By John Wayne on Tuesday, 14 May 2024
Category: Race, Culture, Nation

Albo: Making Australia a Colony of India! By James Reed

 But won't China be jealous as India colonises what remains of Oz? Or, as part of the Asian New World Order and Great White Replacement, do they just divide the place up, in the end? Here is the "part of Asia" that the academics dreamed about in their books and articles in the 1980s, here right now.

One part of this is the migration deals signed with India last year by Albo, so that it will be easier for mass Indian migration to Australia. Peter Dutton, who is supposed to be Opposition leader, agreed with the pacts. He needs to be replaced. As detailed below, Indians are flooding into Australia resulting in the nation's record net overseas migration. In January 2024 and there were 567,505 international students enrolled in Australia with 115,415 from China, and 97,152 from India, with more to come. There is record unemployment in India with 20 percent of the young unemployed, all eager to come here. Don't tell me that this is not taking Australian jobs.

As stated at Marcobusiness.com.au "Labor's migration pacts with India, endorsed by the Coalition, will ensure that Australia's net overseas migration will remain persistently high, resulting in perpetual housing and infrastructure shortages, sluggish productivity growth, stagnant real wages, a deteriorated natural environment, and overall declining living standards."

But for the uniparty, all that counts is polishing off traditional Australia. It does not matter to them that Aussies are sleeping in the streets, only for the Great White Replacement to be in full swing. And the greatest shame of all is the passiveness of the local population.

https://www.macrobusiness.com.au/2024/05/albos-indian-future-arrives-early/

"Last year, the Albanese government signed two migration deals with India aimed at making it easier for Indians to study, work, and live in Australia.

Among other things, these agreements will provide:

In a speech to India's Jindal Global University in November 2023, Coalition leader Peter Dutton wholeheartedly supported the two migration pacts signed with India:

"The number of Australians with Indian ancestry numbers more than 780,000, some 164,000 more since the 2016 Census- something of which I am incredibly proud", Peter Dutton said in his speech.

"Indeed, there is a strong bipartisan support between the two major political parties in Australia when it comes to nurturing migration with India".

"When Prime Ministers Modi and Albanese met in Sydney in May, they finalised a Migration and Mobility Partnership Agreement".

"That arrangement will facilitate a greater two-way flow of students, of graduates, of academics and business people"

"It's an initiative I welcome wholeheartedly", Dutton said.

The latest migration data shows that Indians are pouring into Australia, driving the nation's record net overseas migration.

Consider first international student enrolments.

In January 2005, there were a total of 173,787 international students enrolled in Australia. China (40,952) dominated enrolments, with India (14,362) in a distant second place:

Fast forward nearly a decade to January 2024 and there were 567,505 international students enrolled in Australia.

While China still comprises the most international students (115,415), India (97,152) has easily recorded the strongest growth in numbers over the decade:

Next, data released last month by the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) shows that Indian-born residents recorded easily the strongest growth in population (an increase of 467,000) in the decade to 2023.

In March, India's unemployment rate was 7.6%, about double that of Australia. Worse, more than 20% of young Indians are unemployed.

As a result, there is a large underclass of younger, poorer Indians who are eager to move to Australia to live and work.

Labor's migration pacts with India, endorsed by the Coalition, will ensure that Australia's net overseas migration will remain persistently high, resulting in perpetual housing and infrastructure shortages, sluggish productivity growth, stagnant real wages, a deteriorated natural environment, and overall declining living standards.

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