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Amidst the immigration controversy and rights talk, I’m still waiting for the rights of people who were born and raised in America to get a mention.

If any random person who decides to swim across the Rio Grande has a right to live in America, how much more so do natural-born Americans have a right to live there—specifically, to live in an America they recognize, that is fundamentally the same as the country they grew up in and love?

There is only one America, one England, one France, one Netherlands. If immigration renders their cultural and civic life unrecognizable, where are the Americans and Englishmen and Frenchmen and Dutch supposed to go? And consider that if these people were colorful natives living in some less fortunate place, rather than evil Whitey, the Left would be first in line to chase the interlopers out, in the name of preserving these precious, diverse, indigenous cultures.

Perhaps this just goes to show what a troglodyte I am, but I consider it a fundamental human right to be able to preserve and defend and inhabit the country and culture one was born into and grew up in; and to be able to pass on the same, fundamentally intact, to one’s children. Uncontrolled immigration threatens that right—especially when assimilation is weak and multi-culti PC regnant, and when an overwhelming proportion of immigrants come from a limited set of populations which bear political or linguistic or religious or cultural grudges against the host country.

We don’t have to commit cultural suicide to prove we’re not racists, do we?



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