Immigration

  • South Africa fights a modern immigration scourge

    South Africa hasn’t got a standing in the global debate about immigration because it’s believed by many Journalist’s (themselves globetrotting cretins) to be the fairest State due to post-apartheid politics.

    Such a delusion of the tongue and mind has led to a fascinating withdrawal of facts from the world’s media landscape.

    South Africa’s Home Affairs Deputy Minister, Njabulo Nzuza, speaking to Blaine Herman.

    The UK is left as a racist outlier, and maybe America always has been. The failures of Middle Eastern countries like everyone to believe so. This is how it really goes.

    However, the African nations’ inhabitants aren’t giving up, and have long proved a way forward in having a national debate and making some rules up about it, too, to restore law and order.

    They feel it’s about time, seeing trends that disturb them. Their statisticians are particularly worried about changes in the country that point to a worse situation if nothing is done about it.

  • Dover Crossings: Rape crisis in London

    The unpopularity of unrestricted illegal entry at Dover has reached its peak. It’s now believed that 726 rapes in London are linked to the large crime event along our coastline. The result is increasing anger and a deep-seated resentment in the population in general.

    The way forward is uncertain but some government sources believe a national emergency is needed for essential resources to be convened to plug the gap in maritime and immigration law. Those exploiting legal loopholes need to be challenged, some say.

  • US chaos has cost lives

    The chaotic state of affairs in America has unfolded over a long period of time and it’s said to have started just before the fallout of the Vietnam War era. It’s believed that agitators had begun to dismantle small parts of the states in which they lived because they felt disgruntled at a rapidly developing economy that was evolving without their involvement.

    The belief is that this was not focused on and it led to increasing disarray that has only recently become a matter of national security. In fact apart from media images that show some protest it’s believed that 235,000 people have died due to chaotic immigration structures in America.

    This is no small matter and it has led to many experts in America to despair of their situation and to look for answers far and wide. The loss of American life due to policy that is not being updated is one thing but having the matter being driven by public disorder is another thing entirely.

  • Lammy’s policy on Syria is strange

    The UK is in a feckless state at times. The news we’re going to process Syrian asylum claims is just indicative of it.

    Syria is a sponsor of global terrorism. Its citizens have supported the presence of it in the UK.

    The Foreign Secretary has criticised Israel’s offensive. He’s befriended Syria’s revolutionary head.

    There’s little to no realistic prospect of real democracy emerging in such a divided, riddled country.

    The Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office has been accused of looking like amateurs before.

    The bigger risk is the UK will begin to look unserious. It’s not helpful for the UK post-Brexit.

    Our overseas relations won’t make sense until facts are included in every conversation.

    It can’t be driven by public sentiment, or business-driven pipe dreams. It needs to be realistic in future.

  • EU propose tougher borders

    Roberta Metsola, European Parliament President, has stated that Europe needs tougher borders.

    Her concerns are echoed by many as the Continent is beset by movement, and trafficking, gangs.

    Roberta Metsola speaking at Europe at the Crossroads

    However, the EU is a supporter of immigration, and has previously enabled its increase.

    In particular, France has struggled as its social systems are pressured by migrant communities.

  • The PR of human migration

    The irony of leaving the EU is that, a few years later, the UK’s borders came under pressure from thousands of migrants sailing in by boat. It’s a sight those who voted Leave probably didn’t think they’d ever see.

    Indeed, in a poster campaign launched by UKIP and seen before the referendum, the words “BREAKING POINT” were superimposed over a picture of people traveling as a caravan.

    In 2024 the sight of it is now a regular feature of news and debate, and even in America where Reform UK leader Nigel Farage MP (Clacton/Reform UK) regularly travels to speak with Trump.

    Today, the American daily New York Post carried a similar image with the headline, “LAND OF THE FREE LUNCH”. It suggests a dystopian picture of society in which losers become winners by welfare.

  • Mohindra asks after hotel stays

    In a debate today, Gagan Mohindra MP (South West Hertfordshire/Conservatives) questioned the Home Secretary, Yvette Cooper MP (Pontefract, Castleford and Knottingley/Labour), on the issue of hotels for those caught crossing the English Channel illegally.

    He asked if she can provide a methodology for choosing hotels ahead of time, so that his constituents can stay informed. Many hotels have been used in the past. Cooper said it’s important to do, and claimed her department is also busy clearing the backlog of claims.

  • Immigration and control

    A picture of breezing through arrivals at an airport and only just missing customs is outdated. It doesn’t suit our current picture of international travel or even immigration arrivals.

    The fact is the UK suffers with a lack of joined-up thinking in our current approach to dealing with basic state matters that further novel innovations are pipe dreams waiting to burst and leak all over the place.

    If it’s taken into account in the long view we see there’s a problem.

    The fact of illegal immigration at scale makes it clear already a job isn’t a job in hand. It’s a discussion, or a disagreement, or a debate for a later date.

    The truth that people want it to work anyway is not included in this reality.

    The ‘anyway’ sort of people shouldn’t have to make up an argument as to why. They’ve voted for it before or said it before in so many words. It’s just part of the deal that illegal means illegal for a reason.

    In 2005 Michael Howard MP made an assertion the UK lacks a single figure responsible for control at the heart of our borders. These aren’t regional borders but maritime borders on our coastlines.

    He said;

    “We will have one face at the border. One police force. With one chief constable. With just one job: securing Britain’s borders.”

    In other words he promised what we needed but allegedly didn’t have.

    The trouble is you’d think we’d have it already.

    Yvette Cooper (the new Home Secretary under Sir Keir Starmer) has announced a new ‘Border Security Command’ with a single figurehead called a ‘Border Security Commander’ to report back to her in future.

    It isn’t as much an innovation as mentioned before as a delayed response.

    We’ve had successive leaders – and Prime Minister’s – try to rejig a system that should’ve had these roles already. The trouble is we’ve put up with a lot of them and with few measurable results.

  • People trafficking isn’t a norm

    In an age of travel it’s difficult to say why people trafficking is such a bad thing.

    It doesn’t look dishonest because of conflicts, climate change, and political troubles which mean people have to flee.

    The disturbing truth is that whilst seeking refuge is possible, other troubles creep up slowly.

    It entails a slow departure, and covert journey across territory that’s not yours.

    There are no alternatives to this, at times.

    It’s why it’s desperate, and it’s dangerous to deal with people traffickers regardless.

    They’re criminals, and hold ill-will toward us, our society, and our laws.

    It’s difficult but not impossible to crack this sort of crime whenever it happens.