If you speak candidly about how Democrat-engineered population change leads to mass shootings in Buffalo, the media is culpable.
In the wake of a racially-motivated mass shooting that killed more than ten innocents over the weekend, leftwing journalists have heaped blame onto Fox News’s Tucker Carlson, as well as politicians like Congresswoman Elise Stefanik (R-NY) and Congressman Matt Gaetz (R-FL) for promoting what they call “replacement theory.”
Though it’s hard to find a universally accepted definition of replacement theory, its central tenet appears to be that the shrinking proportion of white Americans is part of a deliberate strategy by Democrats. But if that’s a conspiracy theory, it’s one that both the media and the Democratic Party have ascribed to for decades:
It’s indisputable that America’s demographics are changing — the white proportion of the population has been shrinking for decades — and that Democrats view nonwhite or minority voters as a key constituency.
Since even the media will happily acknowledge those facts, it appears the magical ingredient turning this data-based reality into a full-blown white supremacist “conspiracy theory” is the notion that the demographic change is being orchestrated. Indeed, there are ugly interpretations of this theory that attribute the phenomenon to nebulous groups like “the elites,” or “the Jews,” or simply some shadowy “Them.”
But Carlson and Republican members of Congress have made it abundantly clear that they believe America’s shifting demographics are the intended outcome of the Democratic Party’s immigration policies. That’s no white supremacist theory; at worst, it’s a cynical political talking point.
As Atlantic deputy editor Yoni Appelbaum It should be notedMany on the left argue that 2020 will see a Democratic permanent majority.
In 2002, the political scientist Ruy Teixeira and the journalist John Judis published a book, The Emerging Democratic Majority, which argued that demographic changes—the browning of America, along with the movement of more women, professionals, and young people into the Democratic fold—would soon usher in a “new progressive era” that would relegate Republicans to permanent minority political status. This book claimed, somewhat triumphantly, that the “new emerging majority” was both inevitable and impossible to resist.
In 2018, a leaked “Memorandum on political strategy” by the Center for American Progress referred to preserving DACA, the Obama-era program that granted temporary protected status to millions of eligible illegal immigrants, as a “critical component” in the Democratic Party’s future electoral success:
The fight to protect Dreamers is not only a moral imperative, it is also a critical component of the Democratic Party’s future electoral success…
If Democrats don’t try to do everything in their power to defend Dreamers, that will jeopardize Democrats’ electoral chances in 2018 and beyond.
Democrats are expecting the increasing non-white American population to vote for them. So how is it possible that they can argue that their extremely lax immigration policies don’t have any purpose other than securing an election majority? Did they not expect to benefit from their proposed “pathway to citizenship” for illegal immigrants?
How else are we to explain the moment during the October 27, 2019 Democratic primary debate when all ten candidates on stage, including Joe Biden, promised that their government healthcare plan would “provide [free] coverage for undocumented immigrants?”
Governments’ use of immigration as a potential problem-solver is not confined only to electoral politics. In 2000, the U.N. published a paper examining the merits of “replacement migration” as a possible “solution to declining and aging populations.” Mainstream publications like The Economist In 2017, many Europeans endorsed replacement migration.
In the context of immigration, it seems the term “replacement,” only became a dirty word once those in power realized voters didn’t view it as favorably as they did.
It’s no secret that the Democratic Party expects to benefit from America’s changing demographics (although some recent dataThis theory is called into question. But regardless of whether the “demographics are destiny” thesis proves true, the establishment media can’t run away from their track record of endorsing it as a strategy for their favorite political party.
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