Scattered thoughts on multiculturalism, the Dublin riots, and the man who would be king
The transnational ruling class has decided that humans are to be treated as a fungible resource, to be moved around the same way we transfer oil, cell phones, or liquid capital. Of course this doesn’t apply, yet, to every country. China, India, and Japan, for example, are famously exempt from the requirements to open their borders to a laminar human flow from every segment of the globe. In practice, it is only White countries that must treat their borders like sluice gates from a cesspool.
Perhaps the motivations are purely economic. Birth rates remain stubbornly low throughout the developed world, although the adjective ‘stubbornly’ presupposes that anything whatsoever has been tried in order to raise total fertility; in practice, government policies are systematically calibrated towards suppressing the fertility of native populations, which after all helps to keep women in the workforce and, therefore, wages low. Since we all know that humans are entirely interchangeable, with no difference between a Mongol, a Mayan, and a Malay, low birth rates aren’t a problem. We can just import people to make up the difference.
The mass migration strategy that’s been pursued across the Western world has indeed had economic benefits, for the globalist tribe running things at least. By packing third-worlders into their countries, they’ve successfully raised GDP. Big line go up, which is wonderful for the financial ownership class. For everyone else, it’s been terrible, since it turns out that increasing GDP via immigration doesn’t have much of an effect on per capita GDP, although it has quite the strong effect on real estate prices (up), cost of living (up), and wages (down), which is great if you’re in the ruling class and, otherwise, not great at all.
