St. Louis Mayor Demands His City be Flooded with Low-IQ Brown People

Daily Stormer
April 10, 2015

"I have a plan to bury you."
“I have a plan to bury you.”

The mayor of St. Louis is demanding immigrants flood his city and overwhelm the people living there.

Here are some bits from an interview with him on the topic conducted back in August of last year by the National Journal:

Why did you decide to make St. Louis a welcoming place for immigrants?

Well, attracting immigrants and attracting new Americans to St. Louis is something that is an economic imperative for us. Compared to other regions in America, we have a very small percentage of new Americans within our population. What we’re trying to do is attract and retain the best and brightest minds, including immigrants, to our community to help make sure that we can compete in the global economy. We know that immigrants are a big part of the new businesses. Other cities that have higher levels of immigration have grown economically, population-wise, and we want to be part of that. We want people to know that we are a welcoming community. We want to make sure we take advantage of the influx of people coming into our country as much as we possibly can.

The Mosaic Project’s programs seem to target educated, affluent immigrants. Is that who you want to bring to St. Louis

Our efforts to be a more welcoming community for immigrants don’t stop with certain programs within the Mosaic Project. Part of our effort includes the International Institute, which is an organization that serves all immigrants, of every kind. We partner with them and they are very engaged in what we are doing. Casa de Salud is a program that is targeted toward immigrants who are here, who need healthcare, and who are not connected to the system. These are generally low-income families, some of them undocumented, who come into our community. This is a regional effort that we’ve undertaken. The Mosaic Project is structured so that programs deal with people in the corporate world and people who are coming out of school, who have visas and who may have citizenship. But that is not exclusive.

What made you decide to offer shelter in St. Louis to Central American children illegally crossing the border? Did you worry that people might not be so supportive?

First of all, we did this because it’s the right thing to do. You have thousands of young teens who have come into our country, who are now housed in government detention centers near the border. They’re scared, they’re alone, and they have no place to go. We are a caring community and we had a huge amount of support from Catholic Charities, United Way, Washington University, Casa de Salud, International Institute. All these organizations came together very, very quickly. We’re talking about 60 children in three facilities. Did I think everybody was going to support it? Absolutely not. But I’ll tell you, we got a very good response from the community. The negative reaction was very limited. I’m proud of St. Louis. We did not get some of the strong negative responses that other cities have received, even in the state of Missouri. To me, this isn’t about politics, this is about people and kids that need help. We’re going to leave the debate and the blame-game to Washington and maybe someday they will come to an agreement on immigration reform.

The deal here is that you get federal grants for bringing these people into your city.

But how could it possibly be worth it?

Maybe he thinks Mexicans would offset the pressure from the Negroes?