Migrant enclaves changing the character of Australia

Freya Leach, for John Anderson Media, gives an excellent presentation below. We need more of it. In several softly probing interviews, she shows how aggressive Islam is. It’s the same throughout the West. The core authority of Muslim communities dictates their policy goals, which are fundamentally to enforce all aspects of Islamic culture.

It’s interesting to hear one interviewed student say that Australia is a monoculture, meaning migrants form cultural enclaves so that we’re not a multicultural country of different people with different cultural backgrounds, but one of monocultural tribes. He gave the example of Chatswood.

My father’s family settled in Chatswood from the country. They were pioneering people. I went to school in Chatswood. We had friends in Chatswood, and so on. It is now an Asian enclave, hardly recognisable as the suburb it once was. You’ll meet people there behind shop counters who barely speak English. The equivalent in Melbourne is Box Hill, also an Asian enclave. Box Hill shopping centre is like another country – an Asian country.

Many migrant cultures don’t mix. And they don’t want to. It’s obvious. The migrants who blend best with the Australian population are from the UK and other European countries. If you look at the migration figures of the last twenty years, you’ll find a sharp switch from the UK and Europe to Asia and the Middle East, especially to migrants from India and China. Migration has changed, and continues to change, the character of Australia. It’ll soon be more than Auburn where an ordinary Australian will feel out of place.

Is it racist to want your country to maintain its character and foundational principles? If so, then all countries with any pride at all are racist – particularly India, China, and that whole worming batch of Middle Eastern countries, who would not for one moment tolerate a suburb of white Australians in their midst.

The Greens, TEALs, and Labor are very selective in their accusations of racism – as are their propagandist mouthpieces, the ABC and SBS.

White bad. All the rest good.

Tell Pauline Hanson you’ll vote for One Nation if she and her party readjust the migrant intake, both as regards numbers and cultures.

A Boomer’s life

I made this slideshow to celebrate the fortieth wedding anniversary of my older brother, Michael, and his wife, Wendy, in 2006. It was a great hit with the family at the time. It had terrific memories. But now, 20 years later, when Michael and Wendy are in their eighties, and I’m eighty next July, the slideshow has so much more significance. It now shows a way of life and its ambience that has almost disappeared. It’s still a lot of fun, but now it is tinged with nostalgia for a time in Australia that is drifting into the nation’s forgetfulness.

We were in our mid-twenties when the 1960s Revolution hit in Sydney. In this slideshow, one can see the background of the novels in my Sixties Series, especially in Books 3, 4, 5, and 6 to come.