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March 1, 2024 • 41 mins
The guys discuss why the Biden Border Crisis is designed to skew the 2030 census for the benefit of Blue states
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(00:03):
There's a major issue in America rightnow, and it has been an issue
for a long time. It's anissue that has been a top three in
most presidential elections at least the lastfifty years. And it's an issue that
is not getting solved. It's anissue that the remedies that even Obama administration
put in place have been replaced.And it's an issue that is accelerating in

(00:28):
the wrong direction. And the questionis why. And it's an issue that
may be the greatest existential threat toour country. And it's not the financial
issue that's a biggie, and it'snot the military. It's not the imperial
extension of the United States into othernations and other conflicts and proxy wars.

(00:48):
It's bigger than that. And it'sgoing to be the albatross for the Democrats
in twenty twenty four, just likeabortion is the albatross around the neck for
the Republicans. What is that issue? Girls with severe appearance Deficits always in
front of us on our TVs.It is the great migration into the United
States, and it brings conversations onnational policy. It revives conversations on the

(01:15):
purpose of immigration. Who to havein and who not to have in We
have to look at the impact ofimmigration on the illegal side and how that
impacts our country. Not to mention, we have new words like caravans and
sanctuary cities, asylum seekers, theend of catch and release, the huge

(01:42):
costs that are being paid to attracttransport bring across the border, get on
buses, get on planes, putin hotels, sticking to schools, hows
and pay people to do all thatas well. So you have a huge

(02:07):
number of checks being written to NGOsto attract these people. Build bridges in
Central and South America, cut outtrails, pay for security, pay for
food and water, pay for cellphones, pay for gift cards, pay
for cash cards, hotels, payfor hotels and the people, and then

(02:30):
obviously paying the people who are providingthat service. And the people providing that
service are largely drug cartels. Andwhat else are the drug cartels bringing across
with their whoever's drugs? Because they'renot bringing cartels And where's the fentanyl coming

(02:51):
from? China? So China isin bed with the cartels, and the
cartels have they in operation and intraining, skills and equipment to take the
raw ingredients to make fentanyl, andthen to build it, manufacture it,

(03:13):
store it, transport it, getit into the hubs of the Midwest,
the west, the south, thenortheast, the northwest. And then we
have the equivalent of five passenger planesa week going down with no survivors,
about fifteen hundred people a week divefentnel overness coming across the border. Not

(03:34):
to mention the illegals that are taxingthe criminal justice system committing crimes. We're
hearing more and more about those,and you're going to hear even more and
more about those during the twenty twentyfour election. The question is, number
one, what is what should ahealthy nation's immigration policy be? And we

(03:58):
have two hundred and fifty years,three hundred years of policy here in the
United States, and prior that tothe colonies to study. And number two,
who do we want in? Andnumber three where are they going to
go? Number four what do wedo with the people who are here illegally
that were born here? And numberfive do we build a giant wall?

(04:25):
The walls work, But the biggestissue is these people are fleeing something to
come here. So whatever the investmentthat needs to be made in this issue,
is to invest this money back intheir talents, their cities, their
nations so that the cost benefit analysisfails, that the benefits and risking coming

(04:50):
out of caravan coming into the US. Right now, it's green light rolling
out the red carpet. It's justthat bad. It's just that bad.
We're making it very easy, andit's a two step process. Number one,
we have to make it extremely difficultto enter the United States illegally,

(05:12):
and number two, we have toif we're gonna if this is now our
problem, which it is, thenwe have to be part of solving the
problem, which is taking these billionsof dollars and figuring out how to invest
it in Central America and South Americaso they don't need to leave their nations.
Because right now we may be gettingtheir fringe. We may be getting

(05:34):
their criminals. We may be gettingtheir rapists, we may be getting their
drug dealers, we may be gettingtheir their mentally ill. We also may
be getting doctors, engineers, surveyors, paramedics, people that are good natural
labor for their country. We're alsodraining there, it's a brain drain in

(05:58):
their country. Well, this issomething that was heard from Europe in the
sixties, they were complaining about allthe British and European scientists that were coming
over to the US, so theycalled it the brain drain. That was
when the phrase was coined. Wehave absolutely, we will never be able
to solve this issue as long asthe cost benefit analysis such that a rational
actor, a rational person says itis worth risking my life to get over

