Another Bad Idea From The UK: Mass Migration As Social Engineering
Another area of the UK's decline that I've begun to look at is immigration. This so-called "bitesize" piece from the BBC probably puts the best possible take on it:
After World War Two, a mass immigration of people coming to work in Britain began. Many of the early arrivals were from the West Indies, South Asia and Cyprus. The most famous arrival was of people from the Caribbean, mainly Jamaica and Trinidad, on the ship Empire Windrush in 1948. This is sometimes mistakenly referred to as the first arrival of black people in Britain.
- UK had a severe labour shortage after World War Two, especially in the transport network and the newly created National Health Service
- large areas of the main cities had been destroyed by aerial bombing and a programme of rebuilding began, needing workers
- for the above reasons, British governments actively invited people from the Commonwealth to come and work
- the economy of the Caribbean islands, seriously underdeveloped by Britain, was in crisis with high levels of unemployment[.]
Let's see if we can parse this out. From Econ 101, I dimly recall that a shortage of anything raises its price. A labor shortage ought to mean workers can ask for higher wages, except if you can increase the supply of workers, well then, they can't ask for higher wages. So it sounds to me as though as a matter of government policy, the UK elected to import cheap labor to keep wages down during a labor shortage. According to AI:
The British Nationality Act 1948 granted all Commonwealth citizens the right to live and work in the UK. This led to the arrival of the "Windrush generation" from the Caribbean to address severe labor shortages in reconstruction, transport, and the newly formed National Health Service (NHS).
Wait a moment. Isn't it incongruous that the UK had a Labour government from 1945 to 1951, that would notionally have been looking out for the benefit of the working class? Instead, it passed legislation to import cheap labor to keep wages down. In fact, this policy continued into the early 1960s:
During the 1950s and early 1960s, the UK actively recruited workers from overseas, for example, the NHS led mass recruitment drives for nurses from the Caribbean in the 1950s and doctors from the Indian subcontinent in the 1960s. These policies were driven by a recognition that migrant [which is to say cheap] labour was needed for post-war growth and public services.
. . . From 1962 onward, immigration controls were tightened on Commonwealth migration, via the Commonwealth Immigrants Act 1962, further restrictions in 1968 and the Immigration Act 1971. These acts ended the open-door policy by requiring work vouchers or permits for Commonwealth citizens. However, it is notable that even as laws became stricter, legal immigration continued, in the late 1960s Commonwealth citizens were still admitted at tens of thousands per year.
. . . A major shift in UK immigration policy came with integration into Europe. The UK joined the European Economic Community in 1973, but the full effects on migration only emerged after the then Prime Minister, John Major, signed the Maastricht Treaty in 1992, joining the United Kingdom, without the consent of the people, to the newly formed European Union.
The principle of free movement of people was enshrined in EU law, allowing UK and other EU citizens to live and work in each other’s countries without visas. For Britain, EU free movement became particularly significant after the EU’s expansion eastward. In 2004, ten new countries, eight of them in Eastern Europe, (known as the “A8” countries) joined the EU.
The UK government under Prime Minister Tony Blair chose to allow immediate free movement access to workers from the new member states in 2004, rather than imposing transitional limits. This policy decision encouraged a large wave of legal migration from Eastern Europe to the UK.
Let's note that the overall national policy of keeping wages down via mass migration was facilitated by both Conservative (John Major) and Labour (Tony Blair) governments. In fact, this ought to represent a major betrayal of the working class by the Labour Party, which was founded by the Fabians as a way to temporize with working-class demands, but as we've seen, keeping the working class down was the actual Fabian agenda. Recent Labour immigration policy has in fact taken this even farther:
The huge increases in migrants over the last decade were partly due to a politically motivated attempt by ministers to radically change the country and "rub the Right's nose in diversity", according to Andrew Neather, a former adviser to Tony Blair, Jack Straw and David Blunkett.
He said Labour's relaxation of controls was a deliberate plan to "open up the UK to mass migration" but that ministers were nervous and reluctant to discuss such a move publicly for fear it would alienate its "core working class vote".
As a result, the public argument for immigration concentrated instead on the economic benefits and need for more migrants.
. . . Mr Neather was a speech writer who worked in Downing Street for Tony Blair and in the Home Office for Jack Straw and David Blunkett, in the early 2000s.
. . . He said the final published version of the report promoted the labour market case for immigration but unpublished versions contained additional reasons, he said.
He wrote: "Earlier drafts I saw also included a driving political purpose: that mass immigration was the way that the Government was going to make the UK truly multicultural.
Keeping wages down? That's so 1999!
The "deliberate policy", from late 2000 until "at least February last year [2008]", when the new points based system was introduced, was to open up the UK to mass migration, he said.
Some 2.3 million migrants have been added to the population since then, according to Whitehall estimates quietly slipped out last month.
A Home Office spokesman said [in 2009]: “Our new flexible points based system gives us greater control on those coming to work or study from outside Europe, ensuring that only those that Britain need can come.
“Britain's borders are stronger than ever before and we are rolling out ID cards to foreign nationals, we have introduced civil penalties for those employing illegal workers and from the end of next year our electronic border system will monitor 95 per cent of journeys in and out of the UK.
“The British people can be confident that immigration is under control.”
But even as the UK struggled to limit legal immigration, illegal immigration has soared:
In the year ending June 2025, there were 49,341 detected irregular arrivals, 27% more than in the previous year, and 88% of these arrived on small boats. Small boats have been the predominant recorded entry method for irregular arrivals since 2020, when detections on this method increased rapidly and detections on other methods declined (likely in part due to the COVID-19 pandemic making other methods of entry, such as air or ferry, less viable).
The illegal migrants are, of course, precisely those the UK doesn't need and presumably doesn't want, if the "points bsased system" is any indication -- but why does the UK nevertheless encourage them with incentives like migrant hotels?What we're actually seeing is an official effort, only partly concealed, to destroy the traditional UK working class by keeping native-born wages down and importing third-world replacements, who at the same time will harass the native-born working class via techniques like rape gangs.
This is the country that brought us Fabian socialism. There's something deeply wrong here, and it's hard to avoid thinking it has to do with the UK class structure -- but under the current scheme of social engineering, it isn't the middle or upper classes that will be hurt. Instead of the working class sending the aristocrats and the bourgeoisie to the gulag, the aristocrats and the bourgeoisie are going to wipe out the traditional working class.




