Karl Rove, the Bush Dynasty, and the GOP Elite’s Push for ‘Immigration Reform’
Posted on | March 24, 2010 | 19 Comments
Steve Sailer attempts to explain the otherwise inexplicable disaster:
On the personal side, George and Barbara Bush employed a live-in Mexican maid, Paula Rendon, of whom W. has said, “I have come to love her like a second mother.” He went on to employ another Mexican immigrant, Maria Galvan, to raise his two daughters. Younger brother Jeb married a Mexican girl, Columba Garnica, who had spent some years as an illegal immigrant in California.
Jeb and Columba’s son, George P. Bush, was such a natural politician and heir to the Bush dynasty that W., who nicknamed his father “41” (for being the 41st President) and himself “43,” called his nephew “44.”
So, from 43’s dynastic perspective, electing a new people in order to keep electing Bushes to the White House all made a certain grandiose, demented sense.
Yet, for Rove, who was supposed to be the brains of the operation, the motivations are murkier — other than sheer submissiveness toward his willful boss. . . .
Comments
19 Responses to “Karl Rove, the Bush Dynasty, and the GOP Elite’s Push for ‘Immigration Reform’”
THE FULL METAL JACKET REACH-AROUND AWARD
This spot rotates to honor those who link us in shameless obedience to Rule 2 of "How to Get a Million Hits on Your Blog."
HIT THE FREAKING TIP JAR!
Search
Recent Posts
- In The Mailbox: 11.21.24 (Afternoon Edition)
- NBC News Misinterprets Evidence Democrats Stole the 2020 Election
- In The Mailbox: 11.20.24 (Evening Edition)
- In The Mailbox: 11.19.24 (Afternoon Edition)
- Rule 5 Sunday: Casual Denim
- FMJRA 2.0: Franchises In Motion
- In The Mailbox: 11.15.24 (Evening Edition)
- In The Mailbox: 11.15.24 (Morning Edition)
- In The Mailbox: 11.14.24 (Morning Edition)
- Trump 2.0: ‘Siri, What Is Payback?’
Click here to manage your email subscription options.
RSS reader subscription
MEMEORANDUM
Recent Comments
- Election Results 2024: Prepared for a Night of Agony … But for Whom? : The Other McCain on Georgia: How’s ‘Jim Crow 2.0’ Working?
- And, Stacey Adam’s is Still Race-Pimping…… | If You are Left you ain't Right on Georgia: How’s ‘Jim Crow 2.0’ Working?
- Goodbye, Blue Monday | Animal Magnetism on Rule 5 Sunday: Pre-Coffee Lounging
- FMJRA 2.0: No Expansion This Year : The Other McCain on Can We Stay Sane a Few More Days? (Also: Has Trump Always Been Winning?)
- FMJRA 2.0: No Expansion This Year : The Other McCain on FMJRA 2.0: Preparing for the Winter Meetings
THE AMAZING GONZO FEED
Major Leagues
ADVERTISEMENT
Axis of Fedorables
- All-American Girl for the Restoration of Values
- Allergic to Bull
- Cat House Chat
- Chris Cassone
- Conservative Daily News
- DaTechGuy
- Fishersville Mike
- Girl on the Right
- Haemet
- Hogewash
- Just A Conservative Girl
- Marooned in Marin
- Paco Enterprises
- Sissy 'put moi in your blogroll' Willis
- So It Goes In Shreveport
- SWAC Girl
- The (Perhaps Slightly Less) Lonely Conservative
- The Camp of the Saints
- The World's Youngest Blogger
- Uncoverage
- VA Right
AMAZING SAVINGS NOW!
