In this clip of Almost Serious, Sarah Stock interviews Auspill on the dangers of Indian infiltration. Auspill, a well-known Australian expert on migration and content creator, is here to knock some sense into us (and hopefully, our policies).
It seems like everywhere you go, there are Indians now. Apart from markets, restaurants, and universities, now you can also find them cozied up in the corridors of power. Auspill starts off strong by dropping this bombshell:
"I started looking at two officials who are adjacent to India, who work with India within the Australian government. There are a few cases where these guys are working in such sensitive positions and producing such important white papers for the government, who themselves turned out to be Indian with a professed love for India! Is there no conflict of interest here? And then you look around and no one's scrutinizing it."
Can someone who holds loyalty to India's nationalist ideology also uphold the sovereignty and interests of Australia, Canada, or other Western nations? While Chinese and Israeli lobbyists are being scrutinized from top to bottom, under-the-radar Indians are passing undetected. This seems highly irresponsible, especially considering the current issues with national security and the globalist agenda.
India is governed by a right-wing party, the Bharatiya Janata Party, known for Hindu nationalist policies. Because of this, many religious and ethnic minorities in India face discrimination, censorship, and political marginalization—something Western leftists rage on and on about. Yet, Auspill calls out the appalling double standard:
“Oh, call out India's treatment of like minority groups.” But it's like, hang on, well why don't we call out the importation of millions? Why don't we call that out like what they're actually doing to us?"
The Western left is quick to criticize India’s domestic human rights issues—yet remains hush-hush about the Indian influence on Western institutions.
India is clearly expanding its soft power by exporting its loyal diaspora to the Western world. “The Indian population in Australia is only 3% … There were around 30,000 Indians in Australia. Twenty-five years later, it’s over a million.” With so many of them shaping policy, tech, and academia, whose values and interests will our policies represent—ours, or theirs? Because right now, it’s certainly not Western society’s.
It’s time for citizens to stop blindly celebrating immigration and diversity. Unless we start properly scrutinizing who enters the country, there will be a high price to pay.
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