Remember when One Nation was unafraid to call out the serious cultural and demographic effects of mass immigration?
In a stunning about-turn embracing political correctness, Australia’s dominant right-wing populist party now ignores the cries of Australians on the biggest issue affecting our country.
On a federal level, party leader Pauline Hanson and her Senate counterpart Malcolm Roberts continue to neglect the severity of the immigration crisis that has turned many parts of Australia into hotbeds of crime and multicultural dysfunction.
As a fish rots from the head down, it comes as no surprise that all other officeholding One Nation members – Rikkie-Lee Tyrrell (Victoria), Sarah Game (South Australia), Tania Mihailuk (New South Wales), and Stephen Andrew (Queensland) – have also abdicated all responsibility to act on the concerns of their supporters when it comes to immigration.
Disgracefully, One Nation decided to draw attention away from the root cause of Vyleen White’s alleged murder by blaming a disproportionately violent trend unique to African migrants on a meaningless “youth crime crisis“.
This deflection away from the real issue – multiculturalism as a major cause of violent crime – is both reckless and dangerous. A refusal to expose the problem for what it truly is allows these heinous acts by unhinged migrant criminals to continue unabated.
We should demand more from our so-called conservative parliamentarians, particularly those who make it their brand to represent disaffected Australians. Why should they get a free pass to do nothing and drain the energy out of patriotic Australians merely because the other parties are worse?
These politicians are paid $217,000 a year on a federal level, and at least $172,000 on a state level to act in the interests of the nation, yet Pauline Hanson seems more interested in trying to get people to buy posters to fund her cartoon rather than call out the widespread social problems caused by immigration.
Apparently immigration is too controversial for our “fearless” senators to mention these days, other than in a few low-effort tweets on its effect on the housing market.
Malcolm Roberts gloated this week on social media how “propaganda didn’t work” on him, but at the same time runs from every opportunity to speak out about the cultural implications of immigration.
How’s that resistance to propaganda going, Malcolm? It clearly isn’t holding up in the face of the relentless anti-White narrative which pervades our schools and media today.
The seeds of this One Nation decay appear to have been sown at least five years ago. In August 2018, Hanson succumbed to media pressure, condemning anti-immigration senator Fraser Anning’s maiden speech and endorsing the “multiracial society” which has yielded the rotten fruits of the alienated Australia we live in today.
Perhaps that was the warning sign we missed. All Anning did was acknowledge the “importance of [Australia]’s predominantly European identity” and argue with history on his side that Australian nationality was bound by “the common threads of inherited identity that unite its people”.
Or maybe it was the 2017 Four Corners exposé of One Nation, which showed the dark side of a party happy to ruthlessly cut off loyal supporters and ignore the thoughts of hardworking candidates.
That same documentary tracked Roberts through One Nation’s rural Queensland heartland, accurately portraying its base as overwhelmingly White and regional.
Why, then, did Hanson think it appropriate to promote an Indian hellbent on depicting her as pro-immigration as the highest Queensland senate candidate behind herself at the 2022 election?
If Pauline Hanson cared about the economic pain and social ostracisation of her White supporters, why did she choose to embrace anti-racist propaganda and promote Indian immigration at a Diwali function in 2018?
It says a lot about the priorities of One Nation when their leader is busy taking a nice 100% profit on the $1.1 million sale of a commercial property investment while hardly lifting a finger to tackle the number one issue exacerbating the cost-of-living crisis in Australia – the importation of over 737,000 people to Australia last year.
All the evidence points to one conclusion: Pauline Hanson’s One Nation has strayed from its founding values and betrayed its loyal and long-suffering supporters.
We cannot accept such weakness and mediocrity from these weak conservative politicians. If their indifference to the ills of mass immigration continues, White Australians will be forced to look elsewhere for representation or be condemned to total replacement.