04/20/2023
Once again, Texas (and VDARE.com) celebrate San Jacinto Day.
From Click2Houston: San Jacinto Day 2023: Texas to mark 187th anniversary of battle for independence with reenactments, revelry, April 20, 2023.
News from H-Town: San Jacinto Day 2023: Texas to mark 186th anniversary of battle for independence with reenactments, revelry https://t.co/MnXy9ucKq1 #houston #news #local pic.twitter.com/gehIbVKITc
— Jason S β πΊπΈ (@theluckyman) April 17, 2023
Historical events like the Civil War / War Between The States or the conquest of the American Southwest can continue to create rancor not for years, but for hundreds of years. That’s why I was surprised to see, searching Google News, that there are none of the kinds of protest marches on San Jacinto Day that you see on Columbus Day.
This year, I did see the Houston Teachers’ Union complain that Texas, in celebrating Texas’s victory over Mexico, might be offending the many, many, HISD students who are descended from the losers.
Texas VS. Mexico= Mexico looses April 21, 1836#HISD Holiday of April 21/"San Jacinto Day"
is Offensive.What If:
— Houston Teachers United (@TxEdHouston) April 15, 2023
Gave January 19 — "Robert E. Lee Day" OFF to students in Detroit ?
-or-
Gave Schools on Indian Reservations "Christopher Columbus Day" OFF ??#School #Houston #TEA pic.twitter.com/11NxXKLSwZ
San Jacinto Day (April 21) is the anniversary of the final victory of the Texas Revolution, in which Texas won its independence from Mexico. (The Mexicans are still not happy.) One of the earliest articles we published on VDARE.com, April 20, 2001, was Lone Star Setting? San Jacinto Undone, by a writer whose ancestors fought in the Texas War Of Independence — on the winning side.
The San Jacinto Column, the world’s tallest monument, was built in 1936 by Sons and Daughters of the Republic of Texas who were proud of what their ancestors had done. It couldn’t be built today.
Inscribed on it are these words:
Measured by its results, San Jacinto was one of the decisive battles of the world. The freedom of Texas from Mexico won here led to annexation and to the Mexican War, resulting in the acquisition by the United States of the states of Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, Nevada, California, Utah, and parts of Colorado, Wyoming, Kansas, and Oklahoma. Almost one-third of the present area of the American nation, nearly a million square miles of territory, changed sovereignty.
See also Down With Texism And Treason! Happy San Jacinto Day!, by Athena Kerry.
Of course, as the late Linda Thom pointed out in Lessons From A Short History Of Texas, Texas history is proof that Immigration Has Consequences.
In Time to Rethink Immigration? [June 22, 1992], VDARE.com editor Peter Brimelow quoted the Harvard Encyclopedia of American Ethnic Groups to this effect:
In obtaining land grants in Texas, Anglo immigrants agreed to become Mexican citizens, obey Mexican laws, accept the official Catholic faith, learn Spanish, and take other steps to become fully assimilated as law-abiding citizens. However, over the years, it became clear that these settlers, now Anglo-Mexicans, were not becoming integrated into the nation and that Anglo immigration had become a problem … The strains and disagreements ultimately led to the Texas Revolution in 1835.
There’s been speculation that similar modern demographic trends could reverse the success of the Texas Revolution.
Demographer Steve Murdock told the Houston Chronicle that “It’s basically over for Anglos” in Texas, [February 24, 2011], to which Peter Brimelow replied ”It’s Basically Over For Anglos” In Texas. Or Have They Not Yet Begun To Fight?, and Dallas reader Gerald Martin pointed out that “The last person who said, “It’s basically over for Anglos in Texas, “was Santa Anna, right, as he lay down for his siesta about an hour before the Battle of San Jacinto.”
Texas’s 38 electoral votes went to Donald Trump in the 2016 election, with 53 percent of the popular vote. Hillary got 43, so perhaps it’s not over for Anglos in Texas. But it’s worth noting the shape of the electoral map:
187 years after San Jacinto, Texas is still Texas, but there are people on the border who are loyal to Mexico.
This is a content archive of VDARE.com, which Letitia James forced off of the Internet using lawfare.