Mexicans Are ‘Fed up’ With Americans Moving to Their Cities

For decades, the United States southern border has been overrun with illegal immigration at various degrees of invasion. This is a given and a disgruntlement for many Americans.

But what would be the result of an “invasion” in the opposite direction?

This from redstate.com.

Under the Obiden Regime, the cost of living in America has risen and the volume of people crossing the southern border into America has escalated precipitously—with millions of people crossing every year, most ending up in the interior of the country.

 

 

The above-posted video is not a parody.

This is an actual news network running a completely serious story about how Mexicans are upset that white Americans (race is singled out in the video) are moving to their cities legally.

For context, there are an estimated 5.4 million illegal immigrants of Mexican origin in the United States. In Mexico City, it is estimated that a few thousand (at most) Americans have moved in due to the lower cost of living.

Does anyone else grasp the apparent irony here?

What could possibly be the complaint of Mexicans in Mexico?

Well, actually, the Americans moving in are driving up rent prices for locals.

Yet, in America, We the People are appalled at how much mass illegal immigration has cost the average American. We’ve spent billions of taxpayer dollars over the years. And we’re supposed to empathize with Mexicans in the richest city in their country having to see white people at a restaurant? Please!

What makes this even better is that it’s all wrapped up in modern woke ideology. The report claims that white people moving to Mexico City is “modern colonialism.”

 

To recap, it’s fine for millions upon millions of Mexicans to enter the U.S. illegally, putting a strain on the nation’s resources, but it’s “colonialism” for some old, white people to pay for their own apartments in Mexico City.

And this isn’t even the first we’ve heard of this complaint. Mike Miller on RedState wrote a story on a similar report back in July.

Final thoughts: This article is not intended to be anti-Mexican, rather it is to suggest there is a movement, if not an invasion, going the opposite direction. And the people there are as unaccepting of the change as are the people here.

The thought of life in Mexico City does not appeal to me, however, I can imagine many Americans choosing to make the transition, particularly if they are able to maintain their employment remotely online.