Mehreen Faruqi wishes she was still a Paki

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Mehreen Faruki in her homeland, Pakistan.

It is only a matter of time before Section 44 of the Australian Constitution requiring Australian politicians to renounce dual citizenship is overturned. To paraphrase the common parlance, “What is an Australian?”

Mehreen Faruqi gave up her Pakistani citizenship to stand for parliament and says it’s something no one else should have to go through.

“I filled out the form, I signed it, and I put it in my drawer. It was that hard for me to actually submit that form, ” she told the SBS Our House podcast.

The Deputy Greens leader arrived in Australia from Pakistan in 1992 with her husband and son.

She worked as a civil engineer and university lecturer in Sydney before joining the Greens in NSW Parliament a decade later.

Senator Faruqi says the process of renouncing her dual citizenship was harder than she thought it would be, and almost made her reconsider.

“As I was filling out that form, writing out the history of my family — you have to talk about your parents and your grandparents,” she said.

“I just felt as if I was being forced to give up my birthright, you know, to give up my history and my culture.”

Yes.

It’s heartbreaking, and I know exactly how she feels. When I see how my own country has been changed beyond all recognition and the definition of “Australian” has been inverted, I think about my parents and grandparents and their grandparents. I think of how they built a country which no longer exists.

Immigration is a crime against humanity. Mass immigration is a war crime. It disconnects people from their homeland, family, culture and a part of yourself.

You country is your parents, your grandparents, your entire family history stretching back in time through the generations. There is a reason the word “nation” is etymologically related to the word “natal”. A nation is an extended family. Immigration divorces you from your family.

It is incredible that the mainstream Lying Press publishes this sort of thing – a deliberate blindspot whereby immigrants are allowed to have cultural roots but we native Australians are not. Naturally, Mehreen’s story is being used to push for political change to match Australia’s demographic change:

Australia’s parliament is its most diverse yet, but there’s still an under-representation of non-Anglo and European representatives.

Critics such as Senator Faruqi believe the rules are stopping others from diverse backgrounds making the same journey into politics.

“There is absolutely no reason to have this particular law in our Constitution, Section 44 has to go,” she said.

“It actually restricts people from participating in democracy.”

We have to butcher the founding document of Australian democracy in order to save Australian democracy.

The Cultural Marxist left knows it has an opportunity to accelerate its interests, and given the plans for a referendum on the so-called “voice to parliament”, it is clear it has its sights set firmly on the Constitution. