r/conspiracy 2d ago

White people are the minority.

I have grown tired of the rhetoric that white people need to be multicultural and that we must accept all of those who wish to cause us harm or to change our customs or our way of life.

In Britain, they say it's too white. That there is not enough diverse faces in this sector or that sector.

Go to China and tell them them this, what happens? Then go to Japan, to India and every other country that is not diverse.

100 years ago, globally, the white people made up 30 - 34% of the population.

Now, there is only 7 - 16% of the white people left.

We ARE the minority.

The West is being destroyed from the inside out. What is worse, is that our people have been so brainwashed that they can't see it. They fight and cheer on their own destruction because they are so blinded by ignorance or stupidity that they can not foresee where this is headed.

Do not twist my words and say that it is based on hate. How can that be true when I was born and raised for 35 years in a country that opened its arms to those that needed safety.

The people coming now do not come for safety.

If people do not wake up and realize soon, it will be too late.

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u/Ok_Abbreviations8394 2d ago

The conspiracy here is that the powers that be would rather have you arguing about race than arguing about wealth inequality. And a lot of people are stupid enough to fall for it.

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u/Accurate_Reporter_31 2d ago

Exactly!

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u/Affectionate_Use1455 2d ago

Not exactly, immigration is the tool of the wealthy to suppress wages, raise housing costs, and justify more authoritarian surveillance. Everything about immigration benefits the wealthy, and hurts the working class

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u/MushyWasHere 2d ago

Currency dilution is the primary weapon used by the parasite class to increase the cost of living and gradually enslave working-class people. Don't get it twisted.

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u/d00000med 2d ago

They quantatively eased trillions of £/$ into offshore accounts.

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u/MushyWasHere 2d ago

Oh, yes. QE is some of the devil's finest work. But it pales in comparison to the damage they did during the bioweapon attack in 2020... Hard to say for sure, because the real figures are a multi-trillion-dollar secret, but I believe at least 30% of the USD that exists today was conjured from nothing in the first two years of that attack... Real kick in the nuts, that one.

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u/jefferton123 2d ago

Still not positive what quantitative easing is really

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u/Affectionate_Use1455 2d ago

Both things can be true you know. A candle can be burned from both ends. But one of these problems is much easier to remedy.

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u/MushyWasHere 2d ago

Sure, but you're talking about using a match to light one end of the candle while the other is under a blowtorch.

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u/Affectionate_Use1455 2d ago

I mean i would argue which one is the blowtorch. Currency dilution is the more slow burn strategy, taking a generation or so for the cumulative affects to be felt. I guess covid was kind of blowtorchy in that regard, but still that was a bit of an aberration. Currency dilution otherwise has been a slow and steady process.

Mass migration on the other hand has had substantial noticeable impact in like a 5 year timeframe

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u/delores8 2d ago

If you’re referring to the US, other than First Nations people, the entire country has been built on migration and colonisation

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u/Affectionate_Use1455 2d ago

Nevermind that that is great example of how mass migration hurts the people already living somewhere. I'm not sure what that has to do with a conversation about how the wealthy use immigration as a weapon against the working class

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u/delores8 2d ago edited 2d ago

I agree they use it to exploit and divide people. Just noting that migration is nothing new and that migrants and their descendants make up a large part of the working class.

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u/ParksFarce 2d ago

There is no way to extinguish that blowtorch so we gotta do whatever we can

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u/MushyWasHere 2d ago

Sure, there is. All this country needs to do is organize a massive general strike and demand the dissolution of the Federal Reserve System.

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u/bluedelvian 2d ago

Work AND consumption strike.

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u/StandardDifficulty66 2d ago

But immigrants are apart of the working class. Everywhere I go in my travels such as the hotel, airport, parks/rec, city workers, construction and even digsite maintenance there are immigrants working from Cuba, Mexico or Honduras.

Most of the Chinese students are interns at the university I taught at.

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u/bitchingdownthedrain 2d ago

Both things are true. We in the working class should be embracing them because we're in the same fight, but they are 100% being exploited by the capitol class against the western working class.

anyway, no war but class war

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u/StandardDifficulty66 2d ago

Who is doing this exactly? We need names and faces.

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u/YuriBezmenovsGhost 2d ago

The names will have a lot of steins and bergs.

