Failed policies that left “Dublin in flames” portended worse in the United States as Steve Bannon made his case to Tucker Carlson on how “…we’re going to have a firestorm in this country that is going to pale in comparison.”
The latest edition of the former Fox News host’s program on X came on the heels of a stabbing attack in Ireland attributed to an Algerian immigrant and the government’s response that disregarded the root cause in favor of cracking down on those opposed to devastating open border policies.
Asserting that the problems stemming from immigration without assimilation were “happening by design,” Carlson turned to Bannon to sort out “What does this mean? What is happening here? And what’s the right response to it?”
Ep. 41 Dublin in flames. What’s happening in Ireland will happen here, at scale. Steve Bannon explains. pic.twitter.com/KzrRUJq0ZL
— Tucker Carlson (@TuckerCarlson) November 27, 2023
Contrasting the turmoil in Ireland with Hungary’s position against a globalist agenda, Bannon pointed toward the prime minister and said, “Viktor Orban has led this fight for years and has tried to get his country, the sovereignty of it, to stay away from what’s happening in Germany and places like Ireland. Ireland’s probably one of the worst, if not the worst because the political class has totally sold out the people.”
Breaking down the numbers, the “War Room” host noted, “They’ve had, I think, 125,000 immigrants in the last year. That is the same equivalent if all of Joe Biden’s 9 million illegal alien invaders here in our country all came within one year. That’s the impact it’s had on Ireland. And they’re all on the public dole. There’s been 100,000 Ukrainians in, what, 18 months or 20 months since the war started. 100,000 Ukrainians, all on the public dole, all paid for out of the Irish budget.”
“Now, some of that money is given by the EU, but the Irish politicians are by far the worst that are bought off by the EU. They’re the biggest globalists. They’ve sold out the sovereignty of the Irish,” contended Bannon. “And you’re seeing a natural blowback and you’re really seeing it among working class people in the cities, Irish nationals, Irish citizens whose families have been there for generations and generations and generations and have nothing to show for it and also in the rural communities.”
Along with the rioting in Dublin that Irish Garda Commissioner Drew Harris had blamed on a “hooligan faction driven by far-right ideology,” MMA fighter and native Conor McGregor had been at the forefront of demanding the government do something about the immigration policies asserting in part, “Make change or make way.”
In response, Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadker pushed for laws to tamp down free speech as an investigation into “online hate speech” was opened on McGregor.
After Bannon highlighted the disdain the governing powers had for average citizens and their efforts to control them in any way possible, Carlson mused on the matter of immigration.
“It does seem like there’s a race hate at the bottom of it. I can’t think of a better explanation. I mean, there have been wars in Africa, sort of every week for my entire life, and no one’s saying, we’ve got too many Africans in Nigeria,” the X host argued. “Let’s replace them with Indians or something. No one would even think to say that. But poor Ireland, which didn’t really do anything wrong on the world stage that I’m aware of, is, I mean, in 100 years, there’ll be a minority of Irish people in Ireland. That’s a big change and it’s on purpose.”
Later, with the open border crisis in the United States only intensifying, predicting another 6 million entries into the country before the end of 2024 and the current presidential term, Bannon warned, “And so I hope people that watch your show appreciate the fact, particularly maybe people that are not that political, that we’re going to have not just turbulence, we’re going to have a firestorm in this country that is going to pale in comparison, I think, to what you saw in Ireland last week.”
In no uncertain terms, he reminded, “On D-Day in 1944, there were 150,000 men that hit the beach that day, right? And that’s looked at as the biggest military maneuver, military movement in American history. 150,000 men. We have almost two times that every month coming across the border.”
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