Mansionization Pits Persian Jews vs The Goyim (And Assimilated Jews)

When I hear the term “mansionization“, I immediately think of Persian Jews. They often live several generations to a residence and hence need bigger homes and they don’t have the same aesthetics in most things as the goyim and assimilated Jews. Because they come from material deprivation in Iran, Persians Jews tend to go shopping wild in America, indulging in purchases that most Americans would regard as bad taste.

There’s also a tendency operating here to get everything you can while the getting is good, to quote Steve Sailer, and to ignore the negative consequences to others. WASPs used to have a concept of noblesse oblige — an obligation to act in the best long-term interests of the wider society — that many ethnics have not adopted.

In my experience, about 5% of Jews feel no kinship with non-Jews and feel no concern about the well-being of their host Gentile society. The more traditional the Jew (or any member of a tribe), the more likely he is to be primarily concerned with his own kind and to have fewer relationships with outsiders. Cheating and damaging outsiders is widely considered OK in much of tribal life (Jewish, black, Chinese, latino, etc).

Public shaming used to keep immigrants in check and there were strong social pressures to fit in but now everybody is supposed to celebrate diversity, including the diversity of ugliness.

As Persian Jews often live many to a home, they’re better able than the average goy to afford homes in nice areas, and they’re taking over vast sections of Beverly Hills to benefit from the excellent public education and to be around fellow Persians.

This Los Angeles Times articles does not mention the subtext of Jews vs goyim but you can read it between the lines:

In Hollywood, for example, members of a neighborhood group objected to a spec home exceeding 3,000 square feet, being built on a Stanley Avenue block lined with older, smaller homes — most of them under 2,000 square feet. Aggravated by the “out of place, enormous” residence, Amy Aquino of the Sunset Square Neighborhood Assn. said the group hired a land-use consultant to examine how it was allowed.
“Everything they were doing, hideous as it is, is all completely legal,” Aquino said.
The builder behind the home, Amnon Edri, said that as long as his project meets requirements, it shouldn’t be a problem.
“If the city code allows it, and you want a bigger house, you have the right to a bigger house,” he said. “This is America. It’s a free country.”
Neighbors pushing for stricter rules fear that outsized, out-of-character buildings will drag down their home values. Edri and others maintain that bigger homes boost prices for their neighbors.
The tensions also reflect clashing expectations of Los Angeles living.
For decades there was “kind of a consensus about what a Southern California house should look like” — low, rambling and open to the landscape, cultural historian D.J. Waldie said. That philosophy, along with requirements imposed by builders, gave rise to uniform neighborhoods lined with homes of similar sizes and styles, Waldie said.

I don’t think this is the only example of the Jews challenging the goyim. It’s becoming a theme on my blog. It seems to me that Jews generally win because they have higher group solidarity, fewer compunctions against acting in their own self-interest, higher intelligence, more energy and more intensity.

A typical goyisha protest against these homes is: “It’s the disgusting Persian boxes that go from corner to corner that are ugly.”

I love these stories because they represent a fascinating clash of cultures. On the one hand, traditional Jews do not care about the mores of the goyim and they aggressively pursue what they want. Finally, pushed to the edge, assimilated Jews and goyim try to fight back for traditional civic virtues but are often out-gunned.

Architecture critic Greg Goldin writes for the Los Angeles Times:

Here, in two words, is the architecture that Los Angeles, the city that loves and hates architecture, currently loves to hate: Persian Palace. No other coinage so immediately evinces dismissal and revulsion. It is the ultimate form of “mansionization,” taking a small lot and building the largest possible box on it. A compleat Persian Palace–there are many minor variations and lesser imitations–is distinguished by its exaggerated moldings, numberless layers of cornices, elaborate grillework and columns galore. A Persian Palace brazenly combines motifs and wantonly disregards proportion and scale. A giraffe could glide through the front door without stooping, then turn around and peer out the clerestory window while grazing on a crystal chandelier. In Beverly Hills, where the Persian Palace may have originated and certainly came to prominence, the design is now banned. In Glendale, where steep ravines have been piled high with faux stone and banded entablature, it must abide by strict official architectural guidelines. Elsewhere–as in Valley Glen, where some residents have begun leafletting against encroaching mansionization–it is often unwelcome, a sign that, if nothing else, a neighborhood is in for sniping over the look and size of its homes.

