An Even Darker Side to the Immigration/Asianisation Mania By James Reed
George Christensen has raised the issue of human trafficking, which is being done on an industrial scale in Australia, fuelled by holes in border security and our out-of-control mass immigration system, or is it scam? This has led to Asian women and children being subject to slave-like conditions, often for sex exploitation. Asian Organised Crime is behind this, and profits from this human misery. Crime bosses harvest millions which are then launder through the real estate industry making Aussies unable to get homes due to exploding prices.
As Christensen says: “The government might be complicit in these crimes as this trafficking network relies on ‘visa fixers’ — criminally connected migration agents licensed by the federal government, leading to an exploited underclass in various industries.”
Indeed, this is but one outcome of Asianisation, where our traditional culture is replaced by one that has less concern about human rights and freedom. The Albo Labor regime is indeed responsible. The answer is to stop immigration in its tracks, now! And, in due course, vote them out and replace them with more independent nationalist politicians.
https://nationfirst.substack.com/p/australias-dark-secret-the-govt-wants
“The aim of modern mainstream media is simple: the misdirection or manipulation of public focus.
In an age where the world’s information is accessible right within our fingertips, people cannot be deceived by blatant lies.
What the fake news legacy media — and the globalist ‘elite’ masters they serve — can, however, do is divert our attention to trivial non-issues so that the real problems are never brought to focus.
Go to any news site today and the front page is filled with celebrity gossip, celebrity gossip, sensational headlines, and why this or that is suddenly racist/sexist/etc, often overshadowing critical issues and events of national and global significance.
For one, there is little talk about the growing issue of our country becoming a hub of human trafficking in Asia.
Exploiting flaws in Australian border security and the immigration system, human trafficking syndicates have been moving victims, primarily women and children, inside the country’s border, where they are distributed ‘like cattle’ to their intended clientele.
Human rights groups have described trafficked victims as being subjected to modern slavery-like conditions and forced to perform extreme and degrading services for wealthy clients.
You (the victim) never come out. You never go into town. You never socialise. You’re never allowed to do anything else. You are there to perform the sex.
— Kevin Forrest, former detective
Crime bosses, that should be behind bars or deported are freely operating their criminal network within the country, facing no law investigation or legal repercussions.
Many of these crime lords are earning in a range of hundreds of millions of dollars through their brutal exploitation of thousands of victims, which they ‘whitewash’ by investing in our real estate markets.
In other words, slavery is helping drive real estate prices, making it increasingly unaffordable for the common Australian.
Binjun Xie was a criminal that former British detective Kevin Forest personally investigated.
Forest successfully helped shut down Xie’s sex ring in Europe.
Upon learning, Xie was living scot-free in Australia and operating his trafficking business with immunity, he remarked that he was “absolutely flabbergasted. I’m flabbergasted that he’s able to get into Australia, bearing in mind that he was jailed here (in the UK) for five years with a condition that he was deported back to China upon his release.”
And you know the worst part?
Our government might be culpable in this heinous ongoing crime.
This trafficking network would not have been possible without the so-called ‘visa fixers’ — criminally connected migration agents licensed by our federal government.
Because of our government’s wilful ignorance or perhaps active involvement in this modern-day slave trade, we are witnessing the growth of an underclass exploited in our sex industry, farms, and other occupations.
We don't ever want to become like the US or Europe from an immigration and border security perspective, but frankly, we are now just like them in terms of the assault on our borders.
— Abul Rizvi, Former Immigration Department deputy secretary
Nothing will be done about this until the public brings more attention to it and holds our government accountable for its inaction.”
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