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One Small City Destroyed, One Giant Leap Backward for Whites

23-7-2024 < Counter Currents 35 2216 words
 

The Haitian National Centre for Geospatial Information (CNIGS) is the closest thing Haiti has to a space program. Possessing no spacecraft launch facilities, satellites, or even telescopes, its sole purpose seems to be to collect satellite data that is donated to it by the French Space Agency which is then used to help Haitians to cope with the many disasters which strike the country. Compare this to NASA achievements and you’ll see why Haitians may be less capable than Ohioans at space exploration. (Image source: Recovery Observatory Haiti)


1,969 words


55 years ago, almost to the day, Neil Armstrong became the first human to set foot on the surface of the Moon. This event is not discussed nearly enough. As I see it, the Moon landing is one of the greatest achievements in the 300,000-year history of the human species. No earthly life form had ever traveled to another celestial body until three brave, white explorers completed their daring journey on July 20, 1969. That iconic date should be counted among the most glorious in the history of White America.


Not one of the great powers of past ages can claim to have sent the first man to the Moon. For myself and my fellow white Americans, that is an achievement that can be claimed by us and us alone. The moment Armstrong stepped onto the Moon’s surface, a new, uniquely American chapter was contributed to the epic, ongoing tale of the white race and its exploits. Here is what the great White Nationalist Dr. William Pierce, writing in National Socialist World, had to say about the Moon landing at the time:


JULY 20, 1969, will certainly go down in the history of our race as one of the most significant dates of all time. For the moon landing is the culmination of a centuries-old dream – a dream which has always been peculiarly Aryan.[1]


Neil Armstrong, the first to fulfill that dream, was an Ohioan from the town of Wapakoneta in the west-central region of the state. Just over 50 miles south of Wapakoneta lies the city of Dayton, which can count among its sons Wilbur and Orville Wright, the inventors of the airplane. In that same part of Ohio is the city of Springfield, the subject of this article. Springfield is currently inundated with thousands of migrants from Haiti, a most unfortunate fate for any municipality.


Springfield is not a wealthy community, and has had to cope with the deindustrialization of the Rust Belt, the resulting population loss, and the opioid epidemic. Between 1999 and 2014, median income decreased in Springfield by 27%.[2] As of 2022, the 72.8% white city had a median household income of $45,113, with 22.7% of its residents living below the poverty line. City Manager Bryan Heck has penned a desperate letter to senators Sherrod Brown and Tim Scott, pleading for federal funds to assist his beleaguered city. The following is an excerpt from that letter, which was republished by the New York Post:


Springfield’s Haitian population has increased to 15,000 — 20,000 over the last four years in a community of just under 60,000 previous residents, putting a significant strain on our resources and ability to provide ample housing for all of our residents.[3]


Haitian immigration has been increased under the Biden administration through what is called the CHNV program. As Andrew R. Arthur, writing in April for the Center for Immigration Studies, explains:


In lieu of detention, the administration created the CHNV parole processes, an acronym for its beneficiaries, nationals of Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua, and Venezuela. CHNV is an executive policy unmoored from any congressional sanction complete with carrots (incentives) and — at least initially — sticks (deterrents).


CHNV started with a much more limited parole program for Venezuelan nationals that the administration implemented beginning in October 2020. As a DHS press release for that program explained, Mexico had then agreed to accept Venezuelan migrants who entered the United States illegally, so if would-be illegal entrants from that country wanted to come to the United States, they had to apply for that parole.


That Venezuelan parole program was capped at 24,000 parolees total, and it did have some short-term impacts: Southwest border apprehensions of migrants from that country dropped from nearly 25,000 in December 2022 to just over 3,000 in January 2023.


Apparently sensing that it had found a winning strategy, in January 2023 the White House announced it would expand Venezuelan parole into CHNV. Unlike the 24,000 total cap on paroles under the earlier program, however, CHNV program would offer parole to up to 30,000 nationals of those four countries per month (360,000 per annum). Those paroles were the carrots.[4]


Arthur then goes on to describe the effects of the new program:


CHNV Parole has been up and running for nearly 14 months now, and through the end of February, some 79,000 Cubans, 151,000 Haitians, 64,000 Nicaraguans, and 91,000 Venezuelans have entered the United States through those processes and been paroled into the country — roughly 386,000 foreign nationals in total.


That’s 31,000 new arrivals more than the current population of New Orleans, and none had a visa to enter this country, nor a legal right to be here. Needless to say, those paroles were over and above the annual immigration limits Congress has set.[5]


In addition to the housing shortage, Springfield is struggling under the weight of the newly-arrived Haitians in other ways. An article by Warner Todd Huston for Breitbart News informed readers that the expenses incurred from providing translation and legal services for Haitians were taking a toll on the city’s finances. The problem in Springfield has gotten progressively worse. As Huston writes:


For a few years, longtime residents were unbothered by the growing Haitian community, but over time, clashes have begun to occur as Haitians have become more obtrusive by driving illegally, piling into apartments and homes by the dozens, filling local schools with children who need special care in education and language services, and increasingly becoming a focus for government spending.[6]


According to Huston, this made the people of the city “uneasy”, but then


that uneasiness turned to outright anger when an 11-year-old child paid the price with his life for all this immigration. The incident occurred in August of last year when migrant Hermanio Joseph drove a 2010 Honda Odyssey into oncoming traffic causing a school bus filled with children on their way to their first day of school to spin out of control and flip over.


