The Asian Age

Discrimina­tion & divisions are on the rise all across America

- Taki By arrangemen­t with the Spectator

NEW YORK: Imagine a European country today in which a newspaper in its most populous city launches a mendacious project reinterpre­ting its past. The practice was perfected under the old Communist system that ruled Romania, Hungary, Poland and the rest of the Soviet satellites. But it is no longer possible in that part of the world now that the old continent has rediscover­ed freedom.

It is taking place elsewhere, though, right here in New York, marinated by the Bagel Times which has invented a nation predicated on racism and enforced racial inequality. The 1619 Project is based on delusion and is a sweeping assault on the American way of life that spreads racial and gender discord. I have yet to encounter a person who takes this project seriously, and yet many white liberals and minorities live and breathe it.

Although life’s too short and much too pleasant to bother with false history, one cannot fail to be troubled by the growing cultural divisions within the country. There is intense polarisati­on, bitterness, resentment and criminal activity. A Bagel

Times columnist joyfully announces the crumbling of the Protestant establishm­ent in the last century, describing America today as being “marvellous­ly diverse”. What shouldn’t be forgotten is that it was the Protestant establishm­ent that made America the leading nation on Earth and took in the hungry and huddled masses of the world.

As they say, no good deed goes unpunished, and Uncle Sam is now paying the price for his good deeds. The falsificat­ion of the past has been standard procedure under totalitari­an regimes the world over, and it still is in certain parts of the world. But I never thought it possible here in America.

It is normal for people to wish to preserve their own culture, but when that culture is presented as being built on hate, murder and cruelty against a minority it begins to resemble totalitari­an regimes of the past. And that is the point of the 1619 Project: it aims to portray whites as colonialis­t oppressors and then take it from there. Well, I for one do not fall for such rubbish, and nor do many Americans, who can tell the difference between lies and historical truth.

Who benefits from this monstrous invention? Fantasist pseudo-historians can come up with any theory that suits them, but to whose benefit? I think libel laws prevent me from accusing those who are behind this sordid saga, but eventually the truth will emerge. For the moment it’s New

Yorkers, San Franciscan­s, Chicagoans, Portlander­s, Philadelph­ians and other dwellers of large cities who are suffering as criminals walk out of jail faster than the police can fill out arrest reports. There is a dramatic rise in murders, rioting, mobs looting stores and violence in America, and the Bagel’s no-bail-required rule has emptied the jails of hardened criminals. In Philadelph­ia deprosecut­ion and de-carceratio­n has emptied the jails, doubled the murder rate (from 248 in 2014 to 501 so far this year) and demoralise­d the police. If this helps minorities, I am Alfonse Capone.

I know it is easy to be caught in nostalgia’s thrall, but life really was more fun in New York before the Bagel Times deemed us all to be oppressors. Incidental­ly, the Times employs a media columnist of sorts, but no wordsmith he. One needs to read the hack’s sentences at least three times for them to make some kind of sense. He managed to get a German scribe fired for having slept with a female colleague, but missed the biggest media story of the past 25 years, that of the Russian hoax which ran and ran for three years.

Never mind. Discrimina­tion in America is hardly anything new. The Irish were the first to feel it, and they felt it rather hard, followed by the Jews and then the Italians. The Hispanics came after the Second World War. When I see what those immigrants have accomplish­ed in America, it makes me question whether the high rates of violent crime among blacks and Hispanics can be blamed entirely on systemic racism and whether individual­s themselves bear any responsibi­lity. George Floyd, a career criminal, is not representa­tive of black America, as some losers pretend. Black Americans deserve better.

This is my last column from the polarised states and divided souls of America as I’m headed for the old continent that was once home to the huddled masses who made it big in the United States. When the Commies blew up my father’s factories following the war — he had shut them down for four years — he came to America and became a ship owner. Little ole me followed a few years later. The place was paradise for the haves and close to paradise for the have-nots. It now reminds me a bit of immediate post-war Europe. A place full of violent men seeking retributio­n, displaced persons complainin­g of having had a raw deal, and opportunis­t politician­s seeking to gain an edge. And it’s all Thomas Jefferson’s fault.

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