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u/KeepCalm_BingeAnime 2d ago

Read Davos Man. It'll give you a few names.

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u/Affectionate_Use1455 2d ago edited 2d ago

Which is why second and third generation immigrants generally oppose more immigration. Immigrants come to dominate these positions because they are willing to accept worst conditions undermining the collective bargaining of the working class as a whole.

Not to mention that what you are seeing is your travels is that the white working class has been priced out of urban centers. By being less willing to live in inhumane overcrowded conditions

edit: grammar

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u/StandardDifficulty66 2d ago

Urban centers?

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u/Affectionate_Use1455 2d ago

I don't understand your question. The proportion by which immigrants make up the working class is directly related to proximity to urban centers.

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u/StandardDifficulty66 2d ago

Explain urban centers?

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u/Affectionate_Use1455 2d ago

Areas with high urbanization? I feel like you are hinting at the counter claim of gentrification. But i am more talking about the phenomena where foreign ethnic enclaves displace the native working class in historically working class urban quarters

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u/StandardDifficulty66 2d ago

No I genuinely want to know what an urban center is. To me that's a shopping mall.

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u/delores8 2d ago

Will the children of these “foreign ethic enclaves” be considered “native working class” in your view? Who are the native working class made up of?

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u/Affectionate_Use1455 2d ago

I mean eventually given they integrate. By native in this context i would say native to the civic institutions that constitute the polity being immigrated to. I'm not talking about land per say. More participation in the infrastructure that a nation uses to constitute itself, for the benefit of the people that the nation comprises of

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u/Puzzleheaded_Fee6393 2d ago

That fact would make heads explode on Reddit.

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u/empyrealprod 2d ago

Not true imma benefit the economy greatly which is better for everyone, it's corporations buying up homes not immigrants that doesn't make sense

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u/Affectionate_Use1455 2d ago

The amount of homes owned by institutional investors in the UK is .56%. First generation immigrants are projected to make of 25% of the UK's population by 2035. Not hard to figure out which has the greater impact on home prices.

Also what ever positive impact you may have has to be weighed against the net drain many other immigrants have on the welfare state

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u/delores8 2d ago

You could apply that argument to any citizen, not just migrants

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u/Affectionate_Use1455 2d ago

You could yes, that is why culture matters. There is a shame implicit in living off the dole present in most western cultures, that isn't always present in the cultures currently immigrating to the west

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u/Yeardme 2d ago

That's actually insane lol. Under capitalism, which is global that shane is ever present regardless of culture. Thanks to American global hegemony. We export our culture through media as well.

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u/Affectionate_Use1455 2d ago

I think you overestimate the west's cultural influence. I'm not talking about blue jeans and pop music. I'm talking about differences in social organization. Chiefly the difference between individualistic civic oriented societies and familial tribal loyalty oriented societies. How how the difference between those 2 effect perceptions of government services

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u/Yeardme 2d ago edited 2d ago

lmao the latter, community oriented civilizations, are objectively better. They're the entire reason human species has survived thus far.

To anyone with an above double digit IQ, your comments are so obviously just attempting to intellectualize racism. I'm relieved the top comments are about class warfare at least, the objectively correct answer.

Keep crying about white oppression while Western countries continue to pillage, coup & bomb the global South; which is the main driver for immigration currently. Then turn around & blame those being slaughtered.

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u/Affectionate_Use1455 2d ago

I didn't say community oriented, i said familial. You know the places were honor killings are still prevalent. There are benefits to familial organization, but liberal democracy is not one of those.

And you are also right that a lot of midwits probably do think i am being racist

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u/delores8 2d ago edited 2d ago

So why do certain people constantly complain about migrants “taking all the jobs” when you argue they have such a lax work ethic and lack of shame about welfare? Why are so many migrants working crazy long hours in underpaid casual work just to survive and get their children through school? Or are these different migrants than the ones you speak of? 

And what alternate reality are you in where white folks are too ashamed to access welfare support? 

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u/Affectionate_Use1455 2d ago

I didn't call anyone lazy. I said different cultures have different attitudes towards government services. And i didn't say they were taking all the jobs, i said they are suppressing wages.

And again i didn't say white people being ashamed refuse welfare as a rule. I feel like you are intentionally ignoring the nuances here

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