|
Several years ago, I
visited Northern Ireland and, for the first time, attained a clear
understanding of the situation in that distressed corner of the United
Kingdom. As I learned about the Troubles in Ulster, I saw parallels to
an increasingly dangerous situation in the southwest portion of the
United States of America. It is impossible to share an in-depth analysis
of those parallels in this short article; therefore, I will content
myself with giving a brief synopsis of the similarities between the
efforts to annex Ulster to the Republic of Ireland and a determined
effort to annex to Mexico five of America's southwestern states and
portions of two more. I will leave it to the knowledgeable reader to
connect the dots and make the comparisons.
The campaign to
accomplish the enlargement of Mexico at America's expense is called Reconquista,
which is Spanish for Reconquest. For several decades, the
border between America and Mexico has resembled a sieve; and for
political reasons, the governments of both nations have refused to
secure it. Mexican politicians encourage illegal immigration by their
citizens into America for three main reasons. First, illegal immigrants
send home money which in turn helps Mexico's economy. Second, Mexican
politicians see illegal immigration to America as a way to reduce crime
and poverty in Mexico. Third, most Mexican politicians hate America and
back Reconquista.
When Mexican citizens in
the United States commit felonies against Americans -- including rape,
robbery, and sometimes even murder -- all that the criminals need to do
to avoid the consequences of their acts is to slip across the border
back to their home country. The Mexican government refuses to extradite
suspects to the United States except in the most extraordinary cases.
Most Mexicans living in
America illegally -- and in some cases, even legally -- consider
themselves Mexicans, not Americans. In fact, in some city neighborhoods
in the border regions, one does not see American flags flying but
Mexican flags.
In recent years, a number
of individuals elected to political office in such American cities have
been Mexicans who have attained American citizenship while retaining
their Mexican citizenship. While such dual citizenship is encouraged by
the Mexican government, it is not consistent with the oath of office in
my nation. But it is allowed nevertheless. Thus we in essence have
foreign nationals occupying government offices in the United States of
America. Such individuals are unabashedly pro-Reconquista and
anti-American. Their loyalty is for another nation, and their goal is to
annex their area of representation to that foreign nation.
The shifting population
demographics of the American Southwest are in favor of the neo-conquistadors.
Not only are hundreds of thousands of illegal immigrants pouring
across the border from Mexico into the United States yearly, but the
same people are having far more children than the average American
couple.
Any American who speaks
out against illegal immigration or Reconquista, even if he
happens to be a Black American or a Hispanic American, is immediately
tagged as a racist.
The victims of what we
call the alien invasion of the Southwest are law-abiding, hardworking
citizens. Ranchers have seen their property become trash-strewn,
nocturnal highways for masses of illegals, including drug dealers and
criminals. American citizens in the rural areas and towns in the border
states have been raped, robbed, kidnapped, assaulted, and murdered by
illegal aliens. To protect their families' lives, citizens have
installed bars on the windows of their homes and put various security
devices in place, thus living in a state of siege. Some have given up
and moved away, bringing joy to the hearts of those who wish to "Mexicanize"
that portion of America as a precursor to successful Reconquista.
Mexican authorities are
anything but concerned about this situation; in fact, there are several
documented incidents in which Mexican military personnel have penetrated
into American territory and even fired at American citizens. There are
also thugs such as the Brown Berets who take every opportunity to
intimidate and physically assault Americans who refuse to see things the
Reconquista way. At the same time, in the best American
tradition, a number of citizen groups have been formed to guard the
property and lives of Americans from alien violence. These small,
armed-citizen militias operate legally under our Constitution and
cooperate with local American border patrol personnel who are caught
between corrupt American and vicious Mexican officials. The Mexican
government demonizes these brave American citizens and calls for their
arrest. Other voices, including those who celebrate when a border patrol
officer is murdered, call for their death. In recent months, an American
group in Arizona called Ranch Rescue has come under fire from unknown
assailants, including a nighttime attack by a sniper team. In short,
because the United States government is allowing an alien invasion by
individuals who are determined to annex a part of our country to another
nation, a militarization of sorts is taking place on both sides of the Reconquista
divide.
While there are many
other parallels between Ulster and the situation in the American
Southwest other than the ones upon which I have touched briefly, here is
where I want to present the most important similarity: the Roman
Catholic Church is shamelessly exploiting the unfolding tragedy in
America. Indeed, that church is one of the driving and sustaining forces
behind that toxic and increasingly explosive situation. Rather than
discourage illegal immigration and call upon the Mexican government to
clean up its corruption and to reform its misery-producing ways, Roman
Catholic Church leadership has blatantly supported the alien invasion of
my country and, in so doing, has been an invaluable aid to the Reconquista
movement while putting many of my countrymen in harm's way of that
movement.
