Immigration is one issue on which Hispanics do not speak in one voice. Contrary to Karl Rove, many dont really care for mass immigration and are even quite hostile to it. And if you put Hispanics under the microscope, youll find that hostility increases even more when it comes to the mass immigration of blacks. Which raises an interesting point about the complexity of race relations in America. The current fixation is, of course, black vs. white, Jim Crow, the legacy of slavery, and institutional racism. But its worth taking a look at black vs. Hispanic, what Hispanics think of blacks, particularly immigrants, how blacks interact with other non-whites, and mass black immigration.
Those matters will be the most interesting to monitor as the country becomes less white in the following decades. In this new demographic ecosystem, blacks will be compelled to interact more with non-white immigrants and their descendants.
That does not portend a peaceful future. Black-on-Hispanic violence is epidemic. So is Black-Hispanic gang war.
Theyre just another facet of the multicultural dumpster fire engulfing America and that will eventually require the attention of the Historic American Nation.
Polled in the fall, 52 percent of Texas Hispanics approved of the Biden Regimes decision to deport Haitian refugees who entered the U.S. illegally [51% of Texas Voters Say Abbott Doesnt Deserve To Be Re-Elected, Quinnipiac University Poll Finds, September 28, 2021, Pol.Qu.edu]. And 63 percent of voters surveyed in Tejano-heavy South Texas favored deporting Haitian migrants as well.
Maybe they know that Septembers surge of Haitian migrants offered a glimpse of what Africanized migration will look like in the not-too-distant future. A startling datum on that subject: 2.1 million African immigrants were living in the U.S. in 2015 [African immigration population in U.S. steadily climbs, by Monica Anderson, Pew Research, February 14, 2017]. In 1970, just 80,000 Africans were here. So in about 50 years, the population increased 2,525 percent. What was the point of this?
African immigration will likely balloon. Africa faces major population pressures in the decades to come. Sub-Saharan Africas population was about 1.02 billion in 2017. By 2050, it will be 2.17 billion and will continue surging to four billion, according to the United Nations.
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