Thursday, August 26, 2021

How to Destroy the World, through Fake Humanitarianism

Wed, Aug 25, 2021 8:19 p.m.
According to Some, We ain't See Nuthin' Yet!


Preparing to Welcome Two Billion Refugees



From the article a colleague sent, with emphasis in the original:

But at some point, hopefully sooner rather than later for most of us, it will dawn on us: This is not an issue of us versus them. We are all in this together. The borders cannot and will not hold. 

Against that, I proffer something from Raspail's preface to the third edition of Camp of the Saints:

I am a novelist. I have no theory, no system nor ideology to propose or defend. It just seems to me that we are facing a unique alternative either learn the resigned courage of being poor or find again the inflexible courage to be rich. In both cases, so-called Christian charity will prove itself powerless. The times will be cruel.

Emphasis added.

There's also the following, from George Kennan:

There will be those who will say, "Oh, it is our duty to receive as many as possible of these people and to share our prosperity with them, as we have so long been doing." But suppose there are limits to our capacity to absorb. Suppose the effect of such a policy is to create, in the end, conditions within this country no better than those of the places the masses of immigrants have left: the same poverty, the same distress. What we shall then have accomplished is not to have appreciably improved conditions in the Third World (for even the maximum numbers we could conceivably take would be only a drop from the bucket of the planet's overpopulation) but to make this country itself a part of the Third World (as certain parts of it already are), thus depriving the planet of one of the few great regions that might have continued, as it now does, to be helpful to much of the remainder of the world by its relatively high standard of civilization, by its quality as example, by its ability to shed insight on the problems of the others and to help them find their answers to their own problems. 

Actually, the inability of any society to resist immigration, the inability to find other solutions to the problem of employment at the lower, more physical, and menial levels of the economic process, is a serious weakness, and possibly even a fatal one, in any national society. The fully healthy society would find ways to meet those needs out of its own resources. The acceptance of this sort of dependence on labor imported from outside is, for the respective society, the evidence of a lack of will — in a sense, a lack of confidence in itself. And this acceptance, like the weakness of the Romans in allowing themselves to become dependent on the barbarians to fill the ranks of their own armies, can become, if not checked betimes, the beginning of the end.









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5 comments:

  1. As I said earlier,I'm a refugee in my own country.

    --GRA

    ReplyDelete
  2. SIRHAN SIRHAN MAY GET PAROLED,AS LA DA NUTJOB GASCON WILL NOT OPPOSE IT

    (Breitbart)Sirhan Sirhan, who was convicted of assassinating Sen. Robert F. Kennedy (D-NY) in June 1968, is eligible for parole, and L.A. District Attorney George Gascón will not send prosecutors to the parole hearing Friday, nor will he oppose parole.

    Sirhan, 77, was arrested on the scene after he shot Kennedy, who had just made a victory speech in the California primary at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles, and was exiting through the hotel kitchen.



    The murder shocked the world, given the fact that Kennedy’s brother, President John F. Kennedy, had been killed five years before, and the fact that Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., had been assassinated in Memphis, Tennessee, just two months before, throwing the nation into turmoil.


    After his win, Kennedy had seemed likely to win the Democratic nomination for president on a platform of opposition to the Vietnam War. Instead, the party went down to defeat against Richard Nixon, after a bitter convention in Chicago. On the American left, the second Kennedy assassination has often been seen as the moment that a brighter future was lost.


    Today, with “criminal justice reform” a major motivating force in the Democratic Party, and “systemic racism” a rallying cry, there are calls for clemency for Sirhan, a Palestinian immigrant who is not a U.S. citizen and could face deportation.

    GRA:He'll be released,pardoned by Biden,given a job as Fauci's assistant in charge of providing Jews with a Covid vaccine containing arsenic.

    --GRA

    ReplyDelete
  3. As went Rome so goes America. Will and IS.

    ReplyDelete
  4. 2 billion refugees but they only want to end up in the USA or the EU. No hope then. Overwhelm the locals, destroy what is good, back to square one.

    If these refugees can teach us so many things, why cannot they teach themselves to make their own lands better?

    ReplyDelete
  5. Did Rome import niggers and hand them the keys to the city?We are writing a new book on "stupid".

    --GRA

    ReplyDelete