>>507680281 (OP)Across the world, nations fiercely guard their sovereignty—except, it seems, in the West. Countries like Israel, Saudi Arabia, India, Japan, and numerous African states maintain strict controls over citizenship, immigration, and property rights. These laws often require ethnic, cultural, or religious ties, and are seen as essential to national identity and stability. Yet the very same global institutions, NGOs, and financial interests that accept or support these restrictions abroad push aggressively for open borders in Western nations. This hypocrisy is no accident. Mass immigration weakens national cohesion, suppresses wages, and transforms proud, self-sustaining citizens into fragmented, politically divided dependents. Since 9/11, Western populations have not only mourned their dead but watched their economies and cultures erode under a new form of warfare—economic and demographic. The state responded to terror with mass surveillance, foreign wars, and loose monetary policy that benefited the few. Meanwhile, cheap foreign labour was imported in bulk, undercutting the working class, dismantling communities, and deepening resentment. Intelligence agencies—led by unelected actors—now exploit the resulting tension, using "left-wing" protestors and militarised police as pawns in a managed conflict, a spectacle of division designed to distract from the real enemy: the financial and political elite who created the crisis. These same powers expect the West to surrender its borders and identity, while they maintain rigid walls for their own people. The double standard is clear: Westerners are asked to give up what others fiercely protect. What we face is not inclusion, but replacement—and those promoting it are not naive. They are strategic. If we cannot name this system, we will remain trapped within it—divided, disoriented, and ultimately displaced.