Archives
- November 2024 (31)
- October 2024 (47)
- September 2024 (43)
- August 2024 (55)
- July 2024 (63)
- June 2024 (59)
- May 2024 (48)
- April 2024 (43)
- March 2024 (55)
- February 2024 (46)
- January 2024 (45)
- December 2023 (53)
- November 2023 (62)
- October 2023 (57)
- September 2023 (56)
- August 2023 (53)
- July 2023 (69)
- June 2023 (67)
- May 2023 (53)
- April 2023 (60)
- March 2023 (73)
- February 2023 (65)
- January 2023 (56)
- December 2022 (60)
- November 2022 (64)
- October 2022 (58)
- September 2022 (68)
- August 2022 (75)
- July 2022 (69)
- June 2022 (73)
- May 2022 (74)
- April 2022 (57)
- March 2022 (79)
- February 2022 (65)
- January 2022 (58)
- December 2021 (62)
- November 2021 (68)
- October 2021 (73)
- September 2021 (63)
- August 2021 (60)
- July 2021 (80)
- June 2021 (64)
- May 2021 (64)
- April 2021 (58)
- March 2021 (73)
- February 2021 (57)
- January 2021 (71)
- December 2020 (77)
- November 2020 (81)
- October 2020 (84)
- September 2020 (94)
- August 2020 (75)
- July 2020 (68)
- June 2020 (83)
- May 2020 (77)
- April 2020 (65)
- March 2020 (85)
- February 2020 (94)
- January 2020 (95)
- December 2019 (88)
- November 2019 (60)
- October 2019 (113)
- September 2019 (91)
- August 2019 (91)
- July 2019 (88)
- June 2019 (80)
- May 2019 (74)
- April 2019 (97)
- March 2019 (100)
- February 2019 (85)
- January 2019 (93)
- December 2018 (90)
- November 2018 (83)
- October 2018 (96)
- September 2018 (79)
- August 2018 (107)
- July 2018 (98)
- June 2018 (86)
- May 2018 (78)
- April 2018 (78)
- March 2018 (97)
- February 2018 (61)
- January 2018 (70)
- December 2017 (62)
- November 2017 (68)
- October 2017 (67)
- September 2017 (70)
- August 2017 (68)
- July 2017 (52)
- June 2017 (60)
- May 2017 (56)
- April 2017 (80)
- March 2017 (80)
- February 2017 (102)
- January 2017 (104)
- December 2016 (65)
- November 2016 (86)
- October 2016 (77)
- September 2016 (81)
- August 2016 (66)
- July 2016 (83)
- June 2016 (81)
- May 2016 (65)
- April 2016 (64)
- March 2016 (81)
- February 2016 (74)
- January 2016 (66)
- December 2015 (64)
- November 2015 (85)
- October 2015 (71)
- September 2015 (80)
- August 2015 (67)
- July 2015 (79)
- June 2015 (69)
- May 2015 (72)
- April 2015 (94)
- March 2015 (122)
- February 2015 (71)
- January 2015 (93)
- December 2014 (99)
- November 2014 (67)
- October 2014 (109)
- September 2014 (87)
- August 2014 (106)
- July 2014 (132)
- June 2014 (154)
- May 2014 (126)
- April 2014 (145)
- March 2014 (144)
- February 2014 (142)
- January 2014 (185)
- December 2013 (192)
- November 2013 (174)
- October 2013 (175)
- September 2013 (181)
- August 2013 (172)
- July 2013 (147)
- June 2013 (135)
- May 2013 (128)
- April 2013 (105)
- March 2013 (162)
- February 2013 (191)
- January 2013 (206)
- December 2012 (190)
- November 2012 (176)
- October 2012 (240)
- September 2012 (206)
- August 2012 (235)
- July 2012 (223)
- June 2012 (161)
- May 2012 (230)
- April 2012 (269)
- March 2012 (282)
- February 2012 (247)
- January 2012 (267)
- December 2011 (285)
- November 2011 (300)
- October 2011 (302)
- September 2011 (297)
- August 2011 (288)
- July 2011 (297)
- June 2011 (245)
- May 2011 (260)
- April 2011 (344)
- March 2011 (293)
- February 2011 (201)
- January 2011 (263)
- December 2010 (265)
- November 2010 (266)
- October 2010 (305)
- September 2010 (280)
- August 2010 (272)
- July 2010 (230)
- June 2010 (244)
- May 2010 (256)
- April 2010 (222)
- March 2010 (271)
- February 2010 (286)
- January 2010 (229)
- December 2009 (21)
- October 2009 (1)
Free Agents
SHAMELESS CAPITALISM
The Other McCain is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for this blog to earn fees by linking to Amazon.com and affiliated sites.
