There is no diversity in Nigeria.
There is no diversity in Somalia.
There is no diversity in India.
There is no diversity in Pakistan.
There is no diversity in Bangladesh.
But, for some reason, the western world is expected to take unlimited migrants from the most homogeneous countries in order to turn us into some multicultural society where our cultures are not equal & we do not mix well.
Time to end this failed experiment.
Send all migrant invaders home.
🚨🇫🇷BREAKING: 17-year-old French boy Louis was beaten to death by a migrant gang in Narbonne.
In the early hours of June 20, the teenager was ambushed on a construction site and pummeled while the attackers filmed themselves delivering repeated blows to his face.
They shared the video with friends before someone finally alerted emergency services.
Construction workers found Louis the next day in critical condition.
He died from his injuries on June 23.
5 suspects have been charged with murder and placed in pre-trial detention, and 3 of them are minors.
AZ Secretary of State Adrian Fontes has refused to turn over Arizona's voter rolls to the DOJ. Crucially, he doesn't want them to have voter date-of-birth information — because, he says, it would violate voter privacy. It also guts any auditor's ability to understand the data. Records with the essential bits missing are effectively worthless.
However, even without full birthdays, Arizona's clones can't be waved away as a harmless case of the famous "Birthday Paradox."
That's the stupidest possible explanation for this data — because it has no birthdays. That's the whole problem. We only have year of birth, not the day. The birthday paradox needs actual birthdays but they're gone.
Also, the birthday paradox only works because it ignores names. It's pure math on a shared pool of dates. But we're not matching dates — we're matching names: same first name, same last name, same year of birth — and the same middle name too.
Here's what that looks like in Arizona's own data:
First + Last + Year of Birth + a matching Middle name (strict): 485,877 records.
First + Last + Phone: 57,231 records — a different key entirely, and it still flags duplication that has nothing to do with birthdays.
You cannot "birthday paradox" your way out of nearly half a million people who share a first name, a last name, a birth year, and a middle name.
And here's the part that should end the "it's just coincidence" argument for good.
If these matches were really innocent collisions, you'd expect them to pile up in the common names. They don't. It's backwards.
The duplication clusters in the rare names. Names that appear only two or three times in the entire state show the highest clone rates: 52.70% in the "appears exactly twice" group, 40.38% in the "appears exactly three times" group. Then the rate falls as names get more common — into the teens for names shared by dozens or hundreds of people.
The common names are clean. The rare names are riddled with clones.
That is the exact opposite of what the birthday paradox predicts. Coincidence concentrates in crowds; this concentrates in the empty corners. That's not the universe rolling dice. That's duplication with a cause — the exact kind of thing the withheld DOB data would let an auditor untangle.
Take a look and see for yourself.
Hahahahahahahahahahahahaha!!!!!!!😭😭😭😭
Nearly EVERY "dual national" on the U.S. team was born and raised abroad, and is ONLY on the U.S. team because they were recruited to play for the U.S., and had a better chance of playing in the World Cup for the U.S. than their actual home country.
Best example -- Sergino Dest. Born in the Netherlands, raised in the Netherlands, and played entire youth career with one of the top Dutch Soccer Club academies.
Very likely would never have made the Dutch National Team, so at 17 or 18 he elected to play for the U.S.
NONE of them are the product of a "welcoming immigration system."
They have dual citizenship because their parents were citizens of different countries, and they were raised abroad, playing in foreign soccer academies as they grew up.
THAT is why they are better soccer players than their U.S. citizen squad mates.
AZ Voter Roll Anomaly — One Identity, 20 Registrations
One name + birth year appears 20 times in Arizona's voter file, spread across multiple counties, spanning 2009–2020.
Let's look at what's actually in that data.
The July 2016 cluster:
Five separate registrations for this identity appear within a single month — July 2016 alone. Different counties. Different addresses. Same person, same birth year.
That's not a clerical error. That's a pattern.
The addresses:
Several records share the same house number across different entries — the kind of repetition you'd expect if addresses were being recycled or generated rather than reflecting real moves.
Some of the addresses are the type associated with transitional housing, mail forwarding, or non-residential locations — not the kind of places you'd expect someone to keep re-registering from across multiple counties over a decade.
On the cancellations:
All 20 were eventually cancelled — but not quickly.
Average active window: 62 days.
Six records stayed active for 3–9 months, including one running through the 2014 general election window and another persisting into early 2020.
But here's the deeper problem: the dates may not be trustworthy.
In California, I identified over 60,000 records that appeared in one snapshot but were completely absent from a snapshot just five days older — with registration dates spanning nearly 100 years. Those dates were false. I pursued that analysis after learning another researcher had found the same pattern in Arizona. Similar anomalies have been documented in Pennsylvania and elsewhere.
If AZ registration dates can be backdated, the 2009–2020 timeline shown here may not reflect when these records were actually inserted. Records marked "cancelled" have also been documented returning to active status in other states.
Bottom line:
Five registrations in one month. Recycled addresses. Active windows lasting months. Dates that may not mean what they appear to mean. 20 records for one person with 20 unique ID numbers.
This is the high score for AZ, but there are thousands of others with similar problems.
“We’re here to fuck all the white girls and fuck the government. We’re over here to breed, we are going to take over.”
That’s what one of the Dewsbury grooming gang rapists told his victim.
Not poverty. Not “cultural misunderstanding”. Not random crime by “Asians”.
This was muslim men operating with a clear religious and racial ideology.
White non-Muslim girls were “slags”, “trash”, and “kuffar whores”, fair game for grooming, gang rape, trafficking, and beatings.
Muslim girls were “pure”. White girls deserved it.
Some perpetrators quoted scripture and framed their actions as religiously justified superiority over infidels.
When the government repeatedly sides with the ideological rapists over its own children, when it betrays fathers and communities trying to protect their daughters, don’t act shocked when people lose faith in the system and take matters into their own hands.
This is demographic and cultural conquest.
An existential attack on Britain enabled by the very people sworn to defend it.
The absolutely filthy anti-white, anti-Christian racist Mehdi Hasan calls the Casey report and the whole push for truth “bullshit.”
The rapists’ own words in court and the girls they destroyed say otherwise.
Denial this loud only confirms who’s still protecting the narrative and why.
@ChicagosMayor This post is so stupid Brandon may have actually written it himself!
Seriously though, work on the 1800 people getting shot in Chicago year after year.
The Reflecting Pool is the perfect metaphor for Washington: Trump is trying to clean it up, while the swamp is doing everything it can to keep it dirty.