Patrick J. Buchanan
August 22, 2006
In April 1968, only days after Dr. King had been assassinated and riots
had erupted in 100 American cities, there arose in England to raise the
alarm on the explosive issue of immigration from the Third World a hero
of the war and scholar of the classics, the Tory shadow minister of
state for defense, Enoch Powell.
"The supreme function of statesmanship," Powell began, "is to provide
against preventable evils. ... The discussion of future grave but, with
effort now, avoidable evils is the most unpopular and at the same time
the most necessary occupation for the politician."
"Only resolute and urgent action," said Powell, could avert the
"horror" unfolding on the far side of the Atlantic. As he spoke, the
immigrant flow into Britain from the Commonwealth nations of Africa,
Asia and the Caribbean was 50,000 a year, a trickle compared to the 1.2
million legal and illegal aliens who have been entering the United
States every year for a generation.
Powell warned that if stern action were not taken to stem the tide, by
2000, 5 million to 7 million Third World people would be there.
"It is like watching a nation busily engaged in heaping up its own
funeral pyre," Powell thundered. Then he spoke the words that ended his
brilliant career: "As I look ahead, I am filled with foreboding; like
the Roman, I seem to see 'the River Tiber foaming with much blood.'"
Powell was instantly gone from the shadow cabinet, dropped by Edward
Heath for what that future prime minister called a speech "racialist in
tone, and liable to exacerbate racial tensions."
Five years after Powell's "Rivers of Blood" speech, French writer Jean
Raspail stunned Europe with his allegory, "Le Camp Des Saints."
Raspail described a "Last Chance Armada" of a million diseased and
destitute from the hellholes of Calcutta who embark aboard a fleet of
leaky and decrepit ships and steer round the Cape of Good Hope to
Europe -- to be taken in, or die. As the armada enters the
Mediterranean and reaches the Riviera, the French government, awash in
humanitarian liberalism, refuses to repel the invaders and invites them
in. Around the world, the wretched of the earth watch the television
reports, and wait. When the Last Chance Armada triumphs, they emerge in
an orgy of looting, rape and pillage to overrun the fat rich lands of
the West, "the Camp of the Saints."
Though many reviewers were repelled, the novel was a smashing success,
with some comparing Raspail's work to Camus' "The Plague" and Swift's
"Gulliver's Travels." "One of the most chilling books of this
generation," wrote James J. Kilpatrick. "Our children and grandchildren
may soon discover that Jean Raspail wrote not fiction, but fact."
In 2004, Raspail surfaced in Le Figaro to accuse the French elite of
treason. "La Patrie Trahie par la Republique," the title of his essay,
translates, "The Fatherland Betrayed by the Republic."
By "the Republic," Raspail meant not just the Fifth Republic of
Mitterand and Chirac, but France's ideology of inclusiveness rooted in
the Revolution's ideology of "liberte, egalite, fraternite." Alluding
to the waves of immigrants from Africa, the Middle East, the Caribbean
and Asia, Raspail grimly asserted: "The deed is done. ... All of Europe
marches to its death."
Raspail recalled the 1974 threat of Algerian President Houari
Boumedienne: "No amount of atomic bombs will be able to dam up the
tidal wave comprising human beings in their millions which one day will
leave the southernmost and poor part of the world, to swamp the
relatively open spaces of the wealthy northern hemisphere, in search of
survival."
Europe denounced and dismissed both men as racists. Now we learn that
19 of those captured plotting to blow up 10 airliners over the Atlantic
were British-born Pakistanis. The suicide bombers of the London subway
were British-born Asians. Richard Reid's father was Jamaican.
Alienated, he was drawn to an ultra-radical mosque, before attempting
mass murder over the Atlantic.
Race riots have since plagued the industrial cities of Northern
England. In France last summer, thousands of French citizens of North
African descent rioted and pillaged in the banlieus of Paris and 300
other cities, until President Chirac, after 12 days, finally declared a
national emergency. Zacarias Moussaoui, the "20th hijacker," was a
French citizen. The Madrid bombers were immigrants or the children of
immigrants, as was the daylight murderer of Dutch filmmaker Theo van
Gogh.
The 9-11 terrorists plotted mass murders in Munich, Arizona and Delray
Beach, Fla. President Bush says they hate democracy.
No, Mr. President, they hate us.
Powell and Raspail were ostracized for what they said and wrote. Their
stories are related in my new book, "State of Emergency: The Third
World Invasion and Conquest of America." Time to revisit the question:
Were these men false prophets rightly reviled, or prophets without
honor in their own countries?