Home / General / JD Vance Wants Racial Purity (Minus His Own Family)

JD Vance Wants Racial Purity (Minus His Own Family)

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JD Vance, married to an Indian immigrant, calls for the politics of the 1924 Immigration Act and the ethnic cleansing of America:

Vice President JD Vance advocated a slowdown in legal immigration Wednesday, saying, “We have to get the overall numbers way, way down.”

Vance took questions from students at the University of Mississippi at an event organized by Turning Point USA, stepping into the role of debater that was so often performed by the organization’s slain founder, Charlie Kirk.

Vance said the optimal number of legal immigrants to admit is “far less than what we’ve been accepting,” but he did not offer a firm number when pressed by a woman who questioned his stance. He criticized former President Joe Biden’s immigration policies, which he said allowed too many people into the country and threatened the social fabric of the United States.

“When something like that happens, you’ve got to allow your own society to cohere a little bit, to build a sense of common identity, for all the newcomers — the ones who are going to stay — to assimilate into American culture,” Vance said. “Until you do that, you’ve got to be careful about any additional immigration, in my view.”

Does Usha share that common identity? Is it transmitted through JD Vance’s sexual fluids?

This hypocrisy did not go unchallenged:

A tense moment unfolded at a university event in the US when a woman, likely of Indian origin, asked pointed questions to Vice President JD Vance over the Trump administration’s hardline immigration stance and his own interfaith family. The incident happened when JD Vance was addressing students at an event at the University of Mississippi.

An advocate of a strict vetting process, Vance batted for limiting legal immigration to the US. While he didn’t provide an exact number of legal immigrants that should be welcomed into the US, Vance said it should be “far less than what is being accepted”.

In her long-winded question, the woman, draped in what seemed like a Kashmiri pashmina shawl, stressed that they had been encouraged and sold the “American dream” only to be later told that immigration levels were “too high”.

“When you talk about too many immigrants here, when did you guys decide that number? You made us spend our youth, our wealth in this country and gave us a dream. You don’t owe us anything. We have worked hard for it,” the woman asked.

Her pointed questions come against the backdrop of the Trump administration carrying out mass deportations of illegals and imposing restrictions on legal immigration through changes in the H-1B system. Moreover, around 6,000 visas of international students have also been revoked.

The Indian-origin women continued, “How can you, as a vice president, stand there and say that ‘We have too many of them now, and we are going to take them out’ to people who are here rightfully so by paying the money that you guys asked us? You gave us the path, and now how can you stop it and tell us we don’t belong here anymore?”

As the crowd applauded her question, the woman was quick to clarify that she had no intention of causing a scene.

“We are not close to causing a scene. Don’t worry,” a squirming Vance quipped.

Not willing to let the vice president off the hook, the student also asked Vance, a Christian, about his Hindu wife and their “inter-cultural household”. Referring to his wife, Usha, the woman asked, “Why do I have to be Christian to prove I love America?”

To this, Vance, who has made faith a recurring theme in his public addresses, gave a nuanced reply.

He said that he hoped his wife, Usha Vance, would one day be “moved” by the Catholic Church and “eventually” believe in the Christian gospel. Vance also pointed out that his wife came with him to the church on most Sundays.

“I honestly do wish that because I believe in the Christian gospel, and I hope eventually my wife comes to see it the same way. But if she doesn’t, then God says everybody has free will, and so that doesn’t cause a problem for me,” Vance said.

What an absolute piece of shit of a human being. And note of course that most of the people deported are either Catholic or evangelical Christians from Latin America, so let’s not pretend that Christianity has a damn thing to do with it.

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