Too Many Indians, Not Enough Chiefs
Australia's migration program is rapidly destroying the nation's harmony and prosperity, and the only response from politicians is to make resistance illegal.
There are some cushy jobs in the Australian government these days - doling out grants to transgender performance artists and monitoring microscopic sea-level rises at tropical north Queensland beaches spring to mind.
But even the public servants appointed to perform those languid tasks look as industrious as Elon Musk launching rockets into space compared to the bloke manning the migration-application desk at the Australian High Commission on The Strand, London.
Every time some hopeful young Pom shuffles in from the rain-soaked, over-crowded street, her head full of dreams about migrating to a land of sunshine, space and prosperity, where she can raise a family in peaceful harmony in a Neighbours-style suburban idyll, the bureaucrat behind the desk opens one sleepy eye, places a sign on the desk saying, “Closed. Please forward all inquiries to Australian High Commission, New Delhi,” and goes back to sleep.
The consequences of this seemingly benign (and only slightly fictional) anecdote are writ large across Australia, and have already transformed the nation from a happy, thriving, high-trust society into the sort of secular dystopia of segregated ghettos that politicians enjoy passing through on their way to and from the airport.
Some time around 2005 someone in Canberra decided to dramatically increase the proportion of migrants to Australia from India and other Asian nations at the expense of those from European/Christian nations.
In the ten years from 2006 to 2016, while Australia’s population increased by only 18 per cent (to 24 million), the number of Indians in Australia tripled (from 147,000 to 455,000). After a brief Covid hiatus, the intake resumed with renewed ferocity. In the past two financial years we have received about 180,000 Indians. There is now more than a million Indians in Australia.
Meanwhile, in the ten years to 2022, people living in Australia who were born in Britain, for example, decreased by 5.5 per cent.
This seismic demographic shift was never proposed in an election campaign by either of our two major political parties, despite the fact that it, along with almost every other aspect of the uniparty’s immigration program, has irreversibly made the country worse.
Can I still say that? Chris Minns, the Premier of New South Wales, where I live, said recently he will brook no debate about the wonders of multiculturalism.
And he has backed that up with laws that, under the cover of “fighting anti-Semitism”, make comments like the innocuous and reasonable ones in this post illegal.
If the bloke handling applications from migrants in London is underworked, the people arranging for Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke to attend photo ops with 12,500 new citizens in Sydney last weekend were working overtime.
Was it merely a coincidence that all the people whose citizenships were deemed worthy of expediting also happened to live in the electorates in the western suburbs of Sydney that might just decide the outcome of the forthcoming election, and that Labor’s big guns were on hand to remind the new citizens which party was on their side?
Even the otherwise electorally toxic Minister for Changing the Climate, Chris “Blackout” Bowen, was recently allowed out of the Witless Protection Program, where he has been ordered to remain for the duration of the election campaign, to release this weird message about some ethnic festival ordinary Australians have never heard of.
It was particularly generous of Burke to attend all those citizenship ceremonies on the weekend. The threat of a terrorist attack in Australia has risen from “possible” to “probable” under his watch as Home Affairs Minister, so one imagines his workload is heavy enough already without spending three days chatting with random newcomers, some of whom unfortunately are as familiar with English as they are with the CWA’s official jam and scone recipes.
To speed things up, Burke composed a welcome letter to be distributed on the day, although “composed” might be a tad generous. It reads like he asked ChatGPT to knock something up that would not offend non-white migrants, and the result reads like a Welcome to Country in the form of a Hallmark card.
Australians share a continent with “the custodians of the world’s oldest continuing culture”, the letter said, and that “understanding this truth is a vital part of what it means to be Australian.”
Never mind the people who civilised the continent, built its cities, generated its enormous wealth and died defending it against formidable enemies. They’re just a bunch of stupid white people.
“Australia welcomes you as a full member of one of the most diverse nations on earth where our citizenship is a bond which unites us all,” Burke concluded.
It’s an increasingly flimsy bond, if the rise in attacks by Muslims on Jews is any measure, but Labor isn’t worried about that. Attorney-General Mark Dreyfus told a conference about anti-Semitism organised by News Corp last Friday that the attacks on Jews were being “weaponised… to exploit the harm it causes.” In Labor’s world, talking about the attacks is worse than the attacks themselves.
The sudden focus on anti-Semitism makes our burgeoning Indian cohort seem relatively benign. That is, until you catch an Uber and reminisce about the days when you could jump in the front seat of a taxi and chat with the driver, instead of sit in the back and listen to him mumble into his phone to someone who could be in Mumbai, for all you know.
Even 60 Minutes is onto it now.
Is this representative of Indian culture? I hate to break it to you but, being ripped off by taxi drivers is the least of the worries for people witnessing a mass influx of Indians.
“Fairness, justice, trust, empathy, and impartiality are alien to many Indians,” investor Jayant Bhandari told a Property and Freedom Society conference in Turkey last year. “They have a hard time telling the difference between right and wrong. They are indifferent even when no cost is associated with being fair. Moreover, if they could do good without any personal cost, they would still prefer not to, because that can be seen as a sign of weakness.”
This chap certainly wasn’t worried about appearing weak when he washed himself in a kiddie’s paddling pool in New Zealand recently.
Bhandari concluded: “Most Indians cannot think beyond money, sex, and survival — just what you would expect of a society with an average IQ of 77. Every Western value given to them has been caricatured and corrupted for these ends. Indians have no Ten Commandments. They are so unaware of these values that they remain oblivious even if they are forcefully presented to them.
“There is nothing you can do about this, except to try to understand what immigration from India and the rest of Third World will do to the West.”
Oh, our politicians, from both major parties, understand all right. It’s part of their plan.
Spot on Fred
After 29 years in Australia (from Canuckistan), I am utterly astounded how quickly the country has changed from when I blurry eyed walked off a 747 onto the tarmac in Sydney and casually lit a cigarette passing one to my new Aussie mate I met on the long ride…
In another 10 years the change will be even more profound…the question is why our politicians don’t see or don’t care??