DAVID IRVING writes:THE “dagoes” reference was to Javier Solana, below, a Spaniard; and a NATO mass-murderer at that. I do not use milk-toast language about people like him.
The reference to Asian hotel-keepers is frank, honest, travel advice to others, as in: “If you find a hotel in the USA managed by an Asian, drive on.” It is nothing to do with racism, merely a realistic travel hint. In my experience — and I drove 15,000 miles around the entire United States since November — Asian-managed hotels are dirty, poorly maintained (bugs!), and being slowly run down.
The light bulbs have been replaced by 40-watt bulbs throughout. The coffee machines have been removed. The soap bars could hide under a 37¢ postage stamp. There will always be exceptions, true, but I did not find even one, and I don’t believe in mincing my language. When you go out in the world, on the road, in farflung towns and cities, as I often do, you pick up a few worldly-wise tips about hotels like those above: I pass them on; it is open to others like yourself, who have perhaps led more sheltered lives, to ignore them if you want to, to go out there, and make the same mistakes that I used to.
Politically-correct Miami used to refuse to put up street signs diverting tourist traffic away from the city’s unsafe (i.e., Black) areas. It took a couple of very nasty incidents for them to change that policy and erect idiot-proof “sunshine” icons to channel arriving tourists safely to the right districts. One German family took a wrong turning from the airport in a rental car (which in those days were all recognizable by the “Z” in their license tag) and were dead within five minutes. As said, overweening political correctness then took a back seat to realism. Tourists who’ve been harrassed do not return; that German family did not either.
In England they now say: A Conservative is a Liberal who has been mugged. I appreciate that political correctness has a set of rules of its own; but respect for ones fellow humans does not oblige us to be quiet about their shortcomings — particularly when you are a weary traveler, on the road.
Incidentally, since I wrote those lines about American motel system, I have received very many letters from others quietly expressing the same puzzlement about its gradual collapse. Race does not come into it: if the common factor were seven-feet tall hotel managers, or two-headed hotel managers, I would say just the same about them; in this case, the common factor is that they are recent Asian immigrants, and seemingly out of their depth in the culture of the United States.