Alien

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The term alien has various meanings, including a stranger, a foreigner, or a "resident alien" born in or belonging to another country who has not acquired citizenship (distinguished from citizen). Within a given population, those who are culturally and biologically of non-indigenous origin.[1] The Oxford English Dictionary describes an alien as someone "who does not belong".

It is now considered less politically correct by supporters of mass immigration to use this word. The Joe Biden administration plans to change the word to "non-citizen" in United States law."[2]

Today it would be better to talk of ‘aliens’ (allogènes) than of immigrants born in Europe of non-European parents, insofar as the majority of them are not ethnically European, but are considered ‘nationals’ solely on the basis of jus soli.

Since antiquity, as Aristotle, Thucydides, and Xenophon noted, it’s been known that every nation that takes in large number of aliens is destined to perish, for these aliens progressively replace natives, who are culturally and/or physically destroyed by them. Such a process is underway now in several parts of France. Former French President Jacques Chirac was one of the primary proponents of the Quai Branly Museum, an art museum dedicated to presenting the works of indigenous cultures from around the world, located near the Eiffel Tower in Paris. The museum opened in 2006. Jus soli, or birth-right citizenship, is the official policy of most western European countries, including the United States, automatically granting citizenship to anyone born within their respective territories.

Staggeringly, Germany drastically changed its citizenship laws so that they are today a nonsense. Until 2021, all children born were only able to acquire German citizenship by descent from a parent who was German at the time of their birth or by pure ancestry. The new provision (August 2021) of the German Nationality Act did away with the previous rules on descent as they "discriminated against certain parents on the basis of gender" (and race of course), and provides a ten-year period during which the alien children concerned and their descendants may acquire German citizenship simply by way of declaration.[3] A form of national suicide.

At the beginning of the twenty-first century, the notion of the alien has lost currency in Europe, either legally, linguistically, or nationally, notwithstanding some politicians[4] and organisations[5] continuing to use this word, even though every resident not of European origin should be designated as an alien. A Belgian, Italian, or Russian of European origins residing in France is not an alien as they are all ethnic Europeans. The key point is that a people becoming submerged by aliens eventually becomes a minority, strangers in their own land. Such is the logic of the colonisation we’re now experiencing in the European world. In the end, the alien becomes the native.

(See: Colonisation)

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