I couldn't agree more, GZ.
I would submit to everyone that the government uses the confusion and chaos created by multiculturalism to keep the majority of citizens off-balance, disorganized, and unable to mount a unified resistance to the threat of government.
Indeed, without a unified culture, common values, and a shared heritage, there is no basis whatsoever for trust among citizens; even citizens of the same race and ethnicity.
Before the middle 1970s, I felt completely comfortable walking up to a strangers house, knocking on the door, and asking to use the telephone if I experienced car trouble, needed directions, or something similar. I was never turned away and I never turned anyone away when a stranger called on me.
Likewise, if someone was broken down on the side of the road, nearly everyone stopped and offered assistance.
Today? No way! Those stories are of an innocent time in America's past; a much better time. Today, there is no way to know who is on the other side of that door or what kind of criminal stunt is being pulled by someone who appears to be broken down on the roadside. It's too dangerous to stop and see or interact with strangers.
America was much better when the fabric of our society was based on a common, shared heritage and trust.
As many world leaders have strongly asserted in recent times, multiculturalism is an abject failure. It leads to confusion, mistrust, and chaos. The social experiment must end. |