Here is what Beverly Hills officially says about Persian Palaces: “The mansionization of the city’s residential neighborhoods poses a serious danger that such overbuilding will degrade and depreciate the character, image, beauty, and reputation of the city’s residential neighborhoods with adverse consequences for the quality of life of all residents. The bulk and mass of such homes, as well as their general appearances, affect the desirability of the immediate area and neighboring areas for residential purposes.” Builders and remodelers must adhere to the Residential Style Design Catalogue, a pictographic guide to the city’s “architecturally pure residential styles,” most of which, the 123-page brochure avers, “were period revival styles, some inspired by lavish film industry sets.”

Of course, neither the word Persian nor the word Palace appears anywhere in the city’s design grammar. The city planners didn’t bother. It was immediately understood that the April 2004 ordinance was aimed at all those mini-mansions on the streets south of Burton Way and north of Wilshire. What other target could there be?

Hamid Gabbay, who is a Beverly Hills architect and sits on the city’s Design Review Commission, admits as much, emphatically. He detests Persian Palaces, and here’s why: “I came here on December 9, 1978, only a few months before the shah was deposed. I would have thought that the immigrants from Iran would have learned something from the experience there. But they didn’t. They build these extravagant houses. They have no sense of humility, or how to live quietly. It’s as if exactly the opposite of what you expected happened: They exploded with ostentation.”

Gabbay’s allusion conjures an image of Reza Pahlavi garbed in white gabardine, trimmed in epaulettes and bedecked in honorary medals, parading in a horse-drawn cabriolet through the streets of Tehran. In a word, meretricious, like the houses Gabbay dislikes. And the sins of Persian Palaces–from shoddy architecture to shoddy details–are obvious.

But hardly exceptional. Money has always flaunted itself, and if you can’t flash your wad in Beverly Hills, where can you? As John Chase, the urban designer for West Hollywood, says, “If Beverly Hills is not America’s playground for the expressions of the rich, where is? It’s today’s Newport.” Ostentation, from Versailles to Vegas, exerts a powerful hold on the imagination. Visual capriciousness and ornament have always had a place in architecture. All you’ve got to do is take a moment to look at a few Persian Palaces to see that the owners love their outsized houses, with their outsized gewgaws. No one is trying to hide behind blank walls or pruned hedges. A column, a pediment, a curlicued balcony railing are like jewels around Zsa Zsa Gabor’s neck. Even if, to pursue the metaphor, they are paste . . . to have them is the point, the more of them the better.

Good to see the news media coming to our Jewish defense.

Steve Sailer writes:

So, there is a lot of activism right now in areas near the Hollywood Hills to put limits on the size of teardowns. The arguments are framed in terms of aesthetics and neighborhood preservation, but much of the energy comes from unspoken ethnic conflict.

My guess is that the most outspoken of the preservationists tend to be Ashkenazi Jews who grew up in SoCal, while the newcomers building the gaudiest new houses tend to be Oriental Jews, but I don’t have any data on that.

Also, in the San Fernando Valley, there is a growing conflict over a zoning variance between the growing numbers of Ultra-Orthodox Ashkenazi black hatters along Chandler Blvd. and the declining numbers of old-fashioned Ashkenazis.

The New York Times reported July 5, 2008:

To the Bukharian Jews of Central Asia, a big house is an essential tradition: a place to shelter multiple generations, to hold large parties, memorials and holiday dinners, to reaffirm a community’s unity.

So wherever they have put down roots, Bukharians — or, as they are sometimes called, Bukharans — have built aggressively, including in central Queens, where tens of thousands have settled since the early 1990s and the collapse of the Soviet Union.

Nowhere has their love of big homes been on more opulent display than in a section of Forest Hills known as Cord Meyer, an upper middle class neighborhood long cherished by its residents for its tranquillity and architectural charm.

There, Bukharians have been tearing down the neighborhood’s sedate Tudor, Georgian and Cape Cod-style homes, paving over lawns and erecting white-brick edifices that borrow from old Europe, with sweeping balustrades, stone lions bracketing regal double doorways, chateau-style dormers and pitched roofs, Romanesque and Greek columns and ornate wrought-iron balconies accented with gold leaf that glints in the sun.

