This morning I’ve been reflecting honestly about immigration.
Certain immigrant groups genuinely bother me — not because of race, but because of clear, measurable patterns: high long-term welfare dependency, slow assimilation, resistance to learning English, and the creation of parallel societies. The data confirms these patterns.
What bothers me even more is that we’re not really allowed to talk about this openly in the land of the free. Pointing out these differences often gets you labeled racist or xenophobic.
Meanwhile, it’s perfectly acceptable to openly disparage America’s founding stock — especially White, Western, Judeo-Christian citizens who built this country.
And here’s the deeper issue: much of this is deliberate. Powerful interests — big business, politicians, academia, and the media — benefit from this situation. Corporations want cheaper labor. Some political factions want demographic change. Academia and media push the idea that all cultures are equal and that Western culture has no special value.
This is the same nation that was founded by men who rebelled against the most powerful empire and army on Earth at the time. We fought a king because we believed what they were doing was wrong.
And yet today, we’re told we cannot have an honest — even if uncomfortable — conversation about culture, behavior, and immigration?
We should be having this conversation. Because if we can’t speak truth in the land of the free, then we are no longer truly free.
Spine NOT Knees
A Grateful Immigrant