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  1. #1
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    Why The Left Loves Mass Immigration

    Good one!



  2. #2
    Moderator Beezer's Avatar
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    Everybody needs to watch this video.

    People had better wake up and start to reverse this mass invasion of our countries and send them back!

    We need a 10 year moratorium on ALL immigration, including foreign students who come here...they never leave. We need to start chain deportation of all illegal aliens, start setting a quota of deporting 5,000 TPS per week and terminate that failed program...they never leave.

    Same goes with "refugee" and "asylum" programs...shut them down. These people need to go back, fix their own failed countries and preserve their cultures on their soil.

    Allowing this to continue will be the demise of our culture, our beliefs and will be our financial ruin. They are bringing many diseases, AIDS, TB, viral diseases and their health issues WE are forced to pay for.

    Not only that, we need to consider our natural resources, water, drought, natural disasters and preserve our water and resources. Not bring in millions upon millions of people that will only stress those resources.

    Many of these European countries are not that large, this massive overbreeding of people from these other countries will cause massive poverty, filth, crime, rape, murder, homelessness and destruction of once beautiful neighborhoods. It is already happening at a very alarming rate. Just look at the countries they come from.

    Go civilize these people on their soil...not import them to ours and destroy our quality of life we have fought and worked so hard for.

    They appreciate nothing, respect nothing and are full of hate and violence not just to each other but outsiders as well.

    WAKE UP PEOPLE...WE DO NOT WANT THIS IN OUR BEAUTIFUL COUNTRY...IT IS LIKE A CANCER THAT IS ALREADY METASTISING!
    ILLEGAL ALIENS HAVE "BROKEN" OUR IMMIGRATION SYSTEM

    DO NOT REWARD THEM - DEPORT THEM ALL

  3. #3
    Senior Member Judy's Avatar
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    Massive immigration doesn't raise you up, it pulls you down. It has nothing to do with race, it has solely to do with the numbers and who they are as a result of their own civilizations. They don't come here to assimilate and become Americans. They come here to change our country from what we are to what they are. Canadians are guilty of this. British are guilty of this. Irish are guilty of this. It doesn't matter what country, what race ... they come here because they aren't happy in their own countries, can't change their own countries, and believe they can buy or shout changes in our country to what they are and want US to be.

    Take Steve Hilton on Fox News. His show is The Revolution. What is this? Americans don't want a "revolution". We certainly don't want one inspired by someone from Great Britain who has only been in the US for 6 years. His wife is a big honcho with Google. He was a key aid of David Cameron, former Prime Minister of the United Kingdom. His parents are from Hungary and they changed their name to Hilton when they moved to England. Steve Hilton doesn't know anything about the average American or the American worker. He may be a good guy on some level, but tell me, how does someone like this end up with his own show on ... Fox News??!! Why would AMERICANS be interested in what an Hungarian Brit Elitist thinks we should do??!! What separates Steve Hilton from an immigrant from Nigeria?! Nothing. They are both immigrants who had no business emigrating to the United States to take jobs, educations (yes, Hilton studied here on a student visa at Stanford), income, TV shows, etc., etc., etc. from Americans!

    Steve Hilton is the kettle calling the pot black if you ask me. All of this immigration needs to grind to a halt. We need an immediate MORATORIUM ON ALL IMMIGRATION and we need it NOW.
    A Nation Without Borders Is Not A Nation - Ronald Reagan
    Save America, Deport Congress! - Judy

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    Senior Member European Knight's Avatar
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    It is the first time in all world history we see such mass invasion of migrants, it come from the left political parties who want to use them as voters.
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    Our educational system OFFERS foreigners a seat left & right. This mystic of the "best minds" is hogwash. Scholarships, not sure who is granting, here or their country.

    Go to a large university website, check out the pics, names of PHD, dental, medical, stem students - 95% FOREIGNERS.

  6. #6
    MW
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    Quote Originally Posted by artist View Post
    Our educational system OFFERS foreigners a seat left & right. This mystic of the "best minds" is hogwash. Scholarships, not sure who is granting, here or their country.

    Go to a large university website, check out the pics, names of PHD, dental, medical, stem students - 95% FOREIGNERS.
    American universities are enrolling unprecedented numbers of foreign students, prompted by the rise of an affluent class in China and generous scholarships offered by oil-rich Gulf states such as Saudi Arabia.

    The following article gives you a good idea of what's going on:


    COLLEGE 09/18/2014 12:35 pm ET Updated Dec 06, 2017
    Forget A Perfect SAT — What Colleges Really Want Are International Students



    By Kim Bellware




    BARRY WINIKER VIA GETTY IMAGES




    When UCLA freshmen arrive on campus in two weeks, an estimated 1 in 10 will be from outside the United States.

