It’s make or break time for America. I think that’s safe to say. This is the election that will make or break the country, maybe for good.
Mass immigration and mass amnesty; or mass deportation.
Kamala Harris or Donald J. Trump.
A simple choice. A stark choice—perhaps as stark a choice as has ever been on the ballot in an American election.
We don’t know what mass deportation in America will look like, because it’s never been tried, but we would be fools to believe that it can’t be done on the scale Donald Trump has promised. Twenty-one million illegals in the last fours years, Trump has said. Twenty-one million people to be sent packing, back to where they came from.
America, of all nations, has been Promethean in its ambitions, has reached for the stars and achieved what others believed was impossible, or wanted to believe was impossible simply because they lacked the vision and the courage, and the means, for it to be otherwise.
If the Saturn V rocket could be made real, Alejandro and Fang Fang and Bing Bong can be made to reach escape velocity one way or another. It’s that simple. America’s example, once again, will inspire the world, and patriots across the declining West will be filled with much-needed hope. Your nations can be yours again. Demographics is not destiny.
On the other hand, we know exactly what more mass immigration and mass amnesty will look like. We’ve seen that dire future, the future of the whole nation, in microcosm in towns and cities like Springfield, Ohio and Charleroi, Pennsylvania, where the Biden-Harris policy of collapse-by-design has been implemented with terrible effect. Small communities, down on their luck, long-suffering, have been swamped with migrants who couldn’t be more alien in their appearance, understanding and habits if the federal government had set up a migrant exchange program with Mars or one of its moons.
This is deliberate, calculated it would seem for maximum effect. It’s hard not to call it evil, like it’s hard not to call the botched federal response to Hurricane Helene evil too, or a hundred other insults inflicted on the American people over the last four years and beyond.
But it’s not just ordinary people across the length and breadth of the nation who recognise, or should recognise, that the future of their communities and their country hangs in the balance right now. Trump’s allies, the powerful men and women who support him—who fund him, who organise his events, who formulate his policies and advise him—they too must know that the future could go very well or very badly indeed. I mean this in a very personal sense. These people stand to lose a lot more than just an election, as does Trump himself.
One of those people is Elon Musk, who finally threw his hat into the ring for Trump after the miraculous events at Butler on that Saturday, back in July.
On Thursday, the world’s richest man got a taste of what’s in store for him, personally, if Trump loses.
That taster came courtesy of The Wall Street Journal, which published a report alleging Musk has been having “secret conversations” with Russia’s president, Vladimir Putin—the closest thing the liberal world has to a latter-day Hitler, when Trump isn’t fulfilling that role.
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