(06:25):
the United States because the payoff atthe United States is big, and access
into the United States is easy,and there is nothing here for me in
El Salvador or Venezuela or Guatemala.So we have to take this problem and
run it upstream. And I haveless of a problem, and I probably
speak for a probably plurality of people. If we're going to commit this amount

(06:49):
of money, whatever that money is, we know it's in the billions.
If we're going to commit this amountof money to have a border patrol,
to police, to transport, tofeed, to hows, to educate,
to sustain not just that person thatmade it across, but now the chain

(07:11):
migration, their immediate family, andnow their chain migration, their cousins,
uncles, and aunts. If thatamount of money is going to be spent
under the current policy. Then let'smake it much more difficult to enter and
then take that money, move itupstream and deploy it into their nations.
The problem is, yeah, thecorruption. So you bring the money over

(07:34):
there and you wind up losing controlof where it's going. You see it
right now, and you create Yousee it all over the world. The
people that get rich are the peoplethat don't that are already in power.
You can't just throw money at theseproblems. So on this show, we
are going to talk a little bitabout the history of the migration into the

(07:55):
United States and give you a quickoverview of the policies who we excluded.
There's some there are some stains,there are a lot of a lot of
the contemporary wisdom of the past wouldbe horribly politically incorrect. Today we're going
to touch on that. But alsoI want to go to some sources.

(08:16):
This is this is a topic thatneither of the General and I have any
specialized knowledge in. We don't youknow, we never really studied immigration,
don't practice immigration law. As Iimagine most people are in the same boat.
We only know what we're told onthe talking heads and what we read
in the press. I don't likereading from the press because I view a
lot of reporters they're just stenographers.I've been involved in too many interviews with

(08:41):
the press. I know they justwrite down what you're saying. And even
if you were to go on atalking head show, on a Sunday morning
talking head show, you get softballs. So my sources for this show in
premise, Hillsdale's im premise has anarticle from January twenty twenty four by an
author named Todd Benzman, and we'lltalk a little bit about his article after

(09:05):
the break. Also the Cato Instituteand the Center for Immigration Studies CIS dot
org. So those are the sourcesof our information, and this show a
lot of what we're going to sharethis information. These authors pass the smell
test for us. It does feelas though they're being neutral and objective,

(09:26):
and they're also being America first.So let's get educated, raise our IQ
a little bit so we know whatwe're talking about, and then look at
what the solutions, the real solutionsare that we want out of our Senate
candidates and out of our president andour congresspeople. But then also we want
to know the why. Why whyis the Biden vision? Why they do

(09:48):
this. Uh general, all right, we're back. I guess I was
whispering a little bit at the endof the last segment, Sleepy Joe yelling
do you what you made me?Laugh? My friend? You we Yeah,
we got to plug our sponsor CHESZRound Automotive up there in Delaware.

(10:09):
Have some a lot of cars,a lot of trucks, any anything you
need. This is the Immigration Show. They have some nice stuff up there.
You get some nice stuff. Ifyou need to caravan over some folks
from Mexico, Central America or anywhereor anywhere you are, they'll hook you
up. Yeah. I mean,my wife was just telling me, you
know, we can't fit the skisinto the cars we've got, so we

(10:31):
need to get something bigger. AndI said, well, that's the place
to go is chess run checks roundthere you go? All right? This
this next segment is information from anational security fellow at the Center for Immigration
Studies called Todd Bentzman. And Iread this This is January twenty twenty four
in Premise and Premises, a monthlynewsletter by Hillsdale. I highly recommend it.

