Here in the States, the major attention to borders and potential threats has long been the border with Mexico, and the Gulf Coast with access to the Caribbean and all its little island nations. The States’ border with Canada has long been demilitarized – indeed, for pushing 150 years.
But in recent years, as Canada has gone more Woke, more Tranzi, and opened the Provinces to mass immigration from not just the Commonwealth but apparently everywhere else? Some people think we need a wall up there, too. (That disgusts us both politically and personally, even more than the idea we must fortify the border with Mexico.)
But things are not good – and the Canada we once knew – even the Prairie Provinces – is long gone. A recent Breitbart article points out that Canada’s crime rate is extremely serious. Not necessarily Chicago-style serious, but (except for homicides) higher than we find in the States overall.
The recent killings in Montreal make this more obvious.
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Immigration and the United Kingdom
Starmer is (we hear and hope) toast. Even Amelia, that purple-haired cutie, thinks so. And she’s been working hard to see him gone. (Of course, he is dragging it out – he may still effectively be in power for months as an election is prolonged, even though he is no longer the “Labour Leader.”)
One of the main reasons that more and more Britons have had it “up to here” with Starmer is the Tranzi push for more and more immigration. Especially from the cess-pits of the world. England, Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland all seem inundated with “refugees” who seem intent on recreating in the British Isles the very conditions that supposedly caused them to flee their homelands.
Britons seem condemned to relive history, don’t they? The last few decades of massive immigration into England, Scotland, Wales, and Ireland are a familiar theme in the last 2,000+ years of British history. Sure, there are some differences: many (not all, by any means) of the immigrants of the last half-century are from what were British possessions: part of the now-defunct third British Empire.
(Third? Yup. See the end note.)
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