Triple-A Franchises
- All-American Blogger
- American Power
- Anti-Idiotarian Rottweiler
- Athens & Jerusalem
- Barney Quick
- Bartholomew's Notes On Religion
- BatesLine
- Bear Creek Ledger
- Bearsears Patriots
- Blog de KingShamus
- Bride of Rove
- Cold Fury
- Daily Pundit
- Dr. Helen
- I Own The World
- Legal Insurrection
- Moe Lane
- No Runny Eggs
- Obi`s Sister
- Protein Wisdom
- Rhetorican
- Small Dead Animals
- The Conservatory
- The People's Cube
- The Sundries Shack
- VodkaPundit
- Vox Day
- Zilla of the Resistance
Blogroll
- 90 Miles From Tyranny
- A Conservative Shemale
- A Point of View
- Adrienne's Corner
- AmSpec Blog
- Bad Blue
- Blazing Cat Fur
- Calvin Freiburger Online
- Carol's Closet
- Catholic Bandita
- Caught Him With A Corndog
- Cecil Calvert
- Common Cents
- Conservative Hideout
- Conservative Watch News
- Conservatives for America
- Conservatives For Palin
- Crazy For Liberty
- Dad 29
- DC Damsel
- Dr. Flap
- Dyspepsia Generation
- Effing Conservatives
- Election Dissection
- Eric Reasons, IT Genius
- Eye of Polyphemus
- Finding Ponies. . .
- Free Will
- Grandpa John's
- Granite Grok
- GrEaT sAtAn"S gIrLfRiEnD
- Hoosier Access
- John William Perry
- Judicial Watch
- Jumping in Pools
- KURU Lounge
- Laughing Conservative
- Makes My Brain Itch
- Marathon Pundit
- Martin Eisenstadt's Blog
- Media Fade
- Michael Leahy
- Mister Pterodactyl
- Naked Villainy
- Nice Deb
- noot's observatory
- Not One Red Cent
- Okrahead
- Ollieander
- Pileus
- Pinup Girl
- Point of a Gun
- Political Pit Bull
- Reaganite Republican Resistance
- Red Alexandria
- Red State Eclectic
- Red, White & Conservative
- Republican Redefined
- ResCon1
- Ric's Rulez
- Ricochet
- Right of Course
- Robipedia
- Robomonkey
- Ruby Slippers Blog
- Saberpoint
- Scared Monkeys
- Sentry Journal
- SI VIS PACEM
- Skepticrats
- Smash Mouth Politics
- Sooper Mexican
- Taking Hayek Seriously
- Tel-Chai Nation
- Tequila & Javalinas
- The Aged P
- The Classic Liberal
- The Izzy Report
- The Minority Leader
- The NeoSexist
- The Nose on Your Face
- The Republican Mother
- The Right Sphere
- The Saint Angilbert Press
- The Snooper Report
- The Underground Conservative
- Thunder Tales
- Tom McLaughlin
- Tory Anarchist
- TrogloPundit
- Vets On The Watch
- Watcher of Weasels
- Western Experience
- World's Only Rational Man
- WyBlog
- Yankee Phil
- Zingstrom's Blog
March 24th, 2010 @ 7:40 pm
George Bush was never one of us never will be, he comes from a long line of Northeastern progressives. I don’t care if he lives in Texas, elitism runs in his blood. And I truly can’t stand Karl Rove, his disastrous “compassionate conservatism” lead us right to the disaster that is Obamacare. He should be consigned to most inner circles of Dante’s hell for what has transpired since he was de facto “political advisor” for the Republican party.
March 24th, 2010 @ 2:40 pm
George Bush was never one of us never will be, he comes from a long line of Northeastern progressives. I don’t care if he lives in Texas, elitism runs in his blood. And I truly can’t stand Karl Rove, his disastrous “compassionate conservatism” lead us right to the disaster that is Obamacare. He should be consigned to most inner circles of Dante’s hell for what has transpired since he was de facto “political advisor” for the Republican party.
March 24th, 2010 @ 7:48 pm
The status quo sucks. Amnesty did not work for Reagan, so it will not work now.
I would prefer a realization that immgration is a good thing. It is uncontrolled illegal immigration that is bad, especially when we are not assimilating those new immigrants. We should be soliciting the best and the brightest from around the world, not acting as a job service for the Mexican economy. Will that discourage some engineering and science students in the United States? Not if it is done right. We get a syngeristic effect by having these people come here. Japan and China can and never will do that. We can. Europe has figured it out and is doing it.
Not that I have any problem with Mexican workers. I am no fan of Mexican criminals, but most Mexicans come here just wanting to work and make an hosest living. Plus Latin American immigrants are generally assimilate over time (unlike the Eurabia issue in Europe). But bringing in lots of cheap labor from Mexico only takes away good jobs from Americans. I would increase the legal immigration from Latin America, but not at the levels currently realized for illegal immigration.