(10:56):
It's a it's a good go to, uh for conservative well researched pretty
balanced thought. He is not ivyleague, so he's got that going for
him. He went to Northern ArizonaUniversity. He got a master's from the
University of Missouri Journalism School, theJay School Top five schools where young Cameron

(11:20):
Koffel goes. I've been there,and he has security studies from the Naval
Postgraduate School. He's a counter terrorismspecialists from the Department of the Texas Department
of Public Safety and an author ofthe book Overrun, How Joe Biden unleashed
the greatest border crisis in US history. So that is the source of our

(11:41):
information for at least this segment andmaybe the next segment. Here's what Todd
says. He starts with his entrypoint on this issue of immigration is nineteen
sixty. Nineteen sixty Eisenhower administration startscounting the number of foreign nationals apprehended or
encountered by US border control what usedto be called border control, and that

(12:07):
was there at the southern border.So we didn't start counting the people coming
in at southern border till nineteen sixty. And since nineteen sixty these numbers have
been published and they are closely monitored. What Todd Benzman says, we have
never seen anything like the numbers we'reseeing now. He calls it a human

(12:30):
tsunami. And border patrol under Bidenhas handled seven point six million crossers,
seven point six million, and hesays this has smashed every record, with
each year's numbers exceeding the previous years. So seven point six million since January

(12:52):
twenty twenty one, and he ispredicting ten million by January twenty twenty five.
Why well, we have rolled backpolicies that would deter this. We've
rolled back policies to block it.We've rolled back policies of detaining them and

(13:13):
deporting them. And let me givelet me give you one piece of context.
Obama's director of Homeland Security on MSNBCguy named Jay Johnson, j Eh,
well done. He said, ifthe number of illegal crossings goes over

(13:37):
one thousand a day, that willmore than overwhelm the system. That's what
Obama's immigrations are. That was hisAlejandro Majorcis, that's what he said,
says, one thousand overwhelms the system. We're doing seven thousand a day right
now. Trump got it down toeight hundred, maybe fifty teen hundred max

(14:01):
in his final year in office,the lowest number in forty five years.
Check this out. The first fourmonths of the Biden administration, apprehensions went
from fifteen hundred to six thousand perday. It's like they knew. It's
like they knew change was coming.Well. Now, entering twenty twenty four,

(14:26):
were at fifteen thousand per day.The reality is even worse because mister
Bensmon talks about the godaways. Wedon't really know about the godaways. The
people who enter, they don't getapprehended. And those estimates are kept by
border patrol, but they're not publicinformation, and they're just estimates, and

(14:48):
they're just estimates. They think thatwe're getting ten We're going to have ten
million illegal immigrants, illegal, notjust the people are coming in the right
way. Ten million the equivalent tothe population of Greater Chicago. They're coming
from one hundred and seventy countries.Three hundred and thirty thus far have been

(15:11):
on FBI's terror watch list, amillion have been ordered deported but still stay
in country, and some other firsts. According to Todd Bensman, Mexico's cartels
have paramilitary forces that are making moremoney doing cross border smuggling than from drug

(15:33):
smuggling for the first time. Soit's like we replaced drugs with humans,
and where's the money coming from alot of the Spanish that these people are
speaking sounds very much like Chinese.Sometimes I don't even know. It's not
even funny and you make me laugh. The the drugs, Yeah, were

(15:54):
talking about rug smuggling. The where'sthe money coming? Here's the money?
So the families scraped the money together. Or are NGOs getting US tax dollars?
Yes, US tax dollars are beingpaid to NGOs and that money is

(16:15):
being used to build bridges, cutout paths, buy security, buy food,
buy water, by backpacks, byclothes, get them on the planes,
pay for the planes, play forthe custom coaches, pay for the
hotel rooms. And then you haveour nineteen thousand border agents who have been

(16:37):
ordered to abandon vast stretches of theborder. According to mister Bensman, they're
in the office doing administrative intake duty. Another first brought out by mister Bensman.
We've never had so many immigrants dietrying to get in here. Also,
we've never had a government explicitly refusedto enforce the immigration laws that are

(17:00):
on the books, something that youcontinue to talk about, General. And
another first, a conveyor belt policydistributing these millions of illegals throughout the American
interior. Why, well, General, what is the why here? Well,
there's a lot of people who,first of all, make the mistake

(17:22):
of thinking, well, it's becausethey're one day going to be voters or
they're going to somehow vote illegally,And there might be a tiny bit of
that happening, but they're really thereal reason is actually much more sinister.
Every ten years, we take acensus in this country. And I want
everyone to listen to this. Thisis very important. And I don't know,
I don't spend a lot of timelisten to other talk radio and I

(17:44):
don't know if this is being talkedabout or not, but everyone needs to
listen to this. Every ten yearswe take a census. It's actually written
into our constitution that we do that. And people say, oh, well,
who cares? Really, Well,you know, it's very important because
that census determines the political representation thatyou in your state gets. But the
trouble is that they don't count citizensin the census. They count noses.

