The International Student Supermarket: All about Replacement Migration By James Reed

The Albanese Labor government is coming clean and no longer penalising international students for admitting on their visa applications that they want to migrate to Australia; as if this ever happened! Indeed, that is a bit of a joke, since the international student supermarket has long been known to anyone dealing with migration that international students are just part of the migration program, primarily to speed up the ruling class Asian elites in the population, in aid of the Great White replacement.

 

An early book on this topic, documenting John Howard’s role in creating an Asian ruling class, was The Howard Legacy: Displacement of Traditional Australia from the Professional and Managerial Classes (2007), by Peter Wilkinson. A lot has happened since 2007, and today the mass immigration program is the greatest in Australia’s recent history. The globalists cannot wait to replace traditional Australia, and it is likely that whites will be minorities in this land perhaps even before American whites are dispossessed.

 

What this means is that in the case of war with China, it will be virtually impossible to protect Australia on the home front, since the number of CCP agents here must be in the tens of thousands … who know how many? There were revelations via a leak (see link below) of over two million CCP members in corporations, government and universities and other intuitions across the world, so the numbers of agents here could be quite large. But, that must have been the plan all along, to melt Australia in to the Asian bloc of the New World Order, making defence impossible. Migration in the modern era is primarily about demographic replacement.

 

https://www.news.com.au/finance/economy/australian-economy/chinese-communist-party-database-leak-reveals-infiltration-into-western-companies/news-story/8fa8f08a2e29564413499f7769ae0bae

 

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/politics/study-and-stay-new-rules-for-foreign-student-visas/news-story/932e1ec7ab4f7a33601be64f4a74dbea

“International students will no longer be penalised for revealing that they want to migrate to Australia as part of their visa application, under reforms by the Albanese government that further benefit overseas arrivals who want to become residents.

The change is part of the move from the Genuine Temporary ­Entrant requirement to a Genuine Student Test, after a push from the higher education sector to allow more students to study in high-­demand fields.

Under the current test international students are required to submit a 300-word statement outlining their plans to study in Australia to prove they are a “genuine temporary entrant”, and applications that explicitly state that they want to stay in Australia are automatically binned. The Australian understands this requirement will be axed as part of the transition to a Genuine Student Test.

Labor’s new policy platform backed at national conference last week “favours permanent over temporary migration, to create a nation of people with equal rights and a shared interest in our ­national success”.

International Education Association of Australia chief executive Phil Honeywood said the industry had been pushing for the requirement to be dropped to encourage high-value international students to bolster the nation’s workforce.

“They throw them out if you dare mention that you would like to get a migration outcome from study in Australia, you are automatically denied a student visa,” he said.

International students would be a valuable asset to combat crippling workforce shortages especially in the science, technology and allied health sectors.

“Too many genuine student applicants have been denied entry merely for being honest about what they hope to achieve when they graduate with a world-class Australian qualification,” Mr Honeywood said.

“For those who do want to stay – and if we want to attract the skills that we need particularly in STEM and allied health – then we’re cutting off our nose despite our face by denying them entry because they wouldn’t mind migrating to Australia.”

 

Malaysian student Leesa Zulkefli, 25, said she applied for her visa to study at Sydney University through an agency that repeatedly advised her not to reveal in her personal statement that she wanted to migrate to Australia. “They kept specifying; even if your intention is to migrate, say that you will not,” she said.

“Make it as convincing as possible that you’re not looking to ­migrate. And that’s the only way to accept your visa application.”

Opposition immigration spokesman Dan Tehan said the change would encourage more migrants to come to Australia and place further strain on the nation’s housing supply, with a record 610,000 student visa-holders ­already in the country.

“Under Labor, 1.5 million ­people will arrive over five years and there is no plan for where they will live or how to manage the impact on government services and the environment,” Mr Tehan said.

“Labor’s solution to the multitude of problems on their watch is to make it more attractive and easier for international students to come to Australia and seek permanent residency.”

Home Affairs Minister Clare O’Neil said in her April that international students were a “very ­important part of the puzzle” to ­reforming the nation’s broken immigration system and addressing workforce shortages. “We want to ensure that high-performing students, with the skills we need, are given the chance to stay,” she said.

The review of the migration system released in March warned that international students were not reaching their potential in the labour market after graduation under the current migration settings, meaning that Australia “misses the opportunity to support and retain the best and brightest”.

The Australian revealed last week that the Tertiary Education Quality and Standards Agency warned education providers of the “significant” risk that large numbers of international students ­arriving in Australia were not qualified for their course and not genuinely intending to study.

Ms O’Neil, who is expected to release the Albanese government migration strategy toward the end of the year, declined to comment.

 

 

 

 

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Wednesday, 15 May 2024

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