And you stop illegal immigration with work place fines. No need to deport anyone (other than the felons). Just crack down on businesses and employers who hire illegals and fine them to a level that makes it not worth their while to do so.
March 24th, 2010 @ 2:48 pm
The status quo sucks. Amnesty did not work for Reagan, so it will not work now.
I would prefer a realization that immgration is a good thing. It is uncontrolled illegal immigration that is bad, especially when we are not assimilating those new immigrants. We should be soliciting the best and the brightest from around the world, not acting as a job service for the Mexican economy. Will that discourage some engineering and science students in the United States? Not if it is done right. We get a syngeristic effect by having these people come here. Japan and China can and never will do that. We can. Europe has figured it out and is doing it.
Not that I have any problem with Mexican workers. I am no fan of Mexican criminals, but most Mexicans come here just wanting to work and make an hosest living. Plus Latin American immigrants are generally assimilate over time (unlike the Eurabia issue in Europe). But bringing in lots of cheap labor from Mexico only takes away good jobs from Americans. I would increase the legal immigration from Latin America, but not at the levels currently realized for illegal immigration.
And you stop illegal immigration with work place fines. No need to deport anyone (other than the felons). Just crack down on businesses and employers who hire illegals and fine them to a level that makes it not worth their while to do so.
March 24th, 2010 @ 8:37 pm
I would prefer a realization that immgration is a good thing.
This is the kind of thinking that’s gotten us into trouble. It confuses an end for a means. Immigration is not a good in itself. It’s a means to a good. Some years the U.S. would be better off without it, sometimes not.
March 24th, 2010 @ 3:37 pm
I would prefer a realization that immgration is a good thing.
This is the kind of thinking that’s gotten us into trouble. It confuses an end for a means. Immigration is not a good in itself. It’s a means to a good. Some years the U.S. would be better off without it, sometimes not.
March 24th, 2010 @ 8:39 pm
The funny thing is that a couple of years ago this article would have been dismissed as another anti-Bush hit piece. I hate to tell you guys that we told you so, but…we told you so.
Yet your side still adheres to Rove politics because in your mind anyone that drives Libs crazy is useful to your cause. Apparently you find Rove useful even if he doesn’t represent your best interests.A recipe for disaster? I’m telling you so…
The question of immigration reform really questions the fundamental crisis of Capitalism as it is interpreted by many: “a huge fraction of Washington insiders have persuaded themselves that low wages are what made America great.”
Americans will work shit jobs if the pay was fair. As long as businesses insist on low wages as their key to personal wealth, illegal immigration will persist.
Kind of like your propensity for electing phonies…
March 24th, 2010 @ 3:39 pm
The funny thing is that a couple of years ago this article would have been dismissed as another anti-Bush hit piece. I hate to tell you guys that we told you so, but…we told you so.
Yet your side still adheres to Rove politics because in your mind anyone that drives Libs crazy is useful to your cause. Apparently you find Rove useful even if he doesn’t represent your best interests.A recipe for disaster? I’m telling you so…
The question of immigration reform really questions the fundamental crisis of Capitalism as it is interpreted by many: “a huge fraction of Washington insiders have persuaded themselves that low wages are what made America great.”
Americans will work shit jobs if the pay was fair. As long as businesses insist on low wages as their key to personal wealth, illegal immigration will persist.
Kind of like your propensity for electing phonies…
March 24th, 2010 @ 4:00 pm
[…] Karl Rove, the Bush Dynasty, and the GOP Elite’s Push for ‘Immigration Reform’ […]
March 24th, 2010 @ 9:05 pm
It may not be 1900 anymore, but this country benefits from new blood and legal immigration. Granted you want to control it and you definitely do not want to open flood gates in a recession. Obviously not all immigrants are equal and criminals have to be gotten rid of. I trust new immigrants to be better Americans than fat leftists like Michael Moore.
March 24th, 2010 @ 4:05 pm
It may not be 1900 anymore, but this country benefits from new blood and legal immigration. Granted you want to control it and you definitely do not want to open flood gates in a recession. Obviously not all immigrants are equal and criminals have to be gotten rid of. I trust new immigrants to be better Americans than fat leftists like Michael Moore.
March 24th, 2010 @ 9:21 pm
The issue is not illegal, legal or uncontrolled immigration. The issue is mass immigration. We had a decent immigration system up through 1965. We took in about 180,000 per year which allowed us to select the people we needed, like an NFL draft, and to assimilate them. Mass immigration is changing that.