But while the Bukharians’ arrival has been a boon for the area’s residential construction industry, it has been a bane for some neighbors. These residents have complained about the Bukharian tendency to build boldly and big, saying that the new houses are destroying their neighborhoods.

“There is a lot of history in the Cord Meyer area and a lot of historical houses that have a specific aesthetic character in that community,” said Melinda R. Katz, a city councilwoman whose district includes Forest Hills. “A lot of the houses that are going up there are just simply too big relative to the other houses that are there and have been there for generations. They are out of character.”

Jeffrey Wendt: Check the different articles down the scroll, and especially the comments.

Steve Sailer wrote in 2008:

American Jews should start thinking of themselves less as oppressed outcasts who need to go for whatever they can get while the getting is good, and start more accurately thinking of themselves as belonging to the best-connected inner circle of the contemporary American Establishment.
Thus, American Jews should realize that, like the Protestant elite of yore, their privileged position as a de facto leadership caste bestows upon themselves corresponding duties to conserve the long-term well-being of the United States—rather than to indulge in personal and ethnic profit and power maximization.
But that’s unlikely to happen until the Jewish elite to begin to tolerate non-Jewish criticism, rather than to continue to try to destroy the careers of critics—or even just honest observers—in what seems to be an instinctive reaction intended to encourage the others.
A group self-image of victimization, combined with a penchant for ideological intensity and powerful ethnocentric lobbies, can lead to bizarre political manifestations—such as the dominant Jewish assumption that proper veneration of their Ellis Island ancestors requires opposition to patriotic immigration reform today.

Dave posts to Sailer’s blog post: “What about funding hospitals and medical research? Wealthy American Jews have endowed a number of hospitals and medical schools, including Cedars-Sinai in Steve’s hometown, Weill Cornell in New York, etc. Or donating to research universities? Bloomberg donated a large sum to his alma mater Johns Hopkins. Those are examples of noblesse oblige.”

Another comment:

I once dated a girl who’s sister was engaged to a jewish guy. (their mother married and converted after a divorce from their biological father)

He and her mother were trying to convince her to convert – and the argument was all material – jews help one another, there are advantages to being Jewish on wall street. The step-father ran a firm that employed all jews and they blatantly favored Jews.

Both complained about ‘anti semitism’ numerous times. and if even so much as hinted that well, gosh maybe we WASPy goy should to the same thing, or that maybe, just maybe they shouldn’t, they both went alan-desherwotiz on me.

That experience was first time I saw what I suspected all along – and Ron Untz Ivy studies confirmed – the Jewish elite is corrupt and self serving and violated the trust they were given. they have no sense of stewardship or custodianship .they are a bad elite, and need to go, because they completely lack any self awareness or self criticism. their whole identity centers around the narrative that they are innocent little lambs in a world of hostile goy

They will never reflect, they will never reform.

Another comment:

I’m definitely envious of Jewish privilege. You get a taboo on mentioning, much less criticizing, your group. You never have to apologize as Jews, individually or as groups. You get to come from the wealthiest, most privileged group, yet see yourselves portrayed as victims and light-bearers. You get to attack anyone you like with impunity. It’s a pretty sweet gig if you can get it; why wouldn’t we envy that?

There are far more similarities in behavior between Jews and blacks than between blacks and white rightists. Jews vote like blacks, spew the same rhetoric, share the same Narrative, push the same agenda, and show almost exactly the same hostile approach to whites and their interests. Exactly the same double-standards, too.

Pretty much everything the Jews do in media & entertainment, and the social sciences redounds to the detriment of Euro-America. Jewish finance ain’t much help, either.

I’m actually grateful for Jews, on a certain level; they’re the model for aggressive, modern ethnic tribalism. It’s good to have the world’s most racist group as the model of wealth and influence, and so admired; it says a lot about racism.

Another comment: “Jews succeed in this country not merely because they are “smart” but it is not because other Jews are doing them favors either. I am Jewish and I can say, Jews will rip each other to shreds. Israel is known for this. But I have noticed that Jews are more ambitious than Gentiles (as a general rule, across a broad population) and are more driven. This cannot be measured on any IQ test. I don’t know of any reason why a trait such as laziness or drive cannot be genetic and inherited.”

