I realized on the way back to the hotel tonight that I hadn't done the standard traveling journalist thing and queried the taxi driver about his views. My driver was a young guy from Somalia who's been in this country four years. He's happy in the Twin Cities. Lots of Somali Muslims like him. This is a great country, he said. He likes Sarah Palin for not aborting her baby, he said. Barack Obama -- man, the idea that the son of an African man can be president is really amazing.
"It just shows you, he said, "that there really is equal opportunity in our country!" Our country. He was delighted to talk about it. Listening to the unfeigned joy in his voice talking about how much he loves his new country because of the opportunity it offers him made me proud, and more than a little down on myself for taking as much as I do for granted.
Home tomorrow.

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Thanks for that post. It is indeed easy to lose sight of what we have because we take it for granted. Spend some with people who've seen some dark places, and you'll gain a better appreciation for the United States. I can remember coming home from my last deployment and just sitting on the porch at my grandparents' house, staring in slack-jawed wonder at it all. The grass was green, the sky was blue, the temperature was moderate, children were walking to the library without adult supervision, the mail was being delivered, the garbage was being collected, the police were patrolling, and did I mention the green grass?? Coming out of Baghdad in 2006, where it was a rare sight to even see children or women anywhere and where gunfire was almost constant, I was bowled over by the contrast. Iraq is better 2008 than it was in 206, but they still don't have the basic services we take for granted, the opportunities. They'll never have the green grass and blue skies and vast forests and mountains and beaches and moderate temperatures. And no one knows what 2009 will bring them.
I'm glad you encountered a member of our large and hardworking Somali community while you were up here. Many out-of-staters may not know that they make up a significant part of Sen. Norm Coleman's (R-Minn) base of support within Minneapolis and St. Paul proper.
Safe journey home.
There is a racist edge to those most concerned about illegal immigration and I find that disturbing. Derbyshire, beloved here, is one of the worst mainstreamish offenders on that.
Thomas R, race is a reality. It is biologically quantifiable. And it seems a pretty natural and universal tendency for humans to want their ancestors to look reasonably like themselves. No non-western country I can think of allows mass migration of those who are racially unlike themselves. Not prosperous ones like Japan, not upcoming ones like China or India.
What you call 'racist'then is simply a natural defensive reaction. It is not natural for people people, previously a racial majority, to want to become a racial minority -- see our native Americans and their campaigns, quite justified, to stop European settlement. Just so, it is not natural for European Americans, who for good or ill pretty much built this country and its institutions, to want to be driven to minority status, or to have themselves transformed radically in a biological sense. This isn't about hate, this isn't about superior or inferior, it is just about us, an identifiable group of people, wanting to maintain our own community, culturally and biologically.
Just so, it is not natural for European Americans, who for good or ill pretty much built this country and its institutions
what an astonishing statement.
"race is a reality. It is biologically quantifiable." SM
TR: I didn't say it was unreal, I just don't like the implications some make about it. Although judging by the genetics "race" is probably more varied then what many think. Africa certainly has several "races." The Khoisan and the Pygmies are different races from each other and from "blacks." Even those "black Africans" are quite likely of several races. Evidence indicates the Ainu were a separate "white race." (Surviving Ainu usually have strong Japanese admixture, but older skeletons indicate different skeletal features from Caucasians)
This doesn't mean I have to start thinking blacks are childlike or Mexicans sneaky as some of these "race realists" advocate.
"it is just about us, an identifiable group of people, wanting to maintain our own community, culturally and biologically." sm
TR: Then become Amish. Segregation is thankfully dead and white nationalism isn't going to go anywhere.
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