The Great Ethnic American Displacement: Part III (Industry)

The Giant Sucking Sound That Hollowed Out Every American Town Fellow Ethnic Americans—the free white persons of good character enshrined in the 1790 Naturalization Act, the explicit “Posterity” named in the Constitution’s Preamble—do you remember being a kid in 1992, sitting cross-legged on the living-room carpet, watching Ross Perot on a giant tube TV? That …

The Great Ethnic American Displacement: Part II (Governance)

The New American Governing Class: Post-1965 Arrivals and Their Descendants Fellow Ethnic Americans—descendants of the European stock that settled this land, fought its wars, and wrote its founding documents—we need to talk plainly. The same quiet transfer of wealth that stripped our families of motels, gas stations, farms, and trucking routes (detailed in my earlier …

The Great Ethnic American Displacement: Part 1 (Small Business)

How 1965 Handed Your Birthright to Foreigners Ethnic Americans—descendants of the European founders who built this nation under the 1790 Naturalization Act’s promise of a homeland for “free white persons of good character”—must now confront the hard truth of their dispossession. The Act was not a suggestion; it was a covenant. It declared, in plain …

The Road to Revolution – Addendum: History Rhymes

Parallels Between the 1776 Grievances & Modern Ethnic American Concerns The 27 grievances in the Declaration of Independence—laid bare in my earlier article The Road to Revolution—were not mere complaints. They were the breaking point for a people who had suffered years of distant tyranny, blocked self-rule, and the calculated obstruction of their right to …

The Road to Revolution

I’ve written this article with one goal: to make the lead-up to the Declaration of Independence clear for every reader, no matter your schooling or background. I want to respect your intelligence while ensuring the story of America’s fight for freedom is easy to follow. Let’s dive into what pushed the colonies to declare independence …

What does 1 year and 9 months mean to an Ethnic American?

As Americans commemorate Independence Day, a critical historical phrase merits retention in our collective memory: “1 year and 9 months.” This temporal marker, reiterated for emphasis, holds profound significance for future discourse on the nation’s foundational principles. Its relevance emerges from a meticulous examination of America’s legal and constitutional evolution, a narrative that challenges conventional …