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Originally Posted by prometheus
People are today enslaved to the system more than ever before, but everyone speaks of "individualism" and "freedom".
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Well, cheap labor is central to the ideology of multi-culturalism, and with huge numbers of persons (aka 'immigrants') to be imported into a country by elites to be exploited in this manner, it is not possible for a people having the misfortune to experience this to retain a stable physical peoplehood and culture, and which explains in part the emphasis on "individualism." Interchangeable people require interchangeable culture after all, and thus the development of the ideology of multi-culturalism.
The connection between cheap labor and multi-culturalism can be easily seen in articles such as this
one excerpted below. Note the comments in the article about 'anti-discrimination'. This is not primarily about the 'rights' of the cheap laborer, of which the multi-cultists doesn't give a damn -otherwise they would not be exploiting these people as they are- but about stopping peoples targeted by multi-culturalism from attempting to defend themselves and thus endangering the multi-cultists' profits. Multi-
culturalism easily fits into the UN definition of being
genocidal, but as the UN is itself one of the biggest promoters of the cult, one should not expect any action from them anytime soon.
Multi-culturalism is driven by avarice, greed, and a general hatred for man.
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Tony Laszlo says Japan needs
to embrace diversity...The difficulty, however, comes when considering unskilled labourers, who are currently not allowed to work in Japan.
And they are just the kind of people Japan needs most as its population ages, according to Tony Laszlo, director of an anti-discrimination organisation in Tokyo.
"In 10 years, 20 years, 50 years, you have to ask yourself who is going to be finding the holes in the tunnel and patching them up so people don't die, who is going to be climbing the buildings to wash the windows, who is going to be building bridges and fixing bridges, and the answer is you don't have these people," he said.
Illegal labour could take up some of the slack. Japanese authorities say there are 250,000 illegal immigrants, the majority of whom entered the country on a temporary visa and over-stayed. Many of these people are thought to work as unskilled labourers.
But the government wants to halve that number in the next five years, and it does not appear ready to legalise unskilled foreign workers...
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