Trump’s Return: White Foxes and the Irony of Immigration Policy

 

Trump’s Return: White Foxes and the Irony of Immigration Policy

Well, here we are again. Trump’s back in the White House, and like clockwork, the self-anointed "white foxes" of America are clutching their pearls over immigration. Suddenly, the stolen land they live on belongs exclusively to them—descendants of European colonizers who plundered natural resources, wiped out native populations, and built fortunes on stolen labor. Now they demand stricter immigration laws to keep others out, as if their own ancestors would have passed the very tests they now champion. The irony is almost too rich.

If justice worked the way they think it does, England would be bankrupt paying reparations to India, and half the old-money families in America would be auctioning off their mansions to compensate the descendants of those they wronged. But no, instead of owning up to their crimes, they’ve decided to double down, parroting the same tired rhetoric that immigrants are the problem. The hypocrisy stinks worse than a swamp in midsummer, but it’s never stopped them before.

Trump, of course, is their perfect mascot. He doesn’t just speak their language—he shouts it from the rooftops. His first presidency was a masterclass in scapegoating, and now he’s back, promising more of the same. Build a wall, ban Muslims, and blame everyone else for the nation’s problems. Never mind that his big plans failed miserably the first time. His wall is crumbling, his travel bans barely survived court challenges, and his promises to "fix" immigration remain as empty as his cabinet meetings. But the white foxes eat it up because, for them, it’s not about solutions. It’s about hearing their grievances validated on the biggest stage.

And let’s talk about these grievances for a second. The same people railing against immigration conveniently forget how much immigrants have contributed to America’s success. From Asian engineers driving the tech boom to African and Middle Eastern scientists shaping NASA’s greatest achievements, these so-called "outsiders" have done more to make America a global powerhouse than Trump’s entire fan base combined. Yet the credit always seems to land elsewhere. History books are filled with whitewashed tales of innovation, conveniently erasing the contributions of the very people they now want to shut out.

Meanwhile, the labor market is crying out for workers. There are millions of job vacancies in this country, and undocumented immigrants are often the ones stepping up to fill them. But instead of acknowledging this reality, the white foxes cling to fantasies that strict immigration policies will magically create jobs for them. It’s almost laughable. The real problem is their refusal to adapt. They shun higher education, avoid job training, and then blame immigrants when they can’t land the gigs of the future. It’s the ultimate exercise in denial—easier to point fingers than to look in the mirror.

And let’s not ignore the deeper game here. Immigration policy in America isn’t about protecting jobs; it’s about controlling labor. The powerful have always used immigration as a way to drive down wages and boost profits. Undocumented workers are easy to exploit because they have no legal protections, and that’s exactly how the system is designed. But try explaining that to the white foxes. They’re too busy drawing swastikas on their immigration policies to notice they’re being played.

It’s almost comical how some of them dream of a leader like Hitler, thinking he’ll magically restore their imagined glory days. What they fail to realize is that the world has changed. The lessons of the 20th century are still fresh, and the rest of us aren’t asleep at the wheel. The non-whites, the immigrants, the allies—we’re all watching. And we’re not about to let the foxes rewrite history or dictate the future.

So yes, Trump is back. And yes, he’ll talk a big game about immigration. But if his first term taught us anything, it’s that his bark is worse than his bite. He’ll bluster, he’ll posture, and in the end, he’ll accomplish little more than a few headlines and a lot of hot air. The rest of us, meanwhile, will keep pushing forward, building the America he and his base claim to love but barely understand.



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