    UCLA is among the schools with the highest international student enrollment in the nation, and it has rapidly increased its percentage of foreign students in the last several years. This year’s projected total is up from 2008, when just 2.3 percent of the freshman class was international, according to figures provided by the school.

    The California school’s changing makeup is hardly unique: Colleges and universities from Arizona to Illinois have steadily ramped up international enrollment. Experts say schools are courting these young people for reasons both monetary and cultural.

    International students have been coming to American schools at the graduate level for years, but undergrads now make up 41 percent of international students in the country, according to the Institute of International Education’s most recent Open Doors report on international student trends. The figure is up from 31.4 percent in 2008. A record number of international students are now studying in the U.S., peaking at a high of 819,644 students in 2013, according to the report. (The U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement puts that number as high as 966,333 in July of 2014.)

    The influx of foreign nationals has been a boon for cash-strapped public universities. Nearly all of these schools have seen their funding slashed over the years, and looking abroad is one way to find young, bright minds willing to pay sticker price for their education.

    Between 2008 and 2012, state funding for higher education dropped off by 10.8 percent nationwide, according to the most recent Grapevine report published by the Center for the Study of Education Policy at Illinois State University. Arizona sustained the deepest cuts: Over the five-year period, the state’s legislature decreased public education support by 36.6 percent. California schools were hit hard as well, with a 23.9 percent funding decrease in those years.

    “It’s kind of common knowledge at this point that state legislators have pulled back on funding for [public] schools,” Eddie West, director of international initiatives for the National Association for College Admission Counseling, told The Huffington Post. West cited a recent Chronicle of Higher Education report that offered devastating projections for the future of higher education funding — figures so bad that public schools would effectively become privatized institutions, relying on tuition money instead of public funding for support. “These public schools are facing declining investment from their legislators — it’s not their college presidents doing this — so they’re forced to be more entrepreneurial, if you will,” West said.

    University of Illinois President Robert Easter told the Chicago Tribune in August that the sizeable percentage of Chinese students at the school — who this year account for almost 10 percent of the freshman class — “brings dollars into the state.” The school is another leader in international enrollment, and held freshmen orientation for those students in hotel ballrooms in major Chinese cities this summer.

    “That can’t be our primary objective, but it does contribute to the state’s economy,” Easter said. Indeed, international students contributed $24 billion to the U.S. economy during the 2012-2013 school year, according to figures from the U.S. Department of Commerce.

    California and Washington are among the public school systems that have aggressively stepped up international student enrollment as state funding dries up. Arizona State University at Tempe, which endured deep budget cuts in the past few years, has at the same time increased international student enrollment 34 percent in just two years.

    While the courting of international students by American colleges may seem purely transactional to some, experts say the motivations go beyond money. Daniel Obst, deputy vice president of international partnerships in higher education for the Institute of International Education, told HuffPost the rise of foreign scholars reflects the shifting priorities of the American higher education system as a whole.

    “The internationalization of the college campus has become very important,” Obst said. “[College] presidents and board of trustee members are looking at [a globalized campus] for the kind of benefit it can provide their students, since not every student is going to get to study abroad.”

    “Schools are looking to become globally relevant,” West said. “Many are seeking nonresident enrollment, whether in the form of out-of-state or foreign students. International students are doubly attractive because they fulfill both motivations.”

    Though the sharp uptick in foreign-born students can be a win-win for both the young people and the campus communities where they enroll, West predicts it will also force institutions to reconsider their fundamental missions.

    “There’s this perception out there that international students are displacing local students.”

    “Schools have to be really thoughtful of how they balance their priorities with global students and the local students who are in their mission to serve,” West said. He noted that even community colleges — once the quintessential locally focused institution — are stepping up their recruitment efforts of international students.West added that schools will have to be mindful about how cavalier they are with international recruitment efforts. “You’ll see more schools having focused conversations on this balancing act,” he said. “There’s this perception out there that international students are displacing local students — in some cases it’s reality, and in other cases it’s just perception.”

    California and Virginia are just two states where schools and legislatures are clashing over the perception that local students are being displaced — or at least held to a higher admissions standard — than their unsubsidized out-of-state and foreign counterparts.

    This fall, a record one-fifth of the freshman class in the University of California system was not from the state, the LA Times reports. The non-Californians will pay $23,000 more a year in tuition, adding some $400 million in revenue to the schools.

    UC officials have insisted that local students aren’t being displaced by those from abroad, but there’s been growing resentment among some Californians for years about the issue.

    “There’s no reason why someone from another country should come and take my son’s spot,” California resident Veronica Zavala told Bloomberg back in 2011.

