They're refugee camps, around here.

Reply to this note

Please Login to reply.

Discussion

Probably because only the state can afford the high rents.

Yeah, there's a lot of that too. I could've put giant illegal immigrant hotels as an option tbf lol

That's what they're doing with them, here, in many cities.

Same in Ireland

It's p bizarre this is happening almost absolutely everywhere in the west. How does this even happen? Are there any good resources on the policies behind this? I'm familiar with the more 'far fetched' or whatever, but I wonder what are the reasonings put forward by governments themselves as to why? And economists/ academic's thoughts on this...?

You'd think this would be a matter of serious public debate.

At the moment it's a matter of 'it's happening, it can't be stopped. And if you want it stopped you're racist' it's like campus politics of open borders has become policy all for the sake of UberEats lol

The reasons are two fold as I shall explain:

1) There is a globalist interest in breaking down any nationalist sentiment in individual countries. In order to achieve this they introduce draconian hatespeech legislation while simultaeneously flooding target countries with people who have no nationalist sentiment whatsoever.

Because of the hatespeech laws, which are really just censorship laws, people with a nationalist sentiment cannot mount a political response.

This results in nationalists becoming demoralised and giving up on the idea of nationality, thus making it easier to create supranational structures that govern unilaterally.

2) There is a more short term goal of 'manufacturing consent' for international biometric digital identification systems.

Create a massive immigration problem, ratchet up public demand for a viable solution to the mess, present your already drafted draconian policies and people may be desperate enough go go along with it.

Has this sort of thing intensified with emerging blocs and declining blocs. I suppose nationalist interests like borders appear as a nuisance within larger blocs with grander goals. Or something

Same here in the UK 😥

I low-key think they actually import all these people on purpose to prop up the housing market. Housing prices were deflating steadily, as the population aged and declined, and now everything is crowded like crazy and prices get squeezed up.

"Great replacement theory" is a red herring. Governments are importing people to have this sort of real estate 'bail-in' and to create a new voting class to boot

And pressure on keeping wages down, when they eventually enter the labour market? (Apparently a lot are already working for delivery apps using other people's NI numbers here in UK)

If it looks like a red herring, and smells like a red herring...

I think the powers that shouldn't be see mass migration as a solution to the problems they created.

Low birth rates -low house prices-shrinking GDP-collapse of fiat based economy.

And they didnt think there would be any trade offs. They assuned people woukd come and either assimilate (because we are so great) or leave (because money is their god).

I dont think it occurred to anyone that people moving here have thier own agency, desire and cultural attitudes.

One day the money printer will stop.

And It's going to get bad.

Historically bad.

All I know for sure is that people from destabilized countries are making pilgrimage to the US, and Freddie, Fannie, and Ginnie are all broke deadbeats. The bread and circus around those matters here are so fucking rampant that it's almost telling in its own way

Thr whole world is a stage, and the people upon it merely players.....

Everything gets dirty up here Vaultie. 😂

You might want to buy one of the Pele towers...

I wouldn't even sell some bitcoin for that...

Now a small croft on a scottish island... i could be convinced.

Though my partner wouldn't mind an abandoned farm house in Portugal 🤣🤣

But really, where are the serious discussions by academics and economists on this? They may well exist, I could just not have found them. Certainly don't seem to be prominent in wider public, despite the huge interest