to choose statehood, independence or keep some version of the current status as a commonwealth. Opposition groups who don’t believe in statehood and felt unrepresented on the ballot — which originally included only statehood and independence/free association — are boycotting the vote, and experts say a statehood verdict doesn’t necessarily represent what the population wants.
Rosselló said a statehood vote would be legitimate, adding that anyone who doesn’t vote in the upcoming plebiscite is “mostly driven by partisan politics.”
“The plebiscite has to be for a future solution to the status issue, which implied that the current status was not a solution,” he said. “This goes to the roots of what it means to be American, what it means to be part of a nation that shares the same democratic values, human rights, freedom … and all of those components are being severely hampered.”
Independence would give Puerto Ricans complete freedom as a nation, and free association would provide the territory with independence while establishing a mutual agreement with the United States that is defined by a compact.
Sure, it’s going to be sad when the 5 million Puerto Ricans living in the US have to go back home.
That will greatly decrease the amount of vibrant diversity and easy middle-shelf pussy in cities such as New York. And yeah, no more J-Lo films is going to be hard, especially since she’s really just coming into herself as an actress and is probably ready to win an Oscar.
But it must happen.
Because of the freedoms.
The good news here is: David Byrne isn’t Puerto Rican.