Modern History Project

"A little learning is a
dangerous thing"

Absolut garbage

Globalism
2008-04-09

Absolut Vodka recently ran an advertisement (in Mexico) featuring a map showing a large portion of the western U.S.A. under the control of Mexico, as in the 1830s. Some Americans, opposed to the ongoing Latino invasion, were not amused:

"We are launching a formal, national, and sustained boycott against the Absolut Vodka corporation for promoting, encouraging, and pandering to [Latino] separatists that threaten the territories, sovereignty, and national security of the United States of America." (see map) -- ALIPAC

During the past 175 years of American progress and development of that region, Mexico stagnated under a series of corrupt regimes. Their own socialist utopia failed to provide a decent quality of life, so the Latinos have flooded across the border by the millions, demanding their "rights" to jobs, housing and social services at American expense -- and bringing their crime-ridden, anti-American culture with them.

Remember the Alamo? Perhaps a little "righteous wrath" is needed once again...

"The sacrifice of Col. Travis and his command [at the Alamo] animated the rest of Texas and kindled a righteous wrath that swept the Mexicans off the field at San Jacinto. Since 1836, Americans on battlefields over the globe have responded to the exhortation, "Remember the Alamo!" -- Texas Handbook, Alamo

"Measured by its results, San Jacinto was one of the decisive battles of the world. The freedom of Texas from Mexico won here led to annexation and to the Mexican War (1846-48), resulting in the acquisition by the United States of the states of Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, Nevada, California, Utah, and parts of Colorado, Wyoming, Kansas, and Oklahoma. Almost one-third of the present area of the American nation, nearly a million square miles of territory, changed sovereignty." -- Texas Handbook, San Jacinto

Note that Mexico itself was nothing but a typical Spanish Catholic colony until it also "changed sovereignty" in 1821, likewise with the other fragments of "New Spain".