I'm well aware of it, but also remember that White isn't an ethnicity.
The Americans themselves at the time of the Revolution saw themselves as entirely different states, and entirely different peoples.
"White" is still a broad abstract category. The country is founded not on Racialism, but Liberalism. The question that besieged the Founding Fathers was "could anyone but the English Protestants be Liberal". It turns out yes. And thank god, since there were tens of thousands of abandoned Germans that suddenly became American. Even Catholics can be Liberal.
It turns out that although the Universal Man is a flawed concept, people who embrace American values, can become American, because those values are what make us American.
I'm well aware of it, but also remember that White isn't an ethnicity.
I'm aware. There was even discrimination between groups of whites, which communist turd Noel Ignatiev used to create a myth that the Irish were not considered white.
That's beside the point, though. There was clearly a desire to maintain a white majority. When you speak of America's values, do you include that one?
Because the question wasn't race, it was liberalism.
The very reason the Americans became American is because they universalized English rights.
The English literally told the American Colonists that they had no rights because they lived over there. The only place where rights could exist was in England and England alone, only for English. Welsh were not people. Scotts were not people. The Irish were not people. Only the English could have Liberalism. Only the English could have freedom. Only the English could have a culture and society that would be responsible enough to be free. All other peoples and places on the Earth needed slavery and tyranny in order to civilize them, because the English saw themselves as the force of right-ordering the world.
At least, a shit load of them in parliament thought (and still think) that way. Though nowadays they don't use "English".
It was Benjamin Franklin who started to notice the danger that the Americans actually faced from the British Empire at the hands of English supremacism. He traveled to Scotland and saw the brutality, mass murder, and lawlessness of the English ethnic cleansing of the highland. He went to Ireland, and realized that the Coercive Acts passed against the colonies were very similar to what the English had done to the Irish. They literally established a lorded aristocracy over the Irish, ruled them under 2 tier legal system, denied them all available rights and remedies and attempted to slowly ethnicly cleanse the Irish as they had done to the Highlanders.
One of the reasons Franklin pushed for independence and war, is because he genuinely believed there would be a genocide of the colonials, who were explicitly considered as non-English as the Irish, and I don't think he was wrong.
So, philosophically, coming from a people who were abandoning the very concept of their legal and moral framework: "ancient English liberties", they had to assert universal rights.
It was apparent, though, that total universalism would never work, particularly with peoples who had no history of individualism and freedom. Could the Catholics even be trusted to be Liberal. Could the French? Could the Germans? Could the natives?
Christianity seemed to be the answer. Some kind of Christian society could allow people to embrace Liberalism. And Natives could be converted. The French could be converted. The Germans (of the time) didn't seem like they would even be that bad.
The immigration question (which was already bizarre since they didn't even know what a citizen was or would look like), is based on that philosophy. Who could embrace freedom? Europeans, maybe? But not just people who live in Europe. "White" seems like a good category for that grouping of people.
So, yeah. Still Liberalism, but it was cautious because no one was even sure it would work. Turns out, many people can actually be freedom loving individualists if they are prepared to at least accept a Christian moral framework.
That is literally the basis of the American revolution.
This is actually what Dickenson referred to in his statement regarding the need for The Olive Branch Petition.
The HBO series basically borrowed and combined his statements on the matter into a speech that went:
I have looked for our rights in the laws of nature and can find them only in the laws of political society. I have looked for our rights in the constitution of the English government and found them there!
This was exactly the problem. Every time the English had previously asserted their rights, it was as the "restoration of our ancient rights and liberties as Englishmen".
The horrible truth of the colonies is that the British government did not, and would not see them as English. They were not living in England, and therefore could not be English. Therefore, there were no ancient rights and liberties for anyone to appeal to. Only the English could be free. Instead, the political rights of the colonies were constructed by the British parliament and the crown regardless of how, and regardless of correctness.
Dickenson, and all the other colonists, saw themselves as English, and therefore wanted to appeal to those rights, which were a continuation of the Crown's promise to it's citizenry. Hence, the Crown must be appealed to.
Jefferson and Adams were screaming about "natural rights", which simply did not exist within English law. It was an assertion, apropos of nothing but the words of intellectuals and liberal philosophers whom declared it to be so. The English had no "natural rights", they only had rights which they had previously had, as an appeal to tradition. But Dickenson saw that there was no such tradition to appeal to for the colonists.
Once it became clear that the Crown had joined with Parliament to execute every single person in the colonies 13 governments that had petitioned to a stop of the military rule over the colonies, it also became clear that the only legitimacy the colonists had left was to declare independence and assert their "natural rights", in the construction of a new nation of "Americans". In so doing, the concept of English rights and liberties that had been relied on as tradition in England, were now separated from England and asserted as a Universal concept within "Natural Rights", and that would be the basis of the American national government and character as a nation.
It's history of immigration laws prior to the mid 20th century
The Naturalization Act of 1790 (1 Stat. 103, enacted March 26, 1790) was a law of the United States Congress that set the first uniform rules for the granting of United States citizenship by naturalization. The law limited naturalization to "free White person(s) ... of good character", thus excluding Native Americans, indentured servants, slaves, free black people and later Asians, although free black people were allowed citizenship at the state level in a number of states.
