Eamon Falloon
2 min readSep 22, 2017

--

  1. Ethnically homogeneous countries can be riven by huge amounts of crime and strife, I am not denying that. Thirty years war Germany and 16th century France were ethnically homogeneous but consumed by conflict due to religious reasons. However, it is undeniable that history is replete with examples of states made of a diverse range of ethnic groups being unstable and violent. Rwanda, the Ottoman Empire, Yugoslavia, Lebanon, Sudan, South Africa, Rhodesia, I could go on. At the outbreak of World War 1 there were two large German states, the German Empire, and the Austro-Hungarian Empire. The first was a stable, powerful, global powerhouse poised to become the pre-eminent European power. The second was a failing, fractious, incompetent mess barely able to function. The first was ethnically homogeneous, the second was incredibly diverse. Go figure.
  2. Mass immigration has historically been difficult to distinguish from invasion, and today is unfortunately not that different. There is a lot of tension in the US between Hispanic immigrants and other Americans, and that tension would not exist if the immigration were not allowed. Also, I don’t see how you can possibly say that grenade attacks, gang rape, no go zones, Sharia patrols, and native replacement don’t count as problems with immigration being clearly borne out in Europe right now, especially in Sweden.
  3. The amount of articles and comments from prominent figures attacking and demeaning white people are absolutely astounding. If you still want to fight this point I can bury you in a metric ton of links. And lastly on your final point, thinking that society is going to be worse if people in it look different is ridiculous. But thinking it will be worse if people hold different views isn’t. A certain amount of disagreement and debate is extremely healthy for any society, but these disagreements need to come from a baseline of mutual understanding and agreement on a few fundamental principles. And people all around the world disagree on these basics. Wanting to live in a society where the intrinsic pillars of your understanding of what right and wrong are are shared by the rest of the people is only healthy common sense.

--

--

Eamon Falloon
Eamon Falloon

Written by Eamon Falloon

Young white guy, extremely online, you figure out the rest.

Responses (1)