Immigration: The New Warfare - Sidney Secular and Valerie Protopapas

https://newswithviews.com/immigration-the-new-warfare/

Immigration: noun – the action of coming to live permanently in a foreign country

Invasion: noun – 1. an instance of invading a country or region with an armed force: the Allied invasion of Normandy 2. an incursion by a large number of people or things into a place or sphere of activity: stadium guards are preparing for another invasion of fans. 3. an unwelcome intrusion into another’s domain: random drug testing of employees is an unwarranted invasion of privacy.

In 1997, Mr. John C. Vinson wrote an interesting booklet entitled Immigration and Nation, A Biblical View.[*] Obviously, Mr. Vinson intended to reach the many “Bible believing” Christians who accept the present “immigration” situation in the United States and the West with the belief that somehow to deny or prevent this movement of huge numbers of people is “unchristian” when, in fact, what is really taking place is a mass invasion. Mr. Vinson believed obviously that many Christians misunderstood the correct “Christian response” to what was going on; that is, they acted on the assumption that God wanted these “needy people” to have a place of refuge, a need that should not be stopped or constrained by mere human “law.” [*Information on obtaining this work is found at the end of this article.]

Beginning with a Biblical look at the events in Scripture that resulted in man refusing God’s command to go out and “inhabit” the earth after the flood, a refusal that resulted in the Tower of Babel and the “confusion of tongues” that was not ended until Pentecost and the Descent of the Holy Spirit upon the Apostles in Jerusalem, Mr. Vinson covers such topics as Nationhood, (the) Love of the Stranger, The American Nation and Immigration, The Christian Response, Wealth Distribution – a very important facet in the immigration debate! – Racism – another supposedly Christian false flag – (The) Break(ing) Down (of) Barriers, Evangelism and, the final chapter, Quo Vadis America? In other words, the author reaches out to American Christians who view “immigration” as helping the needy and oppressed and therefore failure to do so goes against the Word of God.

I will not go into Mr. Vinson’s arguments. He can present them much better than I. What I wish to at least mention in passing is this – past periods of immigration were not the same as that which is going on now. The “New World” has always been a destination for people who “migrated” out of their own lands. This goes back to the Bering land bridge that brought people from Asia and Siberia into the Western hemisphere in prehistory. Different periods brought different people but in the “modern era” – the 16th through 20th centuries, most who “migrated” here came from someplace in Europe. Those who were not European were not ordinary migrants but either outright slaves from Africa or Chinese workers sent from their own nation to earn money through their labor for their masters back in China. But whatever the case, once the United States became a nation, immigration was not without its rules and limitations! Actually, the understanding in the West after the original period of immigration, an understanding that was held in both America and Canada, was that those immigrating were to be people
Immigration: The New Warfare - Sidney Secular and Valerie Protopapas https://newswithviews.com/immigration-the-new-warfare/ Immigration: noun – the action of coming to live permanently in a foreign country Invasion: noun – 1. an instance of invading a country or region with an armed force: the Allied invasion of Normandy 2. an incursion by a large number of people or things into a place or sphere of activity: stadium guards are preparing for another invasion of fans. 3. an unwelcome intrusion into another’s domain: random drug testing of employees is an unwarranted invasion of privacy. In 1997, Mr. John C. Vinson wrote an interesting booklet entitled Immigration and Nation, A Biblical View.[*] Obviously, Mr. Vinson intended to reach the many “Bible believing” Christians who accept the present “immigration” situation in the United States and the West with the belief that somehow to deny or prevent this movement of huge numbers of people is “unchristian” when, in fact, what is really taking place is a mass invasion. Mr. Vinson believed obviously that many Christians misunderstood the correct “Christian response” to what was going on; that is, they acted on the assumption that God wanted these “needy people” to have a place of refuge, a need that should not be stopped or constrained by mere human “law.” [*Information on obtaining this work is found at the end of this article.] Beginning with a Biblical look at the events in Scripture that resulted in man refusing God’s command to go out and “inhabit” the earth after the flood, a refusal that resulted in the Tower of Babel and the “confusion of tongues” that was not ended until Pentecost and the Descent of the Holy Spirit upon the Apostles in Jerusalem, Mr. Vinson covers such topics as Nationhood, (the) Love of the Stranger, The American Nation and Immigration, The Christian Response, Wealth Distribution – a very important facet in the immigration debate! – Racism – another supposedly Christian false flag – (The) Break(ing) Down (of) Barriers, Evangelism and, the final chapter, Quo Vadis America? In other words, the author reaches out to American Christians who view “immigration” as helping the needy and oppressed and therefore failure to do so goes against the Word of God. I will not go into Mr. Vinson’s arguments. He can present them much better than I. What I wish to at least mention in passing is this – past periods of immigration were not the same as that which is going on now. The “New World” has always been a destination for people who “migrated” out of their own lands. This goes back to the Bering land bridge that brought people from Asia and Siberia into the Western hemisphere in prehistory. Different periods brought different people but in the “modern era” – the 16th through 20th centuries, most who “migrated” here came from someplace in Europe. Those who were not European were not ordinary migrants but either outright slaves from Africa or Chinese workers sent from their own nation to earn money through their labor for their masters back in China. But whatever the case, once the United States became a nation, immigration was not without its rules and limitations! Actually, the understanding in the West after the original period of immigration, an understanding that was held in both America and Canada, was that those immigrating were to be people
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Immigration: The New Warfare
Now many books have been written about the New World Order and its “makers and shakers.” That is not the purpose of this article. The purpose here is to point out that it is futile to argue this matter under the heading of “immigration” just as it would be futile to argue any invasion of a country b
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