The Great Replacement (French: grand remplacement), also known as replacement theory or great replacement theory,[1][2][3] is a debunked[4][5] white nationalist[6] far-right conspiracy theory[3][7][8][9] coined by French author Renaud Camus. Camus' theory states that, with the complicity or cooperation of "replacist" elites,[a][7][10] the ethnic French and white European populations at large are being demographically and culturally replaced by non-white peoples—especially from Muslim-majority countries—through mass migration, demographic growth and a drop in the birth rate of white Europeans.[7][11][12]It fails to mention this UN document:
Replacement Migration: Is it A Solution to Declining and Ageing Populations?ESA/P/WP.160
21 March 2000
ENGLISH ONLY
Population Division
Department of Economic and Social Affairs
United Nations Secretariat
4 comments:
So, is it?
Mike, strange you should ask.
Bringing in many more foreigners only makes the cost of having children and raising families far more expensive to native populations due to constraints of finite resources such as housing, jobs, education, food, and medicine. Things become much more expensive as many more people compete for them. Resources that would go into raising your own children are diverted to take care of the newcomers needs. In addition, women being poorly educated to believe having children is gauche and undesirable in favor of being single and having a career tends to create huge problems down the road...as Japan, Korea, and even China are discovering.
Canada presently suffers from these problems largely due to idiots like Justin Trudeau who decided to invite more people in than his country could accommodate in the name of consolidating his party's political power. Joe Biden's handlers did much the same thing in the United States.
The progressive left has been telling men they are toxic, frightening, and unneeded while teaching women to hate men and not have children in favor of being single and having careers for decades hasn't panned out into Utopia they hoped.
Who could have possibly guessed that denigrating masculinity and promoting women to be more like angry depressed lesbians on anti-anxiety medications isn't exactly a good idea?
I guess it's not, because of all the depressed lesbians or something.
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