(18:10):
And so if you have illegal aliensin your state and you've got ten million
of them there, hypothetically, hypotheticallyyou've got ten let's say California, you've
got ten million illegal aliens in yourstate. That goes into the calculation of
how many seats in Congress California gets, how many they get exactly New York

(18:34):
as they get sent up there,Chicago as they get sent up there.
But even though these people don't vote, if these are heavily blue states,
now you've got blue states getting inanother seat, another seat, another seat
in Congress, another seat. Soif you look at it, if you
look at a live interactive heat mapjust based upon noses twenty sixteen, seventeen

(19:02):
eighteen, and you're seeing where youcan pick potentially pick up more congressional seats.
What you need are more noses inthose blue states, those blue congressional
districts. So you can put togethera strategy where you can fund your NGOs

(19:22):
to attract from nations that have adrought, nations that have corruption, countries
that have no jobs. And youknow who they are. It's the farm
team, you know, it's theminor leagues. You can go down there,
and you can pick your countries andyou can arrange from those churches down

(19:44):
there to start there. You havemeeting spots where you're going to meet,
and then you are given clothes,you're given a backpack, you're giving water,
you're shown away, you're given someprotection, and you're own how to
get through the Darien Gap. You'reshown how to get over up into Mexico.
You're shown then you get to theborder, and then you download.

(20:10):
You're giving a phone and then youdownload an app. Literally, I think
it says call Border Patrol App.I'm not joking. I think it's called
called BP. And then you willbe given instructions on where to go on
the border to get documented and allowit into the country. That's what's happening.
So let's talk about We just talkedabout the why. Let's dig into

(20:33):
this a little bit more. Hi, welcome back. This is the Great
American Migration Show. It's a topicthat we danced around on the edge,
but we're going into headlong for purposesof the twenty twenty four race and the
talking heads on TV and the articlesthat you're going to read, and the

(20:53):
stenographers that just take notes from theImperial City and put that out on the
wires the sources of our information,because this is a topic that is not
in our This is not the waterswe swim in. And Premise, which
is Hillsdale's monthly newsletter that I subscribeto, had a big essay and the

(21:14):
January twenty twenty four issue of andPremise also a lot of information drawn from
the Cato Institute, a think tankthat I go to frequently, and then
also the Center for Immigration Studies CISdot org at general over the break,
you just told me you finished upone thought about counting noses and why this

(21:36):
invasion of noses is happening. Andwe talk about nose, we're talking about
people, not necessarily voters, butnoses. They want to add noses to
count for the census. And youtake a blue state and you move them
into key districts, and then youhave redistricting known as jerrymandering. Right close
that loop force real quick. Ithink it's a very important. You know,

(22:00):
a lot of the northern blue stateshave been losing representation over the last
twenty years as people head south toplaces like Florida and Alabama and Texas and
all of that, and so thesepeople that are being brought in, they
to some extent, go a longway towards replacing those people. Now,

(22:21):
those people who have left are notreplaced as voters. But if suddenly Illinois
goes from let's say twenty six votesback up to twenty nine, those are
three new congressional districts that have tobe carved into Illinois, and they're going
and Illinois has a blue government andthey're not going to carve them in and
be fair to Republicans, they haven'tseen a Republican at the top of that

(22:42):
state in one hundred years, anda lot of the Republicans have left frankly
forty years, right, So whatthey're looking at is they're going to redistrict
these extra three congress congressional seats inin a way that will protect the blue
government even more. And this isit's a demographic shift. It is one
hundred percent. And that is thewhy it's very important to understand they're counting

(23:06):
noses, they're not you know,could we get to a spot where an
illegal is allowed to vote? Well, anything else has happened boys or girls
and girls were boys, and youknow what's right is wrong and wrong is
right. So uh, don't putit beyond the Imperial City to suddenly allow
illegals that are here for a yearwith no criminal arrest to vote. It's

