Leftists Replaced The Constitution With These Four Texts To Enable Mass Migration
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Leftists Replaced The Constitution With These Four Texts To Enable Mass Migration
If America is to ever experience a renewal, it must first understand not only what was taken from it, but the mechanisms, etched in American mythos, that allowed it to happen.
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America’s 250th birthday feels more like a funeral.
The lack of enthusiasm most recently presented itself when musicians set to play in the Great American State Fair concert series this summer withdrew, pointing to the polarizing and political nature of the event that had, in their words, been sold to them as a nonpartisan and neutral celebration of America. Country music singer Martina McBride wrote as much on social media, stating that the invitation to perform at a “nonpartisan” event “turned out to be misleading.”
Yet America was hardly a nonpartisan, harmonious nation 50 years ago.
In the lead-up to the bicentennial, the nation was still dealing with the aftershocks of the civil rights era; the Weather Underground had spent years bombing courthouses, banks, and government buildings in a leftist-fueled domestic terror campaign; the Vietnam War had ended in heartwrenching defeat; and the nation was mired in massive inflation, rising unemployment, and pervasive economic despair thanks in part to staggeringly high oil prices.
And yet America’s 200th birthday featured Elvis, the Eagles, Lynyrd Skynyrd, and Aerosmith performing before packed stadiums, while 6 million spectators witnessed Operation Sail. Despite all the turmoil, the American people managed to unify in an outpouring of patriotism. But how? Because Americans were still largely a people with a historic memory and a sense of national “self.” That identity had been largely forged during 40 years of restricted immigration — beginning in 1924 and ending with the Hart-Celler Act in 1965 — that allowed a singular American identity to solidify.
American statesmen like Theodore Roosevelt railed against “hyphenated Americanism.” President Calvin Coolidge, signing the Immigration Act of 1924, was explicit about his desire to keep America American. These were not fringe positions, but the mainstream convictions of a nation that understood itself as a people, not merely a set of propositions.
America in 2026 is no longer the same nation. In fact, in far too many crucial ways, it is no longer a nation in the traditional sense at all. After all, the Latin word for nation is natio, originating from the word nasci, meaning “birth,” denoting a people, not a paperwork process. The ethnic and cultural composition of the country has been altered so fundamentally from its 1976 state that inherited national memory, cultural continuity, and common civic reference points have all but evaporated.
It is within this deliberate restructuring that America fell victim to a decades-long effort by academic, media, and political elites to redefine it as a “propositional” nation — weaponizing the myth that anyone can become an American by simply adopting a set of ideals. Proponents of “America is an idea” have relied on four specific texts to........
