Doom Noticing (Mass Immigration; The Karmelo Anthony Trial; Something’s got to Give)

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By Wayne Allensworth

For more than three decades, I was paid to notice things. To see patterns. Connect dots. To track developing trends. And to work out scenarios indicating where those trends were heading. Often enough, the trends were not good. The patterns were disturbing. And people don’t like to hear bad news, even when they pay others to deliver it. You can easily get tagged as a doomsayer, a pessimist. That is, someone who sees negative patterns and trends and, knowing nobody wanted to hear them, speaks up anyway. You tell people what’s coming, and many of them don’t want to hear it. All you can do is tell the truth.

“Doom scrolling,” I’m told, is a habit of scrolling through one’s “feed” on a cell phone and dwelling on the bad stuff. These days, I’d say that opening one’s eyes is a form of “doom noticing,” because the situation in our society is not good, and will probably get worse.

I recently had a reminder of how surreal our lives are becoming when I went to our neighborhood pool to swim laps in the morning. Myself and another swimmer were greeted by the sight of a few Muslim men, several Muslim women, covered head-to-toe in black garb, and a number of kids splashing around in the swim lanes. We had to use sign language to communicate and try to explain to them they were off limits. The pool didn’t open for general use until 10 AM, as the large sign at the gate clearly says. The kids were in our way. They stared at us a bit. The women said nothing. I motioned for the kids to move, pointing them to a nearby wading pool. The kids eventually moved. Nobody tried to resist our requests, but the incident left me with a strange sense of foreboding.

The whole episode struck me as nightmarish. Here I was in my native state, known mostly for cows, oil wells, and a “God, guns, and guts” philosophy. About as far from the Middle East and Islam and their alien habits as one can be. Yet all the things that made this state what it is are being overwhelmed, and eventually will be erased, by mass immigration. My neighborhood in Fort Worth is very different than when we moved here 25 years ago — different, and increasingly alien, figuratively and literally. Mosques are being built at a rapid pace in the area. We are experiencing a steady influx of Sikhs, Hindus, East Asians and people of every nationality imaginable as well. That’s apart from the Hispanicization that’s been going on for 40 years. The “migrants” don’t know our ways or laws and often just don’t care.

You can’t help but notice, though we are not supposed to. We are not supposed to notice that we are being replaced as a consequence of plutocratic policies aimed at levelling wages and breaking down resistance to globalism. It’s odd to have to explain to deracinated white Americans why that is not a good thing. We have been brainwashed. We act as though we have no right to defend ourselves or our heritage. Historically, Christianity acknowledged all people as children of God. So, one should not mistreat the stranger. Nor should the guest mistreat his host. Christian morality, however, did not mandate dispensing with our primary responsibilities to our own people, which are, in any case, hard enough to perform. We seem to have forgotten that. But I’ve noticed that the aliens who are taking our place often don’t think that way. They operate under the old tribal rules. They practice “in group morality”: the rules don’t apply to outsiders. They don’t come from our culture, or know our ways, our history, our customs, or the basics of representative government. And they don’t care. There are enough of them — demographics are destiny — that they can, for instance, turn Minneapolis into Mogadishu. That major American city is not only a center of immigration fraud but also a major terrorist recruiting ground. The aliens elect their kind to what was our Congress to fight for the interests of their people. They don’t think like us.

Tribalism and in-group morality were the norm for most of the existence of humanity. In the West, at least, Christianity changed that, however imperfectly. But rejecting tribalism meant acknowledging the humanity of others, not rejecting one’s own identity, rendering one defenseless before people who had not done so. But here we are.

Speaking of where we are and tribal mentality, pay attention to what’s happening in the Karmelo Anthony trial. Anthony, who is black, knowingly violated an unwritten rule at a high school track meet in Frisco, Texas. He entered the tent of another team. He refused to leave. He was looking for trouble and baited the team members in the tent. When Austin Metcalf either pushed him or otherwise attempted to get him to leave, Anthony stabbed Metcalf to death. Anthony’s behavior was what the rest of us have come to expect from all-too-many blacks. He was “copping an attitude” that showed nothing but contempt for other people.  He had come to the tent armed with a knife.

Here’s another sample of trial testimony from the New York Post:

A 16-year-old student athlete, who knew Metcalf since middle school, painted a vivid picture of the moments leading up to the bloodshed.

He said he was sitting under the tent with Metcalf and his other teammates when Anthony waltzed over and took a seat next to him on the bench. …

The Memorial team was instantly confused and told Anthony, a stranger, to leave – but he allegedly refused and became aggressive, the witness claimed.

“F–k y’all,” Anthony allegedly started saying, the student said, according to Fox 4. Anthony wasn’t yelling, he said under cross-examination.

F–k y’all. I’m not going to leave. Y’all are a bunch of p–sies. Y’all not going to do anything.”

“Touch me and see what happens.”

“I’m not going to fight you,” Metcalf allegedly replied…

Meanwhile, Anthony supporters gathered at the Collin County courthouse, where the murder trial is under way, and copped the same very bad attitude Anthony showed at the track meet. One man was chanting “The only good cracker is a dead cracker!” They seemed to be having a grand old time calling for the murder of whites. Nobody was arrested, detained, or otherwise inconvenienced for inciting violence against white people. It goes without saying, but I’ll say it anyway: If a white man had chanted the same thing about blacks, there would have been a nationwide scandal. There’s no point in debating the “root causes” of the savagery displayed by Anthony and his supporters. There’s plenty of blame to go around for the generations of feral black children with whom we must live. But Anthony is responsible for his actions. He doesn’t get a designated victim pass for committing murder. The assumption underpinning the “only-good-cracker-is-a dead-cracker” attitude of Anthony’s supporters is that Metcalf had it coming. Kind of like Nicole Brown Simpson and Ron Goldman had it coming. If Anthony had knifed another black boy to death, the “only-good-cracker-is-a-dead-cracker” mob would have collectively yawned. If Anthony is convicted we may be in for a dose of Blacks Lives Matter rioting financed by the same people who pay for Antifa, now back in action in New Jersey, which also brought you the chaos in Seattle that has prompted residents to block their streets to prevent crime. “Teen takeovers” — black riots — are taking place in a number of states.

All these disturbing trends are about to boil over. A financial, economic, and social crisis is brewing, while war in the Middle East could expand and bring in Russia and China. We are in Year Zero of a new era. The world we knew is over. We are being squeezed and tensions are growing. Something has got to give.

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Chronicles contributor Wayne Allensworth is the author of  The Russian Question: Nationalism, Modernization, and Post-Communist Russia, and a novel, Field of Blood. For thirty-two years, he worked as an analyst and Russia area expert in the US intelligence community.

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Wayne Allensworth

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