Look at all the protesting in NY, Chicago, Boston, LA... I have a few friends that are in Toronto right now, same thing. You have all these people in these countries (more strip malls than countires now) that main allegiance isn't to the country they are from but to where they came from. Tribalism is a tale as old as time and yet we import it thinking everyone is just going to assimilate and it is just going to be 1 happy utopian melting pot. Sure, until something goes wrong and blood ends up being thicker than water.
Forget "military aged males" and the "invasion" for a second and look at the larger picture, I genuinely ask people why they wouldn't rather live in a society that strives for more homogeneity?
This isn't happening now but we have done it before.... "According to the Department of State, the purpose of the act was "to preserve the ideal of U.S. homogeneity."
[3] The 1924 act would define U.S. immigration policy for nearly three decades, until being substantially revised by the
Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952 and ultimately replaced by the
Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965."
We bring 1.5M people here a year legally, the great majority of the people in the streets in these cities are here legally. They didn't sneak in, parachute in, they are who we thought they were as Denny Green once said.
Are people that hard up for cheap landscaping and cleaning ladies or to make sure McDonald's is open 24/7 that they don't want to live in an actual country anymore? I really don't get it other than they're just scared to say anything but even in the RX poli forum you basically get "herp derp illegal immigration bad but everything else good" Koch brothers produced talking points when it comes to this stuff.
Even if you think the deep state or powers that be are pulling the strings, you think those strings might be harder to pull if there were far less lines of division to exploit?