Amerika

Furthest Right

Remigration Will Revitalize The Third World

Let us consider a radical proposition: people are happiest when they feel those around them are likely to understand them. This likelihood is highest when people are genetically closest to each other; although some families are nightmares, people in functional families seem to feel their family members understand them.

Extrapolating to groups, it seems that your ethnic group will reflect the people most likely to appreciate you and understand your needs without lengthy debate, instructions, or interpretive dances. When the people around you are like you, they want the same things and understand you, so you are in a familiar and relatively nurturing environment.

Diversity has obviously failed, since it was originally sold to us as a way for other groups to share in our prosperity and turns out to be other groups trying to dominate us and each other, so no one wins. Remigration is on the table even if the censors are still fighting it, but the benefits of remigration are revealing themselves:

Mexican migration to the United States — one of the largest flows in human history — inverted in the late 2000s, and during the next decade more Mexicans returned home than those who migrated north. We exploit this historical reversal to estimate the effects of return migration on economic development in Mexico. We find that return migration leads to higher levels of development through improved income, labor, health, and educational outcomes. Our findings suggest that the benefits of migration extend beyond individuals’ tenure abroad, as accumulated capital, skills, and social norms have the potential to contribute to development back home.

Third-world people who go to the first world but then go back home bring abilities and knowledge that improve “income, labor, health, and educational outcomes.” Remigration is not just survival for the West, but will mean greater quality of life for developing nations.

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