The following Op-Ed is reader-submitted. The author wishes to remain anonymous.
It is not with pleasure that I write this anonymous letter to the editor. I do so only because I can no longer remain silent about what I see happening around us. I am disgusted by those who loudly proclaim their commitment to women’s rights and the protection of children, yet look the other way when the victims belong to a group they openly despise: white people.
For years, we have lived in fear of simply standing up for ourselves. I noticed these patterns long before the full UK predatory entrapment inquiries were released and before multiple attempted beheadings made headlines..including October 7th when 1500 men marched into the streets of Israel and terrorized residents there…I can’t even imagine. The irony has been glaring: the same voices railing against “colonizers” and “supremacy” have pursued policies that function as exactly that …demographic replacement dressed up as a necessary debt or reparation.
Slowly, from this rhetoric, we’ve seen a mind virus circulate in which willingly signing up for your own demise is compassionate, the right thing to do, and necessary to “make up for past wrongs” of which most of the people primarily targeted today have never even lived through or participated in themselves. We have watched the “rules for thee, not for me” mindset play out again and again. I still remember posting about these glaring discrepancies in treatment in 2023, then deleting the post in terror, plagued by nightmares over the possible consequences of speaking my true feelings. It sickens me to think how many little girls and women will grow up knowing their generation was deliberately failed and displaced, all while being mocked and celebrated in the process.

We see American companies, including major CEOs, bypassing U.S.-born workers in favor of visa holders from countries like India. This is not hatred of foreigners. It is the recognition that every such hire displaces someone who played by the rules their entire life, only to be pushed aside and written off as inferior. Call it a scarcity mindset if you wish, but after a global pandemic and the looming threats of wider conflict, refusing to think about the future caste system currently being constructed behind our backs is reckless. I personally do not want to be a victim or see anyone I know’s children be victims of foreign social structures that deliberately shrink you to a preassigned strata as they are trying so hard to do right now.
Rumors of a “new world order” have circulated for decades. What was once confined to underground circles has entered mainstream conversation because the patterns are now impossible to ignore. Even pointing this out irritates those benefiting from the reshuffling. Mass immigration has long been used as a form of warfare by various regimes…a tactic seen as far back as Castro’s Cuba with the Mariel boatlift, when Cuba emptied its prisons onto Miami’s shores in April of 1980.
The term “immigration coup” refers to the core thesis of Peter Schweizer’s 2026 bestselling book, The Invisible Coup. It describes the controversial theory that mass migration is not just a humanitarian issue, but a deliberate weapon orchestrated by foreign adversaries and domestic elites to undermine U.S. sovereignty, manipulate elections, and exert strategic political influence. We were told a melting pot would benefit everyone. Instead, even many Americans of color born here are beginning to sense they, too, may be sidelined as newcomers from anywhere else receive priority in jobs, grants, housing, and accommodations.
We are pressured to bend our laws and customs for religions and cultures that demand exceptions… exceptions too often exploited (ceremonial knife, anyone? ). Preferences for certain races, ethnicities, and nationalities are written into hiring, education, and government programs, openly disadvantaging those who simply want a fair chance.
Think about how many American-born doctors spend years in medical school, accumulate massive debt, work exhausting hours, and sacrifice years of their lives to earn the right to practice medicine. Then imagine being told that some foreign-trained physicians may have access to alternative or accelerated pathways to licensure. Standards, accountability, and patient safety should always come first.
When concerns arise about fraudulent credentials or serious medical errors, the public has every right to ask hard questions. There have been reported cases across the country involving practitioners accused of misrepresenting their qualifications, as well as instances of catastrophic surgical mistakes. Closer to home, people still discuss allegations involving an OB-GYN in Chesapeake via mass sterilization of patients and other cases where a Portland, Oregon-based Dr. Ashok Muralidaran atimplanted a heart valve upside down in a 13-year-old due to having fraudulent qualifications that have shaken public confidence in medical oversight.
The overwhelming majority of physicians (whether American-trained or foreign-trained) are hardworking and ethical. But we still have the right to question the double standards in credential verification and if the system is deliberately looking the other way due to “quotas” needing to be filled.

*The Philippines is currently the country that dumps the most plastic into the ocean, with an estimated 360,000 tons of…
prove it. sounds like a fox news talking point.
Because the price of bags and straws are already worked into the price of the products you buy and the…
Why doesn’t Northampton County ban the use of plastic bags, for starters?
spot on