(23:27):
clearly not the law. I haven'teveryone talked about that, but that's coming.
The important part is they're bringing innoses to count for the twenty thirty
census. Now this is a newthis is a new purpose of immigration.
The original migration into the North Americancolonies from the British was they wanted to

(23:51):
make sure that we have bodies andsoldiers and people there to defend the British
Crown's colony. And we can godown that rabble hole maybe on another show.
But I want to highlight five thingsthat happen on January twenty, twenty
twenty one. I want to highlightfive things that happened January twenty, twenty

(24:11):
twenty one Biden's first day and office. Four new US policies came into effect,
and one new Mexican law that noone's talked about. These five four
new policies, one Mexican law,the chief drivers, and the immigration tsunami
we see today again my source ToddBenzman from in premise January twenty twenty four

(24:37):
the Hillsdale newsletter. Number One,the tariff against Mexico was withdrawn. Number
two, full foreign aid to allCentral American nations were restored. We froze
foreign aid to Central American nations becausethey were under Trump, because they were
not helping us stem the loss oftheir citizens from fleeing the country. Number

(25:00):
three, we ended Biden that weBiden ended the remain in Mexico policy.
You come across, we catch you, you declare amnesty, We take you
back into Mexico. You sit inMexico while your amnesty is being considered.
That is now been reversed. Andthen Title forty two is something called the

(25:25):
pandemic rapid expulsion policy was waived.This is what Trump used to basically build
a giant wall to keep foreign peopleout of the country. So that was
waived and as a result, therewere fifty six fifty eight Mexican detention centers

(25:48):
that released thousands of people ten daysbefore Biden took office. All right,
now, also that there was achange into Mexico law. Mexico passed a
new law that you cannot hold peoplein Mexico, and so it was all
in concert. It all was inconcert, and now we are getting the

(26:11):
reveal. So you have you haveborder patrol, you have NGOs that get
them to the border, and borderpatrol gets them back to NGOs, and
then the NGOs distribute them into theinterior of the United States via bus and

(26:32):
air. This is also being facilitatedwith an app. It's also cost four
hundred billion dollars by one estimate tofeed hou's clothes and resettle just the illegals.
They're taxing the public school districts,the hospital systems. Now the blue
cities are looking to DC for helpfor funding. And not to mention the

(26:56):
public safety. Every day, everyweek you've got another murder or rape from
an illegal immigrant. I see itin the courthouses, especially here in Franklin
County, and I'm running across moreand more people that can't speak a look
of English and they're here. Andnot to mention the national security, the

(27:21):
terrorism aspects, the downward pressure onwages for American workers. So the national
security and wage pressures have always beenpresent. There's have always been, but
the Biden and the Democrats and whoeverelse is behind this, there's a whole
new level of sinisterism. Is thata word? Now? Ye? All

(27:45):
right, So solutions, according tomister Benzman, inforce the current immigration laws.
Got enough on the book. Sowhen these lawmakers get up there,
general hit that. This is whatkills me, is that we get these
Republicans and these dem crad saying,oh, you know, if we could
just pass these new laws. Whatgood do new laws do if you won't

(28:07):
enforce them. You don't enforce theold ones, you won't enforce the new
ones. This is a bad joke, told badly. There was trade tariffs
on Mexican goods. If Mexico wasn'tgoing to help us on their side of
the fence to deal with this,then Trump put on twenty eight percent tariffs,
and Trump got twenty five thousand MexicanArmy guardsmen there along the border stopping

(28:33):
people from coming in because of thosetariffs. Put the trade tariffs on reinstate
the remain in Mexico policy. Ifyou're going to claim asylum, then stay
there. Also, there's another exampleof supranationalism. This is where a nation
is going to subordinate its national interestto participate in the global parliament. The

(28:53):
United Nations Convention relating to the Statusof refugees treaty, something heard of until
I read this article requires the USto meet global standards for handling asylum seekers.
I'm sure that is a policy thatno red blooded American would ever write.
But asylum seekers must apply for asylumin the first country. This safe

