I'm going to be laying out a history lesson to countermand the libtard/cuckservative line of argument which states "you can't deport X million people user" or "exiling dirty shitskins is unAmerican."
Sending non-whites back to their stinking mudhole nations where they will likely starve and be put out of our misery isn’t (((our))) values, but it certainly is our values. And we here all know that it is exactly what the US stood for until 1941 or thereabouts.
I suspect that in the coming months and years the little known “Mexican Repatriation” which occurred during the 1930s will become a popular talking point among the left, particularly among those of a certain tribe. A more accurate description of the events in question would be, “the exile of filthy mestizo and indio trash from our sovereign territory,” I wouldn’t expect that to grace the front of page the Jew York Slimes unless we seize it as a state asset under the first American Reich, more on that topic later. But perhaps I am wrong since making this past nationalist action well known will show the people how even without a Trumphen Wall such mass exiles are possible and have legal precedence. The most frightening thing for the (((leftists))) and (((compassionate conservatives))) is for the goyim to start getting ideas based on primary historical documents displaying the unvarnished and unvilified opinions of the actors who made history. How many of us have read of our own experiences mirrored in the struggle of an aspiring Austrian painter/architect who found himself misled in his education and adrift in the sea of degeneracy then swamping the once lovely city of Vienna in the early twentieth century? If you have not read those chapters which a slightly older version of that young Austrian gentleman dictated for posterity you really should. If you are a white man with post-secondary education and were born after 1980 the parallels are pretty incredible. To that end I will provide both a dry and brief recitation of the events which occurred as well as the primary sources with a focus on the words of those whose actions mirror our current opinions regarding immigration.