Mexifornia: A State of Becoming by Victor Davis Hanson, Lloyd James (Read by)

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(Audio - Unabridged, 5 Cassettes, 6 hrs.)

  • Pub. Date: October 2003
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: October 2003
    • Publisher: Blackstone Audio, Inc.
    • Format: Audio

    Synopsis

    This book is part history, part political analysis and part memoir. It is an intensely personal book about what has changed in California over the last quarter century.

    The Los Angeles Times

    Hanson's primary worry is steadily rising illegal immigration into a welfare state with expanding entitlements and waning commitment to the history and virtues of Western civilization, an admittedly imperfect, coercive consensus that nonetheless held together a uniquely successful, multiethnic nation. The emerging Mexifornia is becoming "not quite Mexico and not quite America either." — Frederick R. Lynch

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    Customer Reviews

    Mexifornia: A State of Becomingby Anonymous

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    October 14, 2005: Victor Davis Hanson is a college professor, part time farmer raised on a Central Valley farm, and most controversially, something of a guru to neocons. In this book, he discusses something closer to home: the mass immigration of low-skilled, low wage Mexican labor into his state and country. This book is not apologies for illegal immigration. It's not a white supremacist or xenophobic tirade. It's a brief reminiscence and analysis of the costs of immigration by a man who was raised and lives with and among immigrants, both legal and illegal. The chief problems, Hanson believes, are multiculturalism and bilingual education, which not only promote cultural disunity, but actually retard the prosperity and upward mobility of immigrants as well.

    Mexifornia: A State of Becomingby Anonymous

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    August 24, 2005: Hanson expresses little hostility for Mexicans or Mexican-Americans. He grew up in a small farming town where most of his friends and neighbors were--and still are--Mexican immigrants. The author understands that most Mexicans who went through the assimilation process in the 1950s and 1960s are industrious, proud citizens who went on to contribute much to American society. He also recognizes that many of the illegal aliens who arrive in California today are industrious individuals who likely would go on to become proud citizens with much to offer their adopted country. Understanding Hanson's background and views of Mexicans should immediately banish the label of 'racist' to the garbage bin. He's definitely not a supremacist or a separatist. He is, however, gravely concerned with the present state of federal immigration policy and how both the political right and left view the millions of poor illegals flowing into the country. According to Hanson, the pro-business right sees opposition to undocumented immigrants as nativist and isolationist, and the left views critics of the immigration imbroglio in similar terms, labeling anyone who dares support a tighter border a racist and a hater. Hanson rejects both of these arguments as cynical emanations from a small cadre of special interests that have a lot to gain from exploiting the poor Mexicans entering this country. We better go back to a pro-assimilationist culture, argues Hanson, or we're all in grave trouble. If we refuse to deal with this problem, the author claims, California will turn into 'Mexifornia,' a country that is neither Mexico nor California but a nation that exhibits the worst of both cultures. Considering social movements in California often foreshadow trends in the rest of the country, the rest of our states will become Mexifornias if something isn't done to stymie the flow of illegals and prevent the continued exploitation of generation after generation of those immigrants. Hanson's book is must reading for anyone concerned about the reckless immigration policies foisted upon us by the government. We need to change our border policy for ourselves and for those people who come here seeking a better life.


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