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Jan
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Sep 16, 2016 09:40AM

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Certainly the elections of 1792 and 96 are wonderful examples (and note that the Federalists who included some of the most revolutionary radicals of the 1770s and 80s...Great read would be "Israel on the Appomattox" which chronicles the slaves freed by the Randolphs in the 1790s-1810s), but each wave of immigration inspires a "nativist" backlash. I place this in quotes because those who recoil are of the same ethnic groups who were found repulsive in the previous episodes.
Consider how the Irish (1840s-50s) were seen (a great book..."When the Irish Became White") by the WASPs of New England and New York. By the time the USA limits European immigration (forget the Root-Takihara 'Gentleman's Agreement' to limit Japanese immigration into California) in the 1920s, the Irish were well entrenched int he power structures if not hte country clubs.
Here's a poseur for you. If the United States Army was sitting in Mexico City in 1846, why did the USA only annex the northern (uninhabited pretty much) section of the country? Why not take over the whole thing? Two simple answers--the Southern States did not want a huge chunk of territory where slavery had been outlawed since the 1820s AND the southern half was well-inhabited by free brown people (mestizos). Neither the Northern states nor the Southern States wanted that.
Great read for that is "Race and Manifest Destiny" by Reginald Horseman.
Finally, I do talk a lot about history in my Goodreads blog. Please check it out.
