Corruption: Making Labor more powerful by making Australia less Australian

Corruption: Making Labor more powerful by making Australia less Australian. By Fred Pawle. Warning: strong opinions.

Take immigration. It is now beyond doubt that … multiculturalism has burdened us with generations of hostile immigrants who have formed alien ghettos, embezzled the welfare system and, on occasional balmy summer evenings, popped down to Bondi to spend a pleasant nine minutes shooting Jews from a footbridge uninterrupted by the constabulary.

That’s a bit harsh, I hear you say, they don’t all shoot Jews! Fair point. Some of them are more content to steal billions of dollars intended for the disabled, scam the insurance industry by faking car accidents, steal cars, invade homes, target local women for prolonged gang rapes, treat their own women like chattels, threaten to beat up the Prime Minister or just drive B-double semi-trailers like they’re Toyota Corollas in a smash-up derby while verbally abusing those who abide by the road rules.

Politicians avoid commenting on the extortionate cost of mass immigration for fear of upsetting ethnic voter blocks. And they can ignore columns like this one because, frankly, they are so brazen about their plan to destroy Australian culture that they no longer care.

Immigration Minister Tony Burke is now encouraging immigrants to not assimilate, and recently told an Indian podcaster that he wants millions more Indians to be granted citizenship. He does all this with the nauseating obsequiousness of someone who learned at school that he doesn’t fit into his own culture, and has spent his adult life desperately seeking one where he does. He increasingly looks like a lonely nerd who can’t believe how many new friends he’s made since becoming Immigration Minister.

 

 

Burke has been given a blank cheque to flood the nation with the least skilled non-English-speakers he can find because his party knows the fewer skills immigrants possess, and the less they understand the local lingo, the more likely they are to vote Labor. It’s a strategy to make Labor more powerful by making Australia less Australian. That is an “abuse of entrusted power” …

Unions:

Anti-corruption campaigner Geoffrey Watson recently found, in a report he wrote for the Queensland government, that the CFMEU had overcharged the Victorian government somewhere in the vicinity of $15 billion over recent years. Such an allegation would once have been enough to bring down a state government. These days, though, it doesn’t even generate a file at Victoria’s Independent Broad-based Anti-corruption Commission, and ordinary people are so preoccupied with merely surviving that they don’t have time to wonder why nothing is done about it.

Super:

The way the government and unions treat our $3 trillion in superannuation savings as theirs invokes more suspicion of corruption, although this issue doesn’t receive nearly as much attention as it should, thanks to the widespread perception, perpetuated by the government, that those compulsory savings don’t really belong to us; rather they are a bonus our benevolent government bestows on us upon retirement.

Small “business”:

This cancer is now spreading into the “private” sector. Apart from gangs running the illegal drug trade, which occasionally erupts into homicidal gunfights, and brazenly obvious illegal but lucrative tax-avoiding tobacco stores, protection rackets are now becoming commonplace. Melbourne is now a “war zone” in which bars and clubs are wondering which will be the next to be shot up or firebombed.

In a contemporary twist to an old story, standover men now seem to be targeting even pilates studios, arson being the preferred method of intimidation after twisting the proprietors’ arms presumably failed to yield results. …

Long-term:

Corruption is usually the pursuit of short-term gains at the inadvertent long-term expense of everyone else. But Australia’s new forms of corruption are far worse. The long-term cost is deliberate and co-ordinated. The goal is infinitely more pernicious than … a cop hitting up tourists so he can afford to buy schoolbooks for his kids.

These plans are now almost irreversible. By the time most Australians realise what’s happened, Anthony Albanese and his colleagues will be well into their comfortable retirement in secure communities far from the chaos and anarchy they created.

hat-tip Peter S.