I certainly wasn't doing that. I'm speaking of parents and grandparents from other countries, not hundreds of years of history. Too many English people live in a dream world believing that most around them are English going back hundreds of years, the truth being that immigration has been a continuous large scale process making a high proportion recently mongrel. You should also take into account the huge numbers of the English who have left in recent decades. London alone has been losing over 200,000 people every year for around a decade, mostly English, many going to other countries and being replaced in London by immigrants, keeping our population fairly constant but with slight growth. How do you feel about the huge numbers of the English who move abroad to live, is that ok but the other way round not ok?I can't agree with any attempt to draw a parrallel with what is happening now and the historical imigration trends of this country which go back hundreds of years. They are two completely different entities and there are no similarities.
Do you believe we have some sort of God given right to a better life that other human beings? If not, consider what happens if all borders are open worldwide. What happens is that the process of chasing the best prospects eventually results in a world where we all have equal prospects and living standards and population densities gradually even out. These immigrants from much warmer countries really don't enjoy living in our cold, wet climate and when given an economic chance quickly move back to where they feel more at home. In a similar vein large numbers of Poles who've failed to find consistent work here have been taking advantage of a coach service now provided to take them back home.there is no logical counter argument to the fact that our present imigration free for all is at best, a very bad thing for all concerned or at worst a latent horror.
And a little footnote to all about those Northern Europeans who have been pouring in. It was that archetypal, cricket loving Englishman John Major who fought hard within Europe to enlarge the EU to include the old Warsaw Pact countries in the union. Many of the mainland EU countries were not very keen on them entering, illustrating once again that care should be taken when apportioning blame for change.
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