Yeah demographics. That's why the term demographics is mentioned on page one 15X's.
Make no mistake, this is a heavy hand for democrats for states to go from red to blue. And no! This ain't in our best interest. Your democrat leaders have been discussing this for years. This is where all the illegal immigration, illegal aliens, undocumented immigrants, sanctuary city, sanctuary states etc... come into play. Basically if you can control or navigate the demographics, then the vote can easily be in your favor. They'll get a steady unrelenting stream of votes (from illegal aliens) and it'll never end. While we get the blunt force of how these illegals act. Basically, getting treated the same way they treat blacks back in they homeland. You've already seen them protesters in D.C. and how they had to get on the bullhorn to get them illegals off of that construction site. That thread ya'll recently made did about 10 pages. That's your future thanks to demographics, diversity, etc.. It's interesting how you dudes didn't post the leaders (both democrat) which are the governor and mayor and how they support those people. Your idolatry for democrats/blue will be the demise of you.
Next.....
https://www.thecoli.com/threads/pro...their-jobs-getting-lower-wages.812219/page-10
Protesters In DC Tell Mexican Workers To Stop Stealing Their Jobs... Getting Lower Wages
Here’s Why Democrats Suddenly Feel Confident They Can Turn Texas Blue
Here’s Why Democrats Suddenly Feel Confident They Can Turn Texas Blue
TOPLINE
A tired adage in politics is that at some point soon, demographic changes will turn Texas — a state that hasn’t voted for a Democratic presidential candidate since Jimmy Carter in 1976 — blue, though several indicators suddenly have Democrats feeling increasingly optimistic that time could be soon.
How Houston has become the most diverse place in America
How Houston has become the most diverse place in America
The boys sprint in white and yellow uniforms down the green turf, grunting and sweating as the coach shouts from the sidelines. “
Búscalo, búscalo,” he yells in Spanish, urging the players to sprint for the ball.
“
Umusitari!” comes a voice on the sidelines — run down the line — from Biganiro Espoir, a native of the Democratic Republic of Congo.
The Margaret Long Wisdom High School soccer team hails from Central America, Mexico, Africa and points between. Its bench hums with Spanish, Kinyarwanda, Swahili and often English. But its real unifying language — soccer, played hard — is universal.