    In reality, state budget cuts forced schools in the UC system to bring resident enrollment in line with state funding, Christine Clark, a spokeswoman for UC San Diego, told HuffPost.

    “[UC schools] enroll resident students based on how much money they get from the state,” Clark said. “It’s not a space issue, it’s about who we can get funding for.”

    Nepalese college students hang out on the Main Quad on a Friday afternoon at Howard University in Washington, D.C., on August 22, 2014. Nepalese students make up the largest foreign contingent of freshmen students at Howard University this year. (Marvin Joseph/The Washington Post via Getty Images)

    For the international students, American colleges and universities provide access to the best research facilities, professors and networks in the world, Obst said. And for countries like China and South Korea, which have more college-bound children thanks to a rapidly expanding middle class, the U.S. has an “unmatched ability to absorb these new students,” he said.

    China, whose students account for an estimated 29 percent of all international scholars in the U.S., has some 2,410 universities, according to a 2012 government-sanctioned study. The U.S., meanwhile, has more than 4,599 degree-granting colleges and universities.

    West said schools should be prepared to grow as foreign interest in American schools continues to rise apace.

    “Schools have to be sure they’re building on their existing enrollment, building more classrooms, expanding the curriculums and so forth,” West said. “It would be a really unfortunate thing if this almost entirely well-intentioned effort to welcome more international students caused a blowback.”


    https://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/...n_5836872.html



    "The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing" ** Edmund Burke**

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  7. #7
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    Quote Originally Posted by MW View Post
    American universities are enrolling unprecedented numbers of foreign students, prompted by the rise of an affluent class in China and generous scholarships offered by oil-rich Gulf states such as Saudi Arabia.

    The following article gives you a good idea of what's going on:


    COLLEGE 09/18/2014 12:35 pm ET Updated Dec 06, 2017
    Forget A Perfect SAT — What Colleges Really Want Are International Students



    By Kim Bellware




    BARRY WINIKER VIA GETTY IMAGES




    When UCLA freshmen arrive on campus in two weeks, an estimated 1 in 10 will be from outside the United States.

    UCLA is among the schools with the highest international student enrollment in the nation, and it has rapidly increased its percentage of foreign students in the last several years. This year’s projected total is up from 2008, when just 2.3 percent of the freshman class was international, according to figures provided by the school.

    The California school’s changing makeup is hardly unique: Colleges and universities from Arizona to Illinois have steadily ramped up international enrollment. Experts say schools are courting these young people for reasons both monetary and cultural.

    International students have been coming to American schools at the graduate level for years, but undergrads now make up 41 percent of international students in the country, according to the Institute of International Education’s most recent Open Doors report on international student trends. The figure is up from 31.4 percent in 2008. A record number of international students are now studying in the U.S., peaking at a high of 819,644 students in 2013, according to the report. (The U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement puts that number as high as 966,333 in July of 2014.)

    The influx of foreign nationals has been a boon for cash-strapped public universities. Nearly all of these schools have seen their funding slashed over the years, and looking abroad is one way to find young, bright minds willing to pay sticker price for their education.

    Between 2008 and 2012, state funding for higher education dropped off by 10.8 percent nationwide, according to the most recent Grapevine report published by the Center for the Study of Education Policy at Illinois State University. Arizona sustained the deepest cuts: Over the five-year period, the state’s legislature decreased public education support by 36.6 percent. California schools were hit hard as well, with a 23.9 percent funding decrease in those years.

    “It’s kind of common knowledge at this point that state legislators have pulled back on funding for [public] schools,” Eddie West, director of international initiatives for the National Association for College Admission Counseling, told The Huffington Post. West cited a recent Chronicle of Higher Education report that offered devastating projections for the future of higher education funding — figures so bad that public schools would effectively become privatized institutions, relying on tuition money instead of public funding for support. “These public schools are facing declining investment from their legislators — it’s not their college presidents doing this — so they’re forced to be more entrepreneurial, if you will,” West said.

    University of Illinois President Robert Easter told the Chicago Tribune in August that the sizeable percentage of Chinese students at the school — who this year account for almost 10 percent of the freshman class — “brings dollars into the state.” The school is another leader in international enrollment, and held freshmen orientation for those students in hotel ballrooms in major Chinese cities this summer.

    “That can’t be our primary objective, but it does contribute to the state’s economy,” Easter said. Indeed, international students contributed $24 billion to the U.S. economy during the 2012-2013 school year, according to figures from the U.S. Department of Commerce.

    California and Washington are among the public school systems that have aggressively stepped up international student enrollment as state funding dries up. Arizona State University at Tempe, which endured deep budget cuts in the past few years, has at the same time increased international student enrollment 34 percent in just two years.