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Long Beach Police Chief Jim McDonnell Headed For Victory As Los Angeles County Sheriff

I went to the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s debate last night at the Jewish Community Center. I’m not up on the issues, but it seems like Paul Tanaka has been saddled by everything Lee Baca did wrong and that Jim McDonnell is headed for an easy victory.

Thomas Hines writes:

Long Beach Police Chief Jim McDonnell is the only candidate for Los Angeles County Sheriff who’s been a top cop.

He’s also the only contender who’s never worn the department’s green and tan uniform — an attribute McDonnell said lends itself to the kind of critical eye that’s needed.

“I’m not encumbered by past practices of the organization or long-term allegiances within the department,” McDonnell said.

As Long Beach’s police chief, McDonnell points to dropping crime rates as proof his approach to policing works. If elected sheriff, McDonnell said he plans on applying the same policing strategy, which calls on officers to engage with members of the community, throughout L.A. County. McDonnell said the department would also benefit from his leadership style: Setting clear expectations and holding his subordinates accountable for meeting them.

But the Long Beach Police Department has not been without controversy during McDonnell’s four-year tenure. Last year, officers fired their weapons in 22 incidents, including three accidental discharges, three dog shootings and four misses. The remaining 11 incidents left six suspects dead and five injured, McDonnell said.

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Tolerating Prayer In Public

Chaim Amalek says: “Supreme Court votes 5-4 to tolerate prayer in public settings, and all the Jews on the court reliably line up against the decision.”

If God had meant for the goyim to have their own countries, He would have given them the brains to defend them.

Most Jews in America have a reflexive anti-Christian impulse and I suspect they don’t like this court ruling.

Report: “Residents Susan Galloway, who is Jewish, and Linda Stephens, an atheist, filed the suit, saying the practice made them uncomfortable.”

Secular Jews (as opposed to Orthodox Jews) have often led the way in America in removing Christianity from the public square.

The Times of Israel reports:

Susan Galloway, a Jewish resident of the Rochester satellite town Greece, and her friend Linda Stephens began legal proceedings some seven years ago after becoming increasingly uncomfortable with the consistently Christian prayers opening every town council meeting. Galloway and Stephens began attending meetings in an effort to save the local public access channel, Galloway told JTA in a 2013 interview.

Galloway told JTA, “They’re asking us to bow our heads, they’re asking us to join them in the Lord’s Prayer, they’re asking us to stand — all of this is in the name of Jesus Christ… This one guy went on about the resurrection. We have preachers who stand there with their hands in the air.”

However, the court said in 5-4 decision Monday that the content of the prayers is not critical as long as officials make a good-faith effort at inclusion.

Among the dissenters were Jewish judges Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Stephen Breyer and Elena Kagan…

Americans United for Separation of Church and State was instrumental in bringing the case to court, and Galloway also received support from the Reform movement, the National Council of Jewish Women, the Anti-Defamation League and the American Jewish Committee, which filed friend-of-the-court briefs on her behalf.

USA TODAY: WASHINGTON – The Supreme Court on Monday upheld the centuries-old tradition of offering prayers at the start of government meetings, even if those prayers are overwhelmingly Christian.

The 5-4 decision in favor of the any-prayer-goes policy in the town of Greece, N.Y., avoided two alternatives that the justices clearly found abhorrent: having government leaders parse prayers for sectarian content, or outlawing them altogether.

It was written by Justice Anthony Kennedy, with the court’s conservatives agreeing and its liberals, led by Justice Elena Kagan, dissenting.

The long-awaited ruling following oral arguments in November was a victory for the the town, which was taken to court by two women who argued that a plethora of overtly Christian prayers at town board meetings violated their rights.

While the court had upheld the practice of legislative prayer, most recently in a 1983 case involving the Nebraska Legislature, the case of Town of Greece v. Galloway presented the justices with a new twist: mostly Christian clergy delivering frequently sectarian prayers before an audience that often includes average citizens with business to conduct.

The court’s ruling said the alternative – having the town board act as supervisors and censors of religious speech – would involve the government far more than Greece was doing by inviting any clergy to deliver the prayers.