(29:18):
country, true, the stay safe. Mexico is safe if you are Guatemalan,
if you're Honduran, if you're lSalvador, if you're Costa Rican,
if you're coming into Mexico, that'ssafe. If you don't get to choose
your country to apply for asylum in. This is an occupying regime and we
are becoming conquered people. We haven'teven talked about the trafficked children. We

(29:41):
haven't talking about the being the illegalsbeing released without bail, and the street
crime, the brazen street crime,not even the murders or the rapes,
but again, the criminal element.And immigration has been around for three hundred
years. Depressing American native born wagesvia immigrants has That conversation's been around for

(30:07):
two hundred years. We don't wantpeople here who will not assimilate into the
American ways. That conversation has beenaround for over one hundred years. But
now we have these new issues thatwe're purposely that are secondary to a purposeful
policy which has caused human trafficking ofchildren and the fentanyl overdose. Again,

(30:33):
we're losing five passenger planes a weekin Finnel overdose. It's about fifteen hundred
people a week. And the stenographersin the mass media general say that there's
another there's another angle that a lotof US conservatives think that it's the great
replacement theory, and the stenographers andmass media and say, you guys are

(30:56):
conspiracy theorists? Are We on AttorneyBrad Kopfel, that is the general Attorney
Eric Wilson. Monday through Friday,we are in the courts of Greater Sinceral,
Ohio, seventy three counties of oureighty eight and counties. So for
Channel we're going to be in trialcoming up here in a couple of weeks.
Big case. I'm looking forward.It's been too long since you know,

(31:18):
I've sat elbow to elbow in acourtroom, so I'm really looking forward
to that trial. We are talkingabout the Great American migration that goes back
to the colonial era into the contemporaryimmigration humanitarian crisis, also known as the

(31:38):
Biden border crisis and the why whythis is happening. My wife has asked
me many times and I'm like,I don't know. I don't know.
So we decide, you know,let's do a show on this, let's
study it. And I want tocite my sources for my information because this
is an area that is not ourcommon shared and we just don't have a

(32:02):
common shared interest in this. Wejust don't know. I just don't know
that much about it. So oursources have been in premise monthly newsletter by
Hillsdale Cato Institute and then the Centerfor Immigration Studies. I found these to
be trustworthy, a political conservative ofcourse, and a bit more libertarian.

(32:28):
So those are going to be ourpolitics, showing in our and kind of
coloring our view on immigration. Butat the end of the last segment,
we danced with the alleged conspiracy theoryof the Great Replacement. Of course,
this is a French author Camu wrotethis, the Great Replacement, and the

(32:52):
stenographers and mass media say, ah, this is nothing but a conspiracy theory,
is it? Well, let meask you, does it seem to
you in yours that America is becomingincreasingly untenable for American born workers to find
jobs, the good paying jobs,blue collar, gray collar, white collar,

(33:14):
as the college graduates. What's happeningand the labor market. You can
talk about America's net job growth sincethe lockdowns began, but the job growth
is being driven by foreign born workersand the American American born workforce. We're

(33:35):
still shy one hundred and eighty thousand, so there were one hundred and eighty
thousand more jobs pre COVID that wereheld by American born or native born Americans
that are not filled. And wethe number of immigrants, both legal and
illegal, working is up to almostthree million since twenty nineteen. That statistic

(33:58):
comes from the Center for Immigration StudiesCIS dot org. Who else maybe behind
this? Behind these besides the NGOswho are political ideologues who want to import
noses for the twenty thirty census.If you're just joining us, you don't
know what we're talking about, downloadthe show and go back into the show.

(34:21):
The General talked about that corporate Americahas a big interest in this.
You indentured servitude has always been away to get to America colonial period and
after real quick for the folks whodon't know what indentured servitude is and was,
do tell what happened was you wereapprenticed off to somebody for us who

(34:45):
would pay your way over for aperiod of time, and basically you were
not their slave, but you hadto work for them. So in a
way, contra modified form a contractualform in exchange for being able to stay
on American soil. Right, sothe indentured servitude is now called the H

(35:06):
one B visa. It's the samething. And Corporate America, of course,
is the largest lobby in favor ofH one B visas, which again
it's just come on over, we'llpay your way, we'll take care of
you, but you owe us inexchange. It is a form of indentured
servitude, and the employers fight likekech for it because they know that if

