A Caffeine Hit to Your Hip Pocket
Australia's coffee culture is set to experience a massive price hike. Are other sectors set to follow?
The political imperative for immigration trumps the interests of the Australian people. It's sewing the seeds for a radical shift in politics.
Migration is a hot topic around the world, not least of all because if you want to talk about it seriously, those who don't will label you xenophobic or racist.
But migration can change a country. Sometimes that change is for the better, and sometimes it isn't.
The problem is that you don't really know if it's going to be good or bad until it's too late.
Sure, one can generalise about culture, traditions, and integrations, but data tells the real story.
That data covers things such as employment prospects, criminal activity levels, voting patterns and welfare dependency.
The politicians only care about voting patterns because they know that choosing the 'right' migrants can determine which party wins seats.
That's why Labor has always been opposed to White South African farmers from migrating here - despite the genocidal actions of the black majority. The farmers are likely Coalition voters and Labor don't want more of those people!
The fact that the Liberal Party didn't prioritise their migration while in government is a further testament to their stupidity.
You could say the same about Labor's penchant for Middle-Eastern migrants and refugees. It's got nothing to do with compassion or what's good for Australia.
Instead, it has everything to do with votes.
Now, I have access to some hard data courtesy of Jordan Knight, who also runs Migration Watch.
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