Immigration 2015 style

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‘ A nation that cannot control its borders is not a nation.’ Ronald Reagan

A staggering statistic came out this week that should be marked up as a massive reality check before the coming elections. The Guardian reports that the migrant population of England increased by 565,000 in three years between 2011 and 2014, with about two thirds of the arrivals born in other EU countries. This represents nearly 1% of the UK population of an estimated 63,489,234 in July 2015 (0.89% to be precise). The numbers are estimates of course, but anyone with half a brain can see what is going on. We are to celebrate this of course. The natural bedfellow of mass immigration is government sanctioned diversity. Celebrating diversity has got to be the UK’s greatest achievement of the last 50 years, up there with the 2012 London Olympics.

We are told that the greatest increase in the amount of foreign born residents has been in the capital, with an estimated 200,000 more foreign residents living in London between 2011 and 2014. I have just been reading the comments on this article in the Guardian blog and there are plenty of them not quite sure of if not downright against this mass immigration idea.

The project is almost complete some might argue, and some people in high places must be rubbing their hands with glee. Soon the UK could be no more, utterly demolished by a mixture of misplaced white guilt, bowing down to other cultures, rubbishing our own culture and religion, and using the word racist to brand anyone who ever dared to question the wisdom of opening the floodgates to the world. Again I am reminded of the meeting I went to all those years ago when it was proposed that New Labour had instituted a deliberate policy of mass immigration to destroy the culture of the nation, and this was well before Andrew Nether, the New Labour speech writer let the cat out of the bag when he told the UK that New Labour wanted to rub the right’s nose in diversity.

When I voted for David Cameron in 2010 I was not particularly voting for him as a leader as I have never been a big fan, but I was hoping that the Conservative party was actually going to do something Conservative about immigration when they took power after 13 years of direct assault on the soul of this nation by the apparatchiks of New Labour. Dave assured us that those immigration figures would be brought down but hardly a thing has been done. The sad thing is that the policies of successive governments in this area could make the English people racist. There has been warning after warning about the consequences of all this but the government appears to have a death wish, especially when it comes to dangerous Islamists being allowed to settle in this country.

Institutionalised ‘diversity’ must be one of the greatest deceptions foisted on the world ever, and it has been very successful because the purveyors of this policy have forced it into the public sector, the universities, the schools, and even into the corporate world, where you will be a heretic if you dare to stand agains the prevailing orthodoxy.

Will the British people wake up before the next election as they realise there might be a plan? Is what is being done to their nation part of a plan that has been carefully prepared and used to infiltrate every nation of the old Anglosphere. At the moment UKIP is the only hope to call some sort of halt.

I watched Newsnight the other night and there was a big piece about the housing crisis in the UK. Not enough homes, not enough new homes being built, young people not able to afford a house, escalating rents and so on. House prices are set by supply and demand, which in turn are influenced by many factors such as desirability of area, quality of schools, job market, family break up, interest rates, availability of loans, price of land and so on. The piece said barely a word about immigration, but it should be pretty obvious that over half a million people entering the nation in three years could be a pretty significant driver on the demand side of housing shortages as well as house prices and rent levels.