It's crucial to recognize that migration crises in the West are engineered by powerful interests as a Hegelian dialectic to divide populations and weaken social cohesion.

This dialectic—creating a thesis (uncontrolled migration) and antithesis (anti-immigrant backlash)—ultimately serves a synthesis of expanded state control and surveillance.

The loss of civility is central to this process, as observed in the UK where anti-migration protests led to 1,280 arrests and unprecedented digital surveillance. That's just one example. It's happening all over the West.

Let's be real - migrants themselves aren't orchestrating this situation. Rather, Marxist billionaires and the NGO industrial complex have been funding and facilitating these movements. These migrants are often poor and couldn't afford such journeys on their own. Meanwhile, governments place these newcomers on welfare systems funded by taxpayer dollars while inflation skyrockets.

This pattern creates a dual tragedy: source countries experience devastating brain drain as their most capable citizens flee, condemning those left behind to increasingly deteriorating conditions and potential societal collapse. Meanwhile, destination countries face social fragmentation and resource strain.

In countries like Canada, where the population has increased by nearly one-third in just a decade through demographic engineering, the issue isn't with vulnerable people seeking better lives.

The strategy is insidious and two-sided: migrants are told their struggles result from white supremacy and Western colonialism, while citizens are made to feel their way of life is under threat. Both groups are strategically agitated to create a sense that they must defend themselves against the other. Meanwhile, the actual plan involves bringing these people over, making them dependent on the state, and eventually securing their votes for more collectivist policies. This demographic engineering ultimately manifests in political outcomes designed to permanently alter voting patterns while maintaining the façade of democracy.

Before we allow ourselves to be drawn into these engineered divisive conflicts that could escalate into civil unrest or potential race wars, we must recognize a fundamental issue: our governments, regardless of political affiliation, increasingly fail to represent the people's will. Governments no longer serve citizens' needs but instead answer to unelected supranational bodies that nobody voted for.

This situation is fundamentally unfair to both migrants and citizens, benefiting only elite interests seeking to undermine democratic institutions and consolidate power.

Both left and right parties seem captured by the same interests, leaving citizens trapped in a system where voting no longer produces meaningful change.

In this mess of growing frustration, it becomes even more critical that we don't fall into the trap of blaming each other or targeting vulnerable migrant populations who are merely pawns in a larger geopolitical game.

Instead, we should be asking who benefits from this engineered social division and demographic engineering, who controls the policies that enable mass migration while simultaneously stoking anti-immigrant sentiment, and who gains power when citizens are distracted by fighting among themselves rather than questioning those truly orchestrating these demographic and social crises.

https://blossom.primal.net/959a3d57d97ea6e3b2916e40fee02188b0e2d90854702e25032415836f3b2222.mp4

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