(35:27):
they can get somebody from so,let's say, an Eastern European country that's
somewhat depressed, some of the bestcoders out there are from them. They
want to come over here, andthey want to pay these guys ten bucks
an hour. They don't want topay some well American guy seventy bucks an
hour. You know. In myresearch for the show general. I wasn't
planning on bringing this up today,but we had an intentional draft of Eastern

(35:50):
European thinkers from accountants, information technology, lawyers, physicians to bring over here
for that purpose. And you knowthat can be a much more noble person
purpose. But we're talking about bringingin noses for counting for the census.
What's going to happen and what ishappening is will the white majority? How

(36:16):
soon till the white majority disappears?And I remember being in elementary school and
hearing that the forecast I think waslike twenty forty five that white Americans would
become a minority in the United States. I distinctly remember that. I'm like,
well, that's weird. I mean, you know, and went to
I went to schools there were integratedwith blacks and white kids. I'm like,

(36:38):
what, how is that even possible? So there were there clearly were
smart men and women in the roomthat were understanding that you can twist the
Rubik's cube of immigration to the pointwhere you could bring in not new voters,

(36:59):
but new noses, and you canget them into a spot where you
can shore up your congressional districts andthe census and absolutely the foreign born immigrants
in the big cities over the lastthree census SINSI said, size Sinsi,
you can see that that's where they'regoing. And I never cared anything about

(37:22):
the race. I cared about theculture. Yeah, so we are becoming
Are we becoming we? I'm saying, I'm a white anglist Saxon Protestant.
Are we becoming the next indigenous people? And your catlic right white Catholic,
fat Protestant? Are we becoming thenext indigenous peoples of North America? Let
me ask you a series of questions, at the risk of sounding xenophobic or

(37:45):
worse, do you feel as thoughyour way of life is a victim of
cultural genocide? Sounds way over thetop. Sounds way over the top.
Well, let me break this down. Do you feel as though you and
your family values are undermined being toldthey're wrong, an attempt to replace them
by new values. Do you believethere is a deliberate attempt to bring in

(38:09):
a new population that will dilute andeventually undermine your voice? Do you feel
as though you are being forced toassimilate into another person's way of life by
legislation or administrative rules or other means. Do you feel as though there's a
spike in propaganda directed against your wayof life that is an insidious form?

(38:35):
History tells us that those are formsof cultural and political cleaning caenery. Yeah
so. And then you add inthe attempt to eradicate major aspects of a
particular population's culture, religion, traditions, and eventually to undermine the collective mens

(39:00):
memory, also known as rewriting history. This happened in Rome general, and
Rome may be the Western Roman Empiremay be a very common example, but
it also is very illustrative. TheWestern Roman Empire was clipping right along,
you know, just like we are. But there was a gathering storm of

(39:22):
invaders from all around Europe, Asiaand Africa, and they were running from
something. They wanted what Rome had, They wanted what Italy had. Rome
was sacked in four ten. Ittook a thousand years for Rome to recover.
Think about that. Rome was sackedin four to ten. It took

(39:44):
arguably a thousand years for that greatnation state to recover, and that thousand
years is very much part of Italy'shistory today. Their cities crumbled, their
economies withered, their social f Labrickjust was destroyed. The Roman authorities tried
to assimilate and regulate the influx ofthese other clans. We're not We've been

(40:09):
trying to do that. Now ourleaders are egging this invasion on, and
these people are They're looking for anew place to live and access to resources.
So what's going to happen nationally nextyear, next decade is already happening
today in America's big cities. We'reentering turmoil, uncertainty, and then we

(40:35):
have to keep an eye on thenefarious role of the federal authorities, including
our military, in these NGOs andvarious religious institutions. And that's what's happening.
That is what's happening. We wereprobably gonna have to pick up on
the show on another show, Jennal, what do you think. I think
there's a lot more to say aboutthis subject. I think maybe next show

(40:58):
we talk about the history and someof the policies that were good and bad,
and to have more I think wemissed. I think the voters needed
a more informed understanding of what's goingon, how we dealt with this in
the past, so that we cantell our congress people and senators what we
need Thanks for listening. See whathappens in America this week. We'll talk

(41:21):
about it.
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