We were also told we needed immigrants because our women were not at replacement level fertility, and thus our aging population would not be able to receive their retirement benefits unless we had new, younger workers.
Europe, Canada, Japan, S. Korea and the US all face this issue. However, Japan and S. Korea have decided that immigration is not the fix. They have not accepted mass immigration into their nations. As a result Japan and S. Korea will face problems as their aging population retires and there are not enough young workers to support them.
Europe, Canada and the USA have implemented mass immigration to solve this problem. Guess what? All of us still face this impending problem of having an elderly population supported by fewer workers. Our social security system will still go bankrupt. The trouble is our new immigrants, who aren’t screened like they used to be for self-sufficiency, consume more benefits than they pay in taxes.
Now the US, Canada and Europe will have an additional problem that S. Korea and Japan won’t. Namely, we will have all the problems associated with diversity and multiculturalism. We will see this manifest itself in ridiculous hate crime legislation, disparate impact legislation and racial and ethic lobbies that put the interest of groups above nation.
I think Japan and S. Korea are in a better position now and probably feel relieved that they didn’t emulate this peculiar Western phenomenon.
March 24th, 2010 @ 4:21 pm
The issue is not illegal, legal or uncontrolled immigration. The issue is mass immigration. We had a decent immigration system up through 1965. We took in about 180,000 per year which allowed us to select the people we needed, like an NFL draft, and to assimilate them. Mass immigration is changing that.
We were also told we needed immigrants because our women were not at replacement level fertility, and thus our aging population would not be able to receive their retirement benefits unless we had new, younger workers.
Europe, Canada, Japan, S. Korea and the US all face this issue. However, Japan and S. Korea have decided that immigration is not the fix. They have not accepted mass immigration into their nations. As a result Japan and S. Korea will face problems as their aging population retires and there are not enough young workers to support them.
Europe, Canada and the USA have implemented mass immigration to solve this problem. Guess what? All of us still face this impending problem of having an elderly population supported by fewer workers. Our social security system will still go bankrupt. The trouble is our new immigrants, who aren’t screened like they used to be for self-sufficiency, consume more benefits than they pay in taxes.
Now the US, Canada and Europe will have an additional problem that S. Korea and Japan won’t. Namely, we will have all the problems associated with diversity and multiculturalism. We will see this manifest itself in ridiculous hate crime legislation, disparate impact legislation and racial and ethic lobbies that put the interest of groups above nation.
I think Japan and S. Korea are in a better position now and probably feel relieved that they didn’t emulate this peculiar Western phenomenon.
March 25th, 2010 @ 2:56 am
There are TB cases where non existed before because of illegals. Thanks Bushies.
As for Rove he should be accorded the same respect that Reid/Pelosi merit.
March 24th, 2010 @ 9:56 pm
There are TB cases where non existed before because of illegals. Thanks Bushies.
As for Rove he should be accorded the same respect that Reid/Pelosi merit.
March 25th, 2010 @ 7:39 am
This is what makes it difficult to believe or take to heart many of the after-the-fact pronouncements of the Bush administration.
Seriously, this is an economic and moral issue, if not simply a *ahem* Constitutional responsibility issue. The border is out of control because it’s out of control. It would take the stroke of a pen…but apparently long-term economic viability and demographic consistency (an influx of middle-aged, low-paid unskilled workers) isn’t enough of an ’emergency.’
March 25th, 2010 @ 2:39 am
This is what makes it difficult to believe or take to heart many of the after-the-fact pronouncements of the Bush administration.
Seriously, this is an economic and moral issue, if not simply a *ahem* Constitutional responsibility issue. The border is out of control because it’s out of control. It would take the stroke of a pen…but apparently long-term economic viability and demographic consistency (an influx of middle-aged, low-paid unskilled workers) isn’t enough of an ’emergency.’
April 10th, 2010 @ 5:16 am
It fits our needs perfectly the advantage of immigration reform on the country: Greater supply of unskilled workers, a younger workforce, and skilled workers in needed sectors. But there is also a disadvantage of immigration reform like Greater poverty, more educational cost, lower unskilled wage levels, and increased danger of terrorism. Thanks to the post!
April 10th, 2010 @ 12:16 am
It fits our needs perfectly the advantage of immigration reform on the country: Greater supply of unskilled workers, a younger workforce, and skilled workers in needed sectors. But there is also a disadvantage of immigration reform like Greater poverty, more educational cost, lower unskilled wage levels, and increased danger of terrorism. Thanks to the post!