when dealing with the ontologically evil
Humans are not "ontologically evil", they are just evil. Rate me however you want, but I do believe there are bad tactics, and not just bad targets.
So many ITT sounding like the BML/Pro-Palestine twitter idiots who talk a lot about the queer-anarcho-communist revolution that they will fight for that will start soon, for real y'all, just any day!!
These things take time. One side is more prone to get stabby and rapey and is overall less appealing the more people are forced to live near them. People need to get over their mental block of admitting that the thing that we are told "never happens" keeps happening every day.
Right now many of you are coming off as lunatics who just want to go full Rwanda genocide on the immigrants. This won't win over anyone, and will lose support from the majority.
English middle-class women were okay with the trans stuff until it started appearing in their own workplace, their changing rooms, and until they started having kids and see it first hand. A greasy, fat, slouchy, old Pakistani man taking for a walk his wife wearing full-face covering and with their young, pre-pubescent child (also wearing face covering) is our own best advocate. Let them speak for themselves, and make sure you amplify their message.
Who is Allah? I know what he told the prophet Mohammed and what that means for us and your children.
What’s the process for the gimmigrants flooding into England to become citizens? Is it easily granted to them?
(*UK. There is no English passport. Things like crime and education are managed differently between Scotland, England, Wales, and Northern Ireland.
Btw, this is why they have their own parliament - all but England, as the "English" parliament is the UK one)
- Simple "Life in the UK test"
- English test, with B1 minimum (this is ridiculous if you know what it means. It is barely being able to ask for water at a restaurant*)
- Language sperging:I know a bit about different language levels and what they translate to in real life. Universities will ask for a B2/C1, when it is simply not enough. To be able to comfortably live, you need a solid C1. There will still be areas where your vocabulary is lacking, but you are now at the stage where you can understand the meaning of new words from context. If you start with a C1, and are not too retarded or isolate yourself, you will improve. C2 also does not mean "native speaker with good language skills". Even if you have a really good C2, there will always be things regarding English that you won't be able to get like the native speakers, like Shakespeare and other "old English" literature.
- Be a resident in the UK for 5 years
- Fee for application (about £1.000)
However many don't ever get citizenship as they would lose their native one (eg india does not allow dual citizenship)
*I think that if it would mean to lose citizenship, you should not be given UK citizenship
Also, commonwealth citizens can vote in elections from day 0. This is not true for pre-Brexit EU migrants that have "indefinite leave to remain" (ie "Settled Status), where they can vote for local elections but not for UK Parliament! (New EU immigrants cannot even vote for local elections, with exceptions for Spain and a few other countries).
Therefore, what you should equally, if not more, concerned about is the "indefinite leave to remain".
It gives you the right to live, work and study here for as long as you like, and apply for benefits if you’re eligible. You can use it to apply for British citizenship.
I would really encourage everyone to read that page. The list of eligibility is very very long. The options make it a lot easier for Commonwealth citizens, which include 56 countries (India, Pakistan, Nigeria, Rwanda, etc..).
One eligibility option is if you are linked to someone else who has ILR, not even citizenship! Literally bring your whole extended family with little problems! You don't need to become a citizen, but can vote in parliamentary elections!
There are then other ad-hoc schemes such as Windrush and I think also this "right to abode" one https://www.gov.uk/right-of-abode/commonwealth-citizens
I don't have exact statistics, but I don't think most immigrants here have refugee status. Rather, they are given some interim status to let them stay until they get leave to remain and then they can stay here indefinitely.