Japan Pays Foreign Workers to Go Home, Forever
by Jeff Davis

The big liberal excuse for keeping millions of illegal aliens in this country is that “we need them.” Actually, no, we don’t –especially not during a Depression. Other nations besides the United States have finally woken up to the fact that the social and economic devastation that illegals wreak on a society isn’t worth any short-term economic advantage, and unlike the United States, they’re actually doing something about it.
The New York Times moans: “Rita Yamaoka, a recently jobless mother of three, faces a heart-wrenching decision. The Japanese government has offered to pay thousands of dollars to fly her family home to Brazil. But if she takes the money, Mrs. Yamaoka and her husband, Sergio — a Brazilian national of Japanese descent — must agree not to seek work in Japan again.”
There it is, folks. The solution to illegal immigration. Not amnesty. Not a “path to citizenship.” Simply THROW THEIR BUTTS OUT.
The New York Times goes on “The repatriation offer is part of a new drive to encourage Japan’s sizable pool of Latin American factory workers to leave the recession-wracked country. At least 100 Latin American workers have agreed to leave Japan on the understanding they will not return, according to Japanese officials… In 1990, Japan — facing a growing industrial labor shortage — started issuing thousands of special work visas to descendants of these emigrants. An estimated 366,000 Brazilians and Peruvians now live in Japan. The guest workers quickly became the largest group of foreign blue-collar workers in an otherwise immigration-adverse country, filling the so-called three-K jobs (kitsui, kitanai, kiken — or hard, dirty and dangerous. But the nation’s manufacturing sector has slumped as demand for Japanese goods evaporates worldwide, prompting job cuts and pushing the jobless rate to a three-year high of 4.4 percent. Japan’s exports plunged 46 percent in March from a year earlier, and industrial production is at its lowest level in 25 years. So Japan has been keen to help foreign workers go home, thus easing pressure on domestic labor markets and getting thousands off unemployment rolls.” (more…)












Thanks for the outpouring of support from you in the wake of my arrest and imprisonment. I am very thankful of the response so far and am anxious to hear from all of you. Best to all. David Duke



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