    While the courting of international students by American colleges may seem purely transactional to some, experts say the motivations go beyond money. Daniel Obst, deputy vice president of international partnerships in higher education for the Institute of International Education, told HuffPost the rise of foreign scholars reflects the shifting priorities of the American higher education system as a whole.

    “The internationalization of the college campus has become very important,” Obst said. “[College] presidents and board of trustee members are looking at [a globalized campus] for the kind of benefit it can provide their students, since not every student is going to get to study abroad.”

    “Schools are looking to become globally relevant,” West said. “Many are seeking nonresident enrollment, whether in the form of out-of-state or foreign students. International students are doubly attractive because they fulfill both motivations.”

    Though the sharp uptick in foreign-born students can be a win-win for both the young people and the campus communities where they enroll, West predicts it will also force institutions to reconsider their fundamental missions.

    “There’s this perception out there that international students are displacing local students.”

    “Schools have to be really thoughtful of how they balance their priorities with global students and the local students who are in their mission to serve,” West said. He noted that even community colleges — once the quintessential locally focused institution — are stepping up their recruitment efforts of international students.West added that schools will have to be mindful about how cavalier they are with international recruitment efforts. “You’ll see more schools having focused conversations on this balancing act,” he said. “There’s this perception out there that international students are displacing local students — in some cases it’s reality, and in other cases it’s just perception.”

    California and Virginia are just two states where schools and legislatures are clashing over the perception that local students are being displaced — or at least held to a higher admissions standard — than their unsubsidized out-of-state and foreign counterparts.

    This fall, a record one-fifth of the freshman class in the University of California system was not from the state, the LA Times reports. The non-Californians will pay $23,000 more a year in tuition, adding some $400 million in revenue to the schools.

    UC officials have insisted that local students aren’t being displaced by those from abroad, but there’s been growing resentment among some Californians for years about the issue.

    “There’s no reason why someone from another country should come and take my son’s spot,” California resident Veronica Zavala told Bloomberg back in 2011.

    In reality, state budget cuts forced schools in the UC system to bring resident enrollment in line with state funding, Christine Clark, a spokeswoman for UC San Diego, told HuffPost.

    “[UC schools] enroll resident students based on how much money they get from the state,” Clark said. “It’s not a space issue, it’s about who we can get funding for.”

    Nepalese college students hang out on the Main Quad on a Friday afternoon at Howard University in Washington, D.C., on August 22, 2014. Nepalese students make up the largest foreign contingent of freshmen students at Howard University this year. (Marvin Joseph/The Washington Post via Getty Images)

    For the international students, American colleges and universities provide access to the best research facilities, professors and networks in the world, Obst said. And for countries like China and South Korea, which have more college-bound children thanks to a rapidly expanding middle class, the U.S. has an “unmatched ability to absorb these new students,” he said.

    China, whose students account for an estimated 29 percent of all international scholars in the U.S., has some 2,410 universities, according to a 2012 government-sanctioned study. The U.S., meanwhile, has more than 4,599 degree-granting colleges and universities.

    West said schools should be prepared to grow as foreign interest in American schools continues to rise apace.

    “Schools have to be sure they’re building on their existing enrollment, building more classrooms, expanding the curriculums and so forth,” West said. “It would be a really unfortunate thing if this almost entirely well-intentioned effort to welcome more international students caused a blowback.”


    https://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/...n_5836872.html


    I believe that the Wachowski Sisters, really understand world politics and portrayed it accurately in their
    blockbuster hits: The Matrix Trilogies. Agent Smith, in the films, was allegory for the United States. There were other lands represented, too.
    The Merovingian was Europe. Always living in luxury and was a master or information tech, propaganda and clandestine information gathering.
    The Oracle represented Africa. She holds the secret knowledge of humanity and she's gentle and subversive to those in power. Also the Oracle is always smoking a cigarette, as a illustration that Africa is practicing self destructive acts.
    Lastly, the Oracle is guarded by a Chinese master of martial arts: China.
    The Indian parents and their daughter (in the video below) represents India and the child-like blissful Nirvana that they seem to be trapped in...


    Agent Smith(USA) used to be compliant to the word's system but he found a way to exist without others permission. In the films, Agents Smith thrusts his hand into another person to create more "Americans" and he does this many times through force.

    I think bringing foreign students to be educated in US schools is almost like creating "Americans" to our elected officials. Our pop culture has captivated almost every young person around the world. I went to Argentina and I saw two black people, but they had Beyonce advertisements and Michael Jordan posters everywhere, and Jordan hasn't played a game in years!

    Last edited by Boomslang; 03-18-2018 at 02:28 AM.

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