Wednesday 17 March 2010

Immigration

The case against some forms of immigration: - Britain is overcrowded, its resources overstretched, its culture in danger of being changed or lost, its moral and ethical standards confused. On the question of non-European mass immigration, Government and many British people supported an open door policy. They could not, or chose not, to understand that immigrants of alien cultures, carry opposing beliefs, religious values, moral codes, attitudes to justice, law and order, fair play, respect for other people, attitudes to marriage, to women, the bearing of children, to animals, dress, diet, and death. It is often not a question of single individuals, but of a large number of family members, relatives, friends and acquaintances to follow. It is to be deplored that so many people argue it is a question of origin or prejudice against skin colour, ignoring the fact that such persons bear different ingrained ethnic, religious and social values making integration difficult.
It is true there is world overpopulation, but only in poor, undeveloped countries, - in the Western world white populations are rapidly diminishing, becoming outnumbered by non-white immigration and reproduction.