Eisner's new film "The Alamo" will increase Anti-Mexicanism

by
Hector Carreon
La Voz de Aztlan

El AlamoLos Angeles, Alta California - September 8, 2003 - (ACN) Ever since the Mexican army quelled a rebellion by a group of ungrateful Anglo immigrants in its northern state of Tejas at the Alamo in 1836, Anglos have utilized the slogan "Remember the Alamo" as coded words to discriminate and often "lynch" Americans of Mexican descent. This type of ethnic hatred, experienced most acutely by Los Tejanos, will surely worsen now that the Zionist Michael Eisner will release its historically inaccurate and one sided new film "The Alamo" around April of 2004.

Mexico's military actions at the Alamo were undertaken for the sole purpose of defending its territory from, what General Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna called, "a rabble of wretched adventurers to whom our authorities have unwisely given benefits that even Mexicans did not enjoy". The Mexican government had been extremely gracious in allowing Anglo colonists led by Steven F. Austin to settle in Tejas or Texas as it is known today. Mexico had granted vast tracts of land to about 20,000 settlers but a group of ragged renegades, under the impetus that was later called "Manifest Destiny", conspired to steal the whole state.

La Batalla del AlamoIn 1845, John O'Sullivan, editor of the influential Democratic Review, coined the phrase "Manifest Destiny" to describe this vision of a United States stretching from Atlantic to the Pacific Ocean. "Manifest Destiny" was used by Washington leaders and politicians, most notably President James K. Polk, to justify their territorial expansion westward from the east coast. The Anglo concept of "Manifest Destiny" was eventually utilized by the United States to massacre the American Indians and to rob Mexico of what is now the states of California, Arizona, New Mexico, Nevada, Utah, and parts of Colorado and Wyoming.

The United States took advantage of the fact that Mexico was just a newly independent country suffering greatly from its struggle against Spain. Mexico won its independence from Spain in 1821 and was just in the process of establishing a great nation when the Anglos arrived like a motley crew of pirates.

The United States had suffered an economic depression in 1818 and there was a need to expand into new territories to accommodate their rapid population growth. It's estimated that nearly 5,000,000 American Anglos immigrated to western, mostly Mexican, territories between 1820 and 1848. These American Anglos were essentially what would be considered "illegal aliens" today.

The U.S. expansionist war against Mexico ended in 1848 with the signing of the Treaty of Guadalupe-Hidalgo, a treaty that has not been honored in large measure by this country. The United States needs to make immense reparations to Mexicans on both sides of the current border.

What could be the purpose for the Zionist Michael Eisner to finance, film and distribute yet another "Remember the Alamo" film in a time when Mexican/Anglo relations are in a crisis, in a time when an anti-Mexican book titled "Mexifornia" is having brisk sales among Anglos and in a time when Lt. Governor Cruz Bustamante of California is being called a Mexican separatist? Is Eisner's purpose ultimately to stir trouble between Mexican-Americans and Anglos?

How would the Jews like it if, for example, a Mexican-American produced a film depicting Hamas as heroes in the Palestinian struggle for liberation? I am sure that the Jews would scream "ANTI-SEMITISM"! Michael Eisner is already responsible for the recent distribution of the grossly anti-Catholic film "El Crimen del Padre Amaro" that was produced by a Mexican Jew, yet today, Jews are screaming and yelling "ANTI-SEMITISM" about the upcoming Jesus film "The Passion" by Mel Gibson. Is it possible that the principal fault of the Jews is that they want to "have their cake and eat it too"? I am convinced that the Jews practice not only ANTI-CHRISTIANISM but ANTI-MEXICANISM as well!


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