"Rogue-ner," a.k.a. Bob Roegner, who plays a "journalist" on a week to week basis via the tolerance of the Mirror newspaper, and who styles himself as compassionate to the down and out, has reached new levels of hysteria with his latest denigration of our president, Donald J. Trump. FW Politics doesn't have time to go line-by-line to refute every Roegneresque distortion in his latest column, but it sounds as though "The Roguester" has joined the ranks of the "Open Borders" crowd, e.g., Pramila Jayapal and Company. For these folks, just let "whoever, whenever, however" come into America; it's okey-dokey with them if our population grows from 300 million to 600 million in about 7 years, but it probably wouldn't even take that long if our nation was foolish enough to listen to these radicals and their loud and shrill calls to eliminate any kind of border enforcement.
Lecturer Michael Anton wrote an illuminating piece ("Why Do We Need More People In This Country Anyway") in the Washington Post this month about the effects, already, of mass immigration; the likes of which America hasn't seen since the Ellis Island era of the turn of the 20th century. Not that it's all one-sided for good or ill, but when do we get back to the normal immigration pattern of the 1920s to 60s? One thing's for sure, going by his hysterics, Roegner doesn't give a hoot about the effects of globalism on native-born American citizens, because people like him actually prefer foreigners over Americans, and have no problem keeping some American commoners in their place as long as these radicals' World Globalist ideas are center stage and dominant.
- Mark Greene For Representative (Website) - U.S.M.C. Veteran
[Revised on 7/2/18.]
Lecturer Michael Anton wrote an illuminating piece ("Why Do We Need More People In This Country Anyway") in the Washington Post this month about the effects, already, of mass immigration; the likes of which America hasn't seen since the Ellis Island era of the turn of the 20th century. Not that it's all one-sided for good or ill, but when do we get back to the normal immigration pattern of the 1920s to 60s? One thing's for sure, going by his hysterics, Roegner doesn't give a hoot about the effects of globalism on native-born American citizens, because people like him actually prefer foreigners over Americans, and have no problem keeping some American commoners in their place as long as these radicals' World Globalist ideas are center stage and dominant.
- Mark Greene For Representative (Website) - U.S.M.C. Veteran
[Revised on 7/2/18.]
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