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Rather it was communities from western Europe who wanted to have their own states where they could have their values and their way of life.
And they built one who’s principles y’all now question.
If you wanted a blood and soil type country with deep ethnic roots you can try to move to one. The US is a pretty bad option for those who do like that sort of thing.
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It was communities from the British Isles who subsequently dealt with catastrophic, culture-destroying immigration from the rest of Europe, sure. That America is rich in spite of that is an achievement, but it’s ridiculous to pretend Ben Franklin and the other founding fathers wanted America to be a melting pot of every European nation from Tromso to Odesa.
What do you mean British isles? You literally would let Irish people in? That’d erode the fabric of the nation.
I think that large scale Irish immigration was highly deleterious for the US, but it’s happened now and they’re largely assimilated, plus Ireland is now rich enough (and still quite a small country, with a now-low birth rate) that ongoing inflows would be minimal. Plus there were always some Irish in the US, although more at the start were from Ulster or Protestants/settlers in general.
In what way was it deleterious?
Curious because I’ve never actually heard a serious argument that it was!
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