“An insistence on non-sectarian or ecumenical prayer as a single, fixed standard is not consistent with the tradition of legislative prayer outlined in the court’s cases,” Kennedy said.

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Los Angeles Jewish Leaders Condemn Donald Sterling

The more religious the Jew, the less he cares about Donald Sterling’s putative racism. The more religious the Jew, the less he cares about what people say privately. The more religious the Jew, the less he cares about the goyim and their sensitivities. The more religious the Jew, the less he cares for blacks. There is no mitzva against racism in the Torah and there is no divine directive in the Jewish tradition to fight bigotry. Instead, it is usually a made-up way to be Jewish by those who aren’t interested in studying and observing the Torah.

Do you think Jews in Williamsburg, Crown Heighs and Mear Shearim care about Donald Sterling? Do you think they care about blacks? These Jews, when they talk about blacks, often say things far harsher than Sterling’s recently revealed remarks.

If you go to any traditional Orthodox shul, you’ll be unlikely to find any concern about civil rights for blacks and latinos and Muslims and gays.

It is the secular Jew who is more likely to think that being pro-civil rights is essential to his Jewish identity.

Those Jews who speak out against what Donald sterling said in private are out of touch with Judaism. They are moral show-offs who are alien to the rabbinic tradition. And they are lighting the fires of the next crematoria.

Rabbi Marvin Hier of the Museum of Tolerance told the Jewish Journal of Los Angeles: “There’s no place in America for this kind of racism. We believe the action to ban him for life is correct, and we will not accept any donations from Donald Sterling in the future.”

If there is no place in America for this kind of racism, that means that Rabbi Hier and the Museum of Tolerance either stand for genocide against people who speak like Donald Sterling (probably a majority of the population at one time or another) or for ethnic cleansing (the forceful expulsion of most people out of America). I see no alternative meaning to what the rabbi says. He is effectively calling for totalitarian surveillance of private speech and the end of the First Amendment by making this kind of conversation, talk that was common sense for most of America’s history, illegal.

As for not taking Donald Sterling’s money, I am sure that an examination of Rabbi Hier’s donors would reveal people far more unsavory than Donald Sterling.

The more religious the Jewish organization, the more likely they are to have no problem taking money from the likes of Donald Sterling. Rabbi Hier’s Museum of Tolerance has no precedence in Torah and it primarily appeals to those who are ignorant of the rabbinic tradition.

Banning Sterling for life “is what should happen whenever someone makes anti-Semitic or racist remarks, as millions of people are touched by this view,” according to Hier. So if anyone says anything like this in private they should be banned for life from public life. Wow. Rabbi Hier’s worldview is totalitarian. I wonder if he advocates putting people like Sterling into re-education camps or does he just want them dead or simply expelled from America?

Jewish Federation of Los Angeles CEO Jay Sanderson says: “Donald Sterling is clearly not a member of the Jewish community.” Why exactly? Because he said racist things in private? If that is the standard, most Jews are not part of the Jewish community. The Torah commands the genocide of a particular race — Amalek. The Torah community must not be part of the Jewish community. Israel is systematically rounding up African immigrants in the country illegally and shipping them back to Africa. Israel and its supporters must not be part of the Jewish community according to this type of thinking.

If Jewish organizations were happy to take Donald Sterling’s money before these latest remarks, there is no moral reason to stop taking it now. If you are doing good, then Donald Sterling’s money will help you do more good. Do you care more about how you preen publicly or how much good you do?

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Free Markets Make Irrational Racism Expensive

Steve Sailer wrote about Jackie Robinson and company: That competitive markets make irrational bigotry expensive — not impossible, but costly — was first formally demonstrated in 1957 by University of Chicago economist Gary Becker (the 1992 Nobel Laureate), and in the four decades since has barely gained a toehold in conventional thinking. Let me be clear: this idea does not pollyannaishly presume that white people (or any other people) are motivated by disinterested good will. It merely assumes that if forced to by competition, people will hire whoever makes them the most money. Don’t forget, though, that we humans are always conniving to exempt ourselves from competition. The more we can insulate ourselves from the open market, the more painlessly we can then discriminate for kin and countrymen and against people we don’t like. Baseball’s often ugly history shows this clearly.