I'm well aware of it, but also remember that White isn't an ethnicity.
The Americans themselves at the time of the Revolution saw themselves as entirely different states, and entirely different peoples.
"White" is still a broad abstract category. The country is founded not on Racialism, but Liberalism. The question that besieged the Founding Fathers was "could anyone but the English Protestants be Liberal". It turns out yes. And thank god, since there were tens of thousands of abandoned Germans that suddenly became American. Even Catholics can be Liberal.
It turns out that although the Universal Man is a flawed concept, people who embrace American values, can become American, because those values are what make us American.
I'm aware. There was even discrimination between groups of whites, which communist turd Noel Ignatiev used to create a myth that the Irish were not considered white.
That's beside the point, though. There was clearly a desire to maintain a white majority. When you speak of America's values, do you include that one?
Because the question wasn't race, it was liberalism.
The very reason the Americans became American is because they universalized English rights.
The English literally told the American Colonists that they had no rights because they lived over there. The only place where rights could exist was in England and England alone, only for English. Welsh were not people. Scotts were not people. The Irish were not people. Only the English could have Liberalism. Only the English could have freedom. Only the English could have a culture and society that would be responsible enough to be free. All other peoples and places on the Earth needed slavery and tyranny in order to civilize them, because the English saw themselves as the force of right-ordering the world.
At least, a shit load of them in parliament thought (and still think) that way. Though nowadays they don't use "English".
It was Benjamin Franklin who started to notice the danger that the Americans actually faced from the British Empire at the hands of English supremacism. He traveled to Scotland and saw the brutality, mass murder, and lawlessness of the English ethnic cleansing of the highland. He went to Ireland, and realized that the Coercive Acts passed against the colonies were very similar to what the English had done to the Irish. They literally established a lorded aristocracy over the Irish, ruled them under 2 tier legal system, denied them all available rights and remedies and attempted to slowly ethnicly cleanse the Irish as they had done to the Highlanders.
One of the reasons Franklin pushed for independence and war, is because he genuinely believed there would be a genocide of the colonials, who were explicitly considered as non-English as the Irish, and I don't think he was wrong.
So, philosophically, coming from a people who were abandoning the very concept of their legal and moral framework: "ancient English liberties", they had to assert universal rights.
It was apparent, though, that total universalism would never work, particularly with peoples who had no history of individualism and freedom. Could the Catholics even be trusted to be Liberal. Could the French? Could the Germans? Could the natives?
Christianity seemed to be the answer. Some kind of Christian society could allow people to embrace Liberalism. And Natives could be converted. The French could be converted. The Germans (of the time) didn't seem like they would even be that bad.
The immigration question (which was already bizarre since they didn't even know what a citizen was or would look like), is based on that philosophy. Who could embrace freedom? Europeans, maybe? But not just people who live in Europe. "White" seems like a good category for that grouping of people.
So, yeah. Still Liberalism, but it was cautious because no one was even sure it would work. Turns out, many people can actually be freedom loving individualists if they are prepared to at least accept a Christian moral framework.
Really? When was this? It couldn't be before the Civil War and the abolition of slavery, at the earliest.
That is literally the basis of the American revolution.
This is actually what Dickenson referred to in his statement regarding the need for The Olive Branch Petition.
The HBO series basically borrowed and combined his statements on the matter into a speech that went:
This was exactly the problem. Every time the English had previously asserted their rights, it was as the "restoration of our ancient rights and liberties as Englishmen".
The horrible truth of the colonies is that the British government did not, and would not see them as English. They were not living in England, and therefore could not be English. Therefore, there were no ancient rights and liberties for anyone to appeal to. Only the English could be free. Instead, the political rights of the colonies were constructed by the British parliament and the crown regardless of how, and regardless of correctness.
Dickenson, and all the other colonists, saw themselves as English, and therefore wanted to appeal to those rights, which were a continuation of the Crown's promise to it's citizenry. Hence, the Crown must be appealed to.
Jefferson and Adams were screaming about "natural rights", which simply did not exist within English law. It was an assertion, apropos of nothing but the words of intellectuals and liberal philosophers whom declared it to be so. The English had no "natural rights", they only had rights which they had previously had, as an appeal to tradition. But Dickenson saw that there was no such tradition to appeal to for the colonists.
Once it became clear that the Crown had joined with Parliament to execute every single person in the colonies 13 governments that had petitioned to a stop of the military rule over the colonies, it also became clear that the only legitimacy the colonists had left was to declare independence and assert their "natural rights", in the construction of a new nation of "Americans". In so doing, the concept of English rights and liberties that had been relied on as tradition in England, were now separated from England and asserted as a Universal concept within "Natural Rights", and that would be the basis of the American national government and character as a nation.
Your claim, so what’s the proof?
It's history of immigration laws prior to the mid 20th century
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Naturalization_Act_of_1790