Why is this so? The
answer is simple -- the Roman Catholic Church has its own plan of
reconquest. She is determined to reestablish the power she once
exercised over the civil governments and populations of the world. The
pope, along with the Reconquista cadre, views South, Central,
and North Americas as being one "from Argentina to Alaska." On
several occasions, Pope John Paul II has "consecrated" this
"America" to "Our Lady of Guadalupe." The Mexican
people streaming across America's porous southern border are Roman
Catholics. It is in the interest of the Vatican to establish as many
Roman Catholics as possible in the United States of America. The pope
and his partners in spiritual crime care little how the job is done --
whether illegally or legally -- just so it is done.
For the sake of brevity,
I will content myself with giving just one proof which conclusively
convicts the Roman church as being an accessory to the increasingly
dangerous situation in southwest America, just as she is an accessory to
the ongoing tragedy in Ulster. On January 22, 2003, the Catholic bishops
of Mexico and the United States issued Strangers No Longer: Together
on the Journey of Hope, A Pastoral Letter Concerning Migration.
Revealingly, in a list of definitions accompanying the letter, there is
no definition for illegal immigrant. Rather than use the illegal
word, the bishops explain that the "undocumented immigrant" is
a person who is called such "because they lack the required
paperwork." A migrant is defined as "a person on the
move."
Encouragement for
illegal, Mexican immigration to America is the constant theme, both
subtle and not so subtle, which runs through the many pages of the
bishops' letter. The reason for this is easy enough to comprehend.
Mexican "migrants" are called "bearers of faith and
culture." The bishops, speaking to Mexican and American Catholics,
"call upon pastors and lay leaders to ensure support for migrant
and immigrant families." They "urge communities to offer
migrant families hospitality, not hostility along their journey";
and they "commend church communities that have established migrant
shelters." The bishops instruct Catholic church officials on both
sides of the border to focus on "the needs of migrants on their
journey," consider "the possibility of seminaries in Mexico to
prepare priests for service in the United States," and also provide
for "the assignment of religious communities to accompany
migrants." In short, on January 22, 2003, the Catholic bishops of
Mexico and the United States openly issued instructions for the
construction of an underground railroad, complete with safe houses and
guides, to funnel illegal, Roman Catholic aliens -- "migrants"
-- from Mexico into the United States.
Further, the bishops are
working to set up Mexican dioceses in the United States. Among many
other instructions given for this unlawful network, we find this from
the bishops: "Prayer books and guides to social and religious
services should be provided along the way and at the points of arrival.
The migrants should be reminded of their role as evangelizers . .
." There is no doubt that the Rome-equipped and Rome-assisted,
illegal, Mexican immigrants are evangelizers, but not for the true
gospel or the true Jesus Christ. Rather, they are evangelizers for a
church which seeks to bring the whole world under the iron fist it
currently has covered with a velvet glove. The Roman Catholic Church
supports the Reconquista movement by its support of illegal
immigration into America for the same reason that the Roman Catholic
Church supports the Republican movement in Northern Ireland -- it is in
Rome's best interest to do so. As the bishops' statement says,
"migration between our two nations is necessary and
beneficial." Mexican Bishop Carlos Talavera Ramirez invites us to
"think of the phenomenon of migration as a road toward the unity of
the human family." I hope to not be taking liberty by adding to the
bishop's statement "in a one-world religion headquartered in
Rome."
In their statement, the
Catholic bishops of Mexico and the United States accuse the overburdened
and underfunded officers of the U.S. Border Patrol of "physical
abuse of migrants . . . including the use of excessive force and the
shackling of migrants' hands and feet." Perhaps the next thing that
we should expect is for the papists to call for a decommissioning of the
Border Patrol and their replacement by the Brown Berets.
At any rate, the moral of this story is
that Rome is for Rome, not for Christ; and Rome will do what Rome must do
to advance her goal of bringing all people of the world into her orbit.
Remember, the Jesuits were created by the Roman Catholic Church; the Roman
Catholic Church was not created by the Jesuits. The machinations and
horrors of Rome's past were not aberrations but rather the true measure of
her nature, a nature currently shrouded but still apparent for those with
eyes to see and the courage to speak.
Related article:
Romanizing
America through Illegal Immigration
By Pastor Ralph Ovadal
In recent weeks, the advocates of the "rights" of illegal
Mexican immigrants, accompanied by and even led by Roman Catholic priests,
have staged rallies, protests, and parades all across the United States of
America. . . . The leadership of the Roman Catholic Church has a stake in
Reconquista. The pope and his henchmen are looking to turn America,
founded and still a Protestant country, into a Roman Catholic country.
Back
to top.
|