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Why Do So Many People Want To Lighten Their Complexions?

I thought black was beautiful? Or is that one of the things you have to say out loud because you fear the opposite is widely held to be true, like gay pride?

Here is Sammy Sosa, before and after skin-lightening cream.

s-SAMMY-SOSA-SKIN-large

A friend says: “The Asian market is very advanced when it comes to skin whitening. It’s not about whitening creams anymore. What they do is take high amounts of Glutathione with Vitamin C and it will actually whiten people up in a matter of months. Of course, taking that with creams yield these results. It’s very popular in the Philippines. I can guess these celebrities take the pills. On dark people it will take 3-6 months to whiten, maybe up to a year.”

Chaim Amalek: Is there such a thing as blackening cream?

Chaim Amalek: Also, do black people fade to white as they age?

Daniel: “White people risk skin cancer to get dark. Dark people spend a fortune on creams to get light. People should do what they can to look and feel their best naturally, but at the end of the day, they need to make peace with who they are.”

Steve Sailer writes about whiner Junot Diaz: I realize that Dominican baseball stars aren’t representative of everybody born in the Dominican Republic, but it’s worth comparing the looks of Diaz to other celebrities born in the Dominican Republic, like slugger Sammy Sosa (before and after his unfortunate experience with skin-whitening creams).

Back home in the DR, Diaz would be more or less of a Person of Pallor, but playing at anti-white rage has been very, very good to him in America as the go-to Hispanic guy for receiving literary prizes, including the $500k MacArthur “genius” fellowship.

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Acts Of Love

A month ago, Jeb Bush sympathized out loud with illegal aliens. He said April 6: “Yes, they broke the law, but it’s not a felony. It’s an act of love. It’s an act of commitment to your family.”

Love is just as often creepy and horrific as it is beautiful and warming. I don’t regard illegal immigration as an act of love, and I don’t automatically regard any act of love as a good thing. Same-sex marriage could also be described as an act of love and according to the Torah, same-sex sex for men is an abomination.

Jeb’s sentiments reminds me of another speech about acts of love. This one was written out by John Hinckley in 1982 just before his sentencing:

”From the start, all I wanted was for someone to love me. I desperately wanted to be loved but I never could give appropriate love in return. I seem to have a need to hurt those people that I love the most. This is true in relation to my family and to Jodie Foster. I love them so much but I have this compulsion to destroy them.

”On March 30, 1981 I was asking to be loved. I was asking my family to take me back and I was asking Jodie Foster to hold me in her heart. My assassination attempt was an act of love. I’m sorry love has to be so painful.”

I’ve watched documentaries about losers Lee Harvey Oswald, Mark David Chapman, John Hinckley and I feel like I understand what was driving them. They were failing at life. They were failing in their relationships. So they retreated to their fantasy world and desperately wanted to be important. I get that. Luckily for me, I was raised with a strong sense of right and wrong and so I would never do anything like what they did, but I get their frustration, their failure and their yearning to matter. When you consistently blow it at real life, you’re going to face strong temptations to retreat to dreams and to addictions and to discount other people’s reality. When you’re closely bonded with others, you’re much less likely to do this. Losers, on the other hand, often become True Believers.

I dealt with my feeling of failure by embracing a hero, Dennis Prager, chasing women, converting to Orthodox Judaism, writing my heart out, enrolling in a decade’s worth of psycho-therapy and 12-step programs, and pursuing the Alexander Technique.

Amalek: “You are too old to win sympathy based on your emotional needs.”

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Conspiracy Theories

* I can hear my Uncle Val telling me from beyond the grave — “Keep your bowels open and your mouth shut!” He was a communist. The Fords are genetically attracted to marginal unpopular conspiracy theories because they prove to us that we’re smarter than everyone else.

* When I last traveled (in 2000) to Australia on my family’s dime, I had a more inflated view of myself. At age 34, it was possible to believe I was the great man. At age 48, self-importance is harder to maintain in the face of mounting failures.

* There’s a Jew –former kibbutznik — where I’m going down under, but she’s married to a non-Jew and has kids and I’m told it would be a bit weird to call her up when I arrive and say shalom. Yet, I’m making a list of Jews to call for when the moshiach comes and I want to add her to the list.

