Are you ready for the Salsa Intifada?

With recent protests so “successful” in garnering the attention of the media AND the politicians for the illegal alien issue, it will only be a matter of time before the brilliant minds behind the Reconquista push for their own Intifadah or worse.

To quote one of their writers:

What does the immense success of “La Gran Marcha” mean to Mexicanos and other Latinos? It simply means that we now have the numbers, the political will and the organizational skills to direct our own destinies and not be subservient to the White and Jewish power structures. It means that we can now undertake bigger and more significant mass actions to achieve total political and economic liberation like that being proposed by Juan José Gutiérrez, President of Movimiento Latino USA. Juan José Gutiérrez is proposing that the coalition that organized “La Gran Marcha” meet in Arizona or Texas on April 8 to “organize a mass boycott (huelga) against the economy of the USA” to take place on May 5 or 19.

What they don’t realize is that although the politicians (most of them) are cowering in their bunkers, and the media is fawning over the plight of all these millions of (illegal) immigrants, the demonstrations are looking like they are finally opening the eyes of law-abiding citizens and legal immigrants to the huge threat our nation faces from this wave of criminals.

TB to Malkin

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6 Responses to “Are you ready for the Salsa Intifada?”

  • Taco Tumult?
    Burrito Rebellion?
    Macarina Mutiny?
    Battle O’ the Beaners?
    Mexican Rant Dance?

  • Now now…

    Although I must admit, Mexican Rant Dance is damned funny.

  • If your meaning has been in any way misinterpreted, by all means feel free to post a correction, and I’ll gladly emend my analysis. But since you very consciously linked the Aztlán group, the huge group of protesters, and (by omission) the vast population of immigrants legal and illegal who have nothing to do with any bizarre radical separatist movement, I’m inclined to guess my reading of your post was pretty much on the nose. Your choice of the word ‘criminals’ might just make you too honest, you know what I mean?

    Cheers.

  • I guess then that the question becomes are people who break the law “criminals”, or not? Seems pretty clear cut to me.

    As I posted on your site, yes, using the Aztlan wackos is a straw man, of sorts. I certainly HOPE that it is — but then, we’ve often thought much better of people who turned out to be very detrimental to our country in the past, haven’t we?

  • Isrealcool:

    Isn’t reconquista the same as Zionism?

  • Yeah. Damned those filthy Joos.

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