>>942324090
You’ve stacked your entire argument on two assumptions that fall apart the second you step outside the bubble:
People who speak different languages can’t unify.
That’s just historically false. The U.S. labor movement was built by immigrants who didn’t share a language. Anti-colonial movements unified dozens of linguistic groups. Every major city today runs on multilingual workplaces. Unity is a matter of shared material interests, not matching vocabulary.
All problems reduce to some hidden puppet-master ethnic group.
That’s not analysis — that’s a coping mechanism. It lets you avoid looking at the real power structures: corporations, politicians, financial institutions, regulatory capture, and policy decisions that shape immigration and labor markets. Blaming an ethnic group for “hoarding cookies” isn’t political insight; it’s folklore for adults who want simple villains.
Immigrants aren’t stealing your job. Employers choose the cheapest, least-protected labor they can. That’s a boss problem, not a brown-people problem. And when you frame poor migrants as the enemy, you’re doing exactly what actual power centers want — turning horizontal allies into opponents so that vertical exploitation never gets challenged.
If you really cared about infrastructure, wages, or public services, you’d aim your anger upward, not sideways.
Punching down is just the illusion of rebellion.