06/11/2018
Welcome to VDARE Radio, Iâm your host Virginia Dare. And today, weâre going to be talking about Manifest Destiny.
President Donald Trump recently spoke at the graduation ceremony of the Naval Academy. He spoke of the greatness of America and the unlimited potential of our country, as well as the glory of our past achievements [Read President Trumpâs U.S. Naval Academy Commencement Address, by Lena Felton, The Atlantic, May 25, 2018].
However, the president upset the usual suspects, the journalists and the professional grievance mongers when he said the following:
[T]here is nothing Americans canât do. Absolutely nothing. In recent years and even decades, too many people have forgotten that truth. They have forgotten that our ancestors trounced an empire, tamed a continent, and triumphed over the worst evils in history. In every generation, there have been cynics and critics that try to tear down America. But in recent years, the problem grew worse. A growing number used their platforms to denigrate Americaâs incredible heritage, challenge Americaâs sovereignty, and weaken Americaâs pride.
Naturally, cynics and critics responded by trying to tear down America. They were especially incensed by the presidentâs positive reference to how our ancestors tamed a continent.
For example, one Twitter user called Audria retorted:
"Tamed a continent" is a terrible euphemism for genocide.
â Audria (@audrialemnisca) May 27, 2018
Naturally, some media outlets covered this as âpeople have noticed something worryingâ about the presidentâs speech [People have noticed something worrying about Trumpâs âtamed a continentâ speech, by Greg Evans, Indy100, May 26, 2018].
Yet which people? And what is so âworrying?â
Take another example, one twitter commentator who said:
We didnât tame a continent. We stole it with lethal force and built it with slave labor. And anyone who doesnât think that merits an apology shouldnât be allowed to live here.
Donald Trump is a white supremacist. Pay attention. https://t.co/babxFM5PN9
â Crystal Keith (@TheNativeAngel) May 26, 2018
This has it precisely backwards. What good is an apology without the specific person making it giving back what he or she considers ill-gotten gains? If anything, only those who do not believe there was anything wrong in Americaâs conquest of the continent should be allowed to stay this country. Anyone else who continues living on what they believe is âstolen land,â is simply a hypocrite, benefiting from actions they supposedly disagree with but not actually doing anything to atone for them.
America is not a nation of immigrants. America is a nation of pioneers and settlers. America did not exist in any meaningful sense until English settlers created it.
To say that Americans having âtamed a continentâ is a bad thing is to say that it would be better had America never existed. You can believe that, but then donât call yourself an American, donât take advantage of being in this country, and donât pretend that you have this countryâs best interests at heart. Otherwise it is just empty virtue signaling.
One final issue is the question of American Indians. Today, the politically correct term is âNative Americans.â But this is a nonsensical term, as there was no âAmericaâ when just the indigenous people were here. America was a creation of European settlement. Calling the various tribes âNative Americansâ is something of an insult to them, because it denies their own history.
Still, thereâs a lesson in their experience. For some reason, leftists often invoke American Indians to argue that the United States should allow more immigration. This doesnât make any sense. If anything, their example proves the opposite. Whatever the short-term benefits to some people, whatever the economic or cultural arguments, whatever the good intentions of some people, eventually demography is destiny. American Indians lost control over this continent because of mass immigration. And if Americans donât control immigration, we are going to do the same.
Some of the people denouncing President Trump may think thatâs a good thing. But why should actual Americans, those who care about our country, people, and future, believe them?
Iâm Virginia Dare and weâll talk again soon.