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Is ‘anti-illegal immigration’ just code for anti-Hispanic?

Joseph Cotto writes:

OCALA, Fla., May 1, 2014 — Illegal immigration is turning into a top political issue this year.

With midterm elections around the corner and an enraged pro-amnesty base firmly out of the shadows, unlawful immigration presents a dangerous potential quagmire for Republican politicos.

The amnesty debate rarely hits the heart of the matter, focusing instead on the politics of race. Opposition to temporary legal status or citizenship for illegal aliens is often perceived as anti-Hispanic bigotry.

“This ‘perception’ is false and pernicious,” says Dr. Stephen Steinlight of the Center for Immigration Studies. “No solid data or body of empirical evidence suggest, let alone prove bigotry motivates the great majority that opposes amnesty. It is a smear disseminated by amnesty advocates to advance their cause.

“‘Immigrant advocates’ lack compelling arguments to support their position. By labeling opponents ‘bigots,’ they rationalize refusal to debate them and camouflage fear of responding to opponents’ ideas with a fraudulent moral justification. ‘One Nation, After All,’ an exhaustive study of American attitudes towards Third-Rail issues by Alan Wolfe, finds no evidence that bigotry plays a role in opposition to Hispanic immigration. Americans oppose illegal immigration, not immigrant ethnicity.”

“Amnesty and the resultant increase in immigration would be highly injurious to America’s Hispanic community,” Dr. Steinlight explains. “Most are working poor with a high percentage of families on two major welfare programs. They’re clinging to the bottom rungs of the socio-economic ladder in the loosest labor market since the Great Depression. A tsunami in immigration would greatly intensify competition for scarce jobs, increase unemployment, drive down wages, and make upward mobility even harder for second and third-generation Hispanics whose socio-economic advancement has stagnated. For reasons previously cited, it would also slow assimilation.”

Some claim that Hispanics are “natural conservatives” due to their family-oriented culture. This allegedly makes them Republicans in all but formal registration. Election results say the exact opposite, though.

“The premise and stereotype are equally false,” Dr. Steinlight says. “There’s no correlation between ‘strong family values’ and conservatism. Cultures perceived as possessing them (i.e. Asian Americans and Jewish Americans) are predominantly liberal. Moreover, whether understood generically or as socially conservative code language, Hispanics don’t exemplify ‘strong family values.’”

JOSEPH COTTO WRITES:

Looking beyond the shenanigans of Capitol Hill GOPers, what should America expect in the event of illegal alien amnesty?

“We can expect disaster. In sum, we’ll witness the unmaking of America,” Dr. Stephen Steinlight of the Center for Immigration Studies told me late last year. “It would subvert our political life by destroying the Republican Party. The Hispanic vote will make the Democrats the PRI of America. A GOP relic might survive regionally, but could never successfully contest a national election.

“America would turn into a One Party State which, like all others, would be tyrannical and corrupt. The political center would lurch to the left. Political liberty, the freedom to choose among authentically different alternatives, would be lost.
“A population transfer from one nation with a different language and political culture which will become the predominant future demographic will destroy social cohesion. The diversity of previous immigration safeguarded against this. Dual language/dual culture countries are plagued by Balkanizing social strife.”

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The Despair State

I often slip into this state at the smallest signs of rejection. Daniel Siegel writes: “For example, if an individual has been exposed to repeated neglect as a young child, a state of despair may have been activated and engrained. In this excessively low energy state, perceptions of the world are marked by a sense of rejection; emotions are filled with shame and hopelessness; memories may evoke previous experiences of being rejected; a model of the self as unlovable and of others as unavailable may be activated; and there may be a behavioral tendency to withdraw. Because this state of despair has been repeatedly activated, it will be more likely to be activated in response to even minor signs of rejection, such as a friend’s or therapist’s not returning a phone call on time. The change in state in response to this environmental context is a function, in part, of this individual’s history. The entire cluster, however, can quickly become the dominant information-processing mode at such a moment, giving the individual a sense of massive rejection and despair far exceeding the initial stimulus and not having any clear, consciously accessible connection to experiences from the past.”

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