A nation of immigrants

The United States is today often referred to as a “nation of immigrants”. It is of course true in the obvious sense that the U.S. as a society was built by European immigrants, but the phrase is used by traitors and subversive minorities to create support for welcoming hordes of non-European immigrants.

The phrase was popularized by John F. Kennedy, who write the book “A Nation of Immigrants” at the request of the Anti-Defamation League (ADL), one of the country’s most notable Jewish organizations. Indeed, on the ADL’s site, on a page containing indoctrination materials to be used in schools, we read:

In the Foreword, [ADL Director Abraham] Foxman shares that Kennedy, who was a junior Senator of Massachusetts, accepted ADL’s request to write this essay, and A Nation of Immigrants was published in 1958.

This was part of the intensive efforts of the organized Jewish community to make immigration laws less restrictive, leading to the important Immigration Act of 1965.

Other important elements of the “immigration nation” image of the modern U.S. also have Jewish connections: for instance, the notable phrase “melting pot” was coined by the Jew Israel Zangwill, and the “Give me your tired, your poor, Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free …” poem was written by the Jewess Emma Lazarus. (The original manuscript of this poem is even held by the American Jewish Historical Society.)

Source Article from http://www.destroyzionism.com/2014/02/03/nation-immigrants/

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