News from around the globe that the newspapers seldom print

Disclaimer and fair comment

While I agree with most of the material passed on I may not be in agreement with all. However there is much we can learn from some that we disagree with. Remember it was once thought that the earth was flat.

It is left to your judgment to determine what you agree with and what to act upon.

The following was inspired by a page in the Politically incorrect Australian National Independent $22 a year PO Box 8 Essendon 3040.

AS THE POT MELTS – A CRUMBLING SOCIETY

Another story has come to our attention, but not through any official or media source, that illustrates the deteriorating ethnic situation in the western suburbs of Sydney or much of the rest of Australia for that matter. For those not familiar with the area, suburbs like Auburn and Fairfield have been practically ethnically cleansed of white Anglo-Australians who used to dominate until a few decades ago. If you were to drive through the main street of Auburn you would think you were in the Middle East except for a sprinkling of Asians.

Nevertheless there are still a small number of ordinary Australians living there but some are having a hard time of it. One young lad at the local primary school had to transfer to another school due to getting picked on by Middle Eastern children who predominated in the area His family feared problems when he progressed to high school so they relocated to the Fairfield area and enrolled him at the local high school there. This school is one of those noted for problems and is surrounded by a heavy metal fence and staff in the playground, and at the entrance gates, carry walkie-talkies in case of trouble. Our young Australian boy found his problems got worse if anything and things came to a head when he was actually chased out of the school grounds by dozens of Middle Eastern youths. Now his mother is frantically trying to find a school safe enough to enroll the boy. If the mainstream media heard of this case they chose to ignore it as they have ignored or down played similar incidents.

This story illustrates how those too poor or not in a position to move out of migrant areas are marginalised and often persecuted. Those who have moved have not always done so entirely voluntarily.

Imagine if this had happened to an ethnic child and those picking on them were white students. The media would be screaming out, politicians would do the usual grovelling and bureaucrats would be ducking and diving and pointing at a suitable scapegoat.

This incident helps explain why Patriotic and anti-immigration parties tend to attract more votes in the poorer working class neighbourhoods than in middle class suburbs. Those most supportive of multicultural policies have a strong tendency to move to areas where they don't come face to face with the problems created by these policies.

Schools in migrant dominated areas are degenerating to the point where the staff is losing control. Those who try to assert some sort of authority are subject to payback. This may involve actual assaults but miscreants tend now to attack the cars of staff with graffiti, arson or other forms of vandalism. There have been cases where contractors trying to effect repairs to school buildings have been harassed off school sites and even those just making deliveries have been subject to harassment or even assaults.

We have a situation where multicultural immigration has landed us with serious social problems that no one seems to be able to solve. Nevertheless the government is determined to make matters worse by adding to the influx of non-assimilable migrants and refugees.

As for a political solution to this problem? Both major parties seem committed to high levels of immigration while One Nation is holding on by the skin of their teeth. The Greens are pro-refugee but seem at last to be coming a little more realistic about other immigration. Whether they will have much impact however is yet to be seen. Australia First Party and some other minor parties have yet to win a seat in parliament and at the moment are having trouble with the Electoral Commission.

The immediate future seems bleak for those concerned about Australia's identity, cultural and racial heritage.

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