Net-zero is not enough – millions must go
One Nation will extend its zero-net migration policy and focus on permitting only highly skilled migrants from culturally cohesive countries into Australia. Migrants must demonstrate a sound level of English for assimilation purposes.
Pauline Hanson must be commended for pushing a net-zero immigration policy, in line with repeated polls going back years showing that large majorities of Australians think immigration is too high.
Unfortunately, her net zero goal does not solve the problem of the immigrants who are already here, many of whom have gained citizenship, and even if achieved could easily be undone by the next government which decided to reopen the floodgates.
As council elections in Australia and across the West have long shown, immigrants vote along ethnic and religious lines whereas native White people do not, resulting in local governments dominated by minority groups, who, of course, act mainly in their own interests, at the expense of everyone else. Why wouldn’t they?
Last week, for example, dozens of Muslim councillors were elected across the UK while running on pro-Palestine platforms. At least one screamed “Allah Akbar” after winning.
Well, as of the 2021 Census there were 7,029,262 overseas-born people in Australia, and 21,306,662 Australian citizens, out of a total resident population of 25,685,412. Three years on the population is estimated to be over 27 million.
By June 2023, the foreign-born population had risen by 1.2 million, and since then hundreds of thousands more immigrants have been allowed in.
In the year to June 2023, 192,947 people became citizens, including 40,361 Indians, the largest group by nationality.
What these figures show is that the bulk of the problem, the 5.5 million non-citizens (more than 17% of the population), is easily dealt with.
These people could have their visas cancelled overnight, which would instantly solve Australia’s housing crisis, ease congestion, and increase social cohesion.
Criminals dual citizens could also be forced to give up their Australian passports.
But even without a sudden and sweeping visa cancellation decision, it would be quite easy to motivate many of the foreign-born to leave voluntarily, with little to no impact on the lives of Anglo-Celtic Australians.
Here is a short list of measures that would be simple to implement and enjoy majority public support:
Close non-Christian religious institutions, schools and places of worship
Ban non-Christian religious garb, eg. the hijab, the kippah
Mandate the use of English only in all government departments and public services
Ban foreign ownership of property – current owners forced to sell
Ban the use of foreign languages by businesses in signs, menus, websites, language spoken at work, etc.
Ban the flying of foreign flags except at foreign embassies
End all government assistance for the foreign-born who have never worked or paid tax – no Medicare, no Centrelink
Shut down SBS and all other foreign language media, public and privately owned
Ban the celebration of foreign festivals and holidays
Ban Halal and Kosher food production
Ban remittances
Raise language requirements for universities to native English speaker Year 12 proficiency
This would result in millions of people who don’t belong in Australia leaving of their own accord, while enforcement could be self-funded by heavy fines for non-compliance along with the confiscation of property. It may even benefit the budget.
And as for the inevitable humans rights complaints, Covid showed that the government is more than willing to violate them for the common good, and that the average Australian simply does not care.
Er ...one little mistake in there: "ban Kosher food"?.
(I would ban it, but that's another story...).