British Woman Feels Like a Stranger in Her Own Neighborhood: 'I feel like a stranger where I live’
In the Nineties, when I arrived, this part of Acton was a traditional working-class area. Now there is no trace of any kind of community – that word so cherished by the Left. Instead it has been transformed into a giant transit camp and is home to no one. The scale of immigration over recent years has created communities throughout London that never need to – or want to – interact with outsiders.
Jane Kelly | 7:30AM GMT 29 Jan 2013 | The Telegraph & Limits to Growth
Limits to Growth: In recent weeks, cumulative demographic changes have been reported in Britain, along with white flight away from cities to escape the social conditions created by diverse immigration.
Human beings don’t want diversity and prefer to be around others who speak their language and share the same culture. Most don’t like it when elitist liberal governments decide that the traditional beliefs like patriotism can be fixed by importing a new, more grateful people. Polls from Pew and Ipsos indicate a cross-cultural dislike of having too many foreigners residing in their countries.
In the present example, Jane Kelly, an editor for the Salisbury Review, voices her unhappiness at feeling like a stranger in her own London neighborhood. The only surprise is that she would be brave enough to speak against the new secular religion of diversity being the highest good; in fact, white Britons are now a minority in London.
Certainly many Americans have told similar stories about how their pleasant California neighborhoods turned into crime-filled Mexican barrios. Citizens are fleeing the once-Golden State for places where a culturally recognizable America remains.
The mega amnesty now being proposed would open the floodgates to a hugely Mexicanized America.
At least the London writer doesn’t live in an area that has been declared a sharia zone by local Muslims — yet.