The accident left 11-year-old Aiden Clark dead and a dozen other children injured, some seriously.


The migrant, who had only been here a bit longer than a year, did not have a driver’s license and had never passed any state driving exams to obtain one.[7]


A piece in Al Jazeera reported that another Haitian migrant crashed his car into a Springfield church just days after the bus accident. It also explained that the city’s school district “has had to accommodate double the number of students needing English language assistance by hiring more bilingual assistants,” and that a local medical center “has seen the number of paediatric patients needing French or Haitian Creole services jump from 38 in 2020 to 416 last year.”[8]


Of course, residents were never asked if they wanted 20,000 Haitians dumped on their doorstep, nor do they have any recourse to get them to leave. In the aftermath of Aiden Clark’s death, angry citizens attended a city meeting to question officials about the Haitains’ presence. There, City Manager Heck told the crowd that “when other countries are in crisis, the federal government — not the state, not the local government; it is federal government — allows immigrants into our country.”[9] Last October, the Dayton Daily News quoted immigration lawyer Kathleen Kersh as saying that “[t]he Haitians that I’ve met all have permission to be here. The federal government knows they are here.”[10]


Haiti is a place that a sane country should never, under any circumstances, accept immigrants from. Independent for most of the past two centuries, Haiti has been a testament to the inability of sub-Saharan Africans to build and sustain an advanced society. Right next door, on the same island, sits the Dominican Republic, a predominately Mestizo nation that has completely sealed its border with its black neighbor.[11] Evidently, the Dominicans do not want Haitians any more than the people of Springfield do, and for good reason. Haiti boasts a mean national IQ of 67, 13 points below that of the Dominicans and 31 points below that of the United States. Right now, Haiti is going through a particularly turbulent phase of its history as the existing government has collapsed and various gangs have seized power. In 2022, Haiti had a murder rate of 18.02 per every 100,000 people, three times greater than the American rate. However, that number is surely far higher now, as the country’s crime rate more than doubled between 2022 and 2023.[12]


Needless to say, these Haitians have not and will not improve Springfield. They have already proven themselves to be a threat to public safety and a drain on public resources, and there is no reason to expect that to change. Due the very presence of these people in the city, the quality of life for Springfield’s white population will suffer in innumerable ways. It will suffer each time a white resident’s car gets hit by an unlicensed and uninsured Haitian driver. It will suffer each time a white student is bullied or assaulted by one of their Haitian “peers” in the city’s public schools. It will suffer each time a white woman or girl is sexually harassed, or worse, by one of their foreign “neighbors.” It will suffer each time a white parent has to tell his young child that it isn’t safe to play outside, or tell his teenage son or daughter that it isn’t safe to venture out after dark. The list goes on and on.


The occupation government in Washington has waged a demographic war against the people of Springfield. No community of 60,000 could manage a sudden deluge of 20,000 migrants from what is quite possibly the world’s worst country. As the anarcho-tyrants who misrule white America inflict terror upon of Springfield via biological weapons in human form, this poor community is well on its way to becoming another casualty of the Great Replacement. How long will it be before the inevitable white exodus from the city commences, and Springfield effectively ceases to be a part of Western Civilization? History suggests that those who can afford to flee will do so, and that the unfortunate souls who are left behind will become foreigners in their own hometown as it sinks ever lower toward the Haitian standard of civilization.


In Neil Armstrong’s home state, the race that went to the Moon is being pushed aside to make room for a class of invaders who have never been able to advance their own country above a state of primitive barbarism. Thus, it is fair to say that the destruction of Springfield represents a giant leap backward — for whites and for mankind as a whole.


Notes


[1] Kevin Alfred Strom, “William Pierce on Apollo: First Step on an Infinite Journey,” National Vanguard, July 20, 2019.


[2] Uri Berliner, “Springfield, Ohio: A Shrinking City Faces A Tough Economic Future,”  NPR, September 19, 2016.


[3] Therese Boudreaux, “Ohio city facing ‘significant’ housing crisis due to migrant influx,”  New York Post, July 10, 2024.


[4] Andrew R. Arthur, “What Is ‘CHNV Parole’ — and Why Should You Care?”, Center For Immigration Studies, April 1, 2024.


[5] Ibid.


[6] Warner Todd Huston, “Biden Floods Ohio Town with 20,000 Haitian Migrants: 10 to a Bedroom,”  Breitbart News, July 10, 2024.


[7] Ibid.


[8] Stephen Starr, “How a child’s death caused an Ohio city to turn on its Haitian community,”  Al Jazeera, December 12, 2023.


[9] Vicky Forrest, “Crowd questions Springfield leaders on immigration issues after bus crash,”  Springfield News-Sun, August 30, 2023.


[10] Lynn Hunley, “Haitian immigrants reshaping Springfield: 5 key takeaways from our reporting,” Dayton Daily News, October 12, 2023.


[11] Widlore Mérancourt et al, “Dominican Republic closes border with Haiti, further stoking tensions,” The Washington Post, September 14, 2023.


[12] Richard Roth and Hira Humayan,“Haiti’s crime rate more than doubles in a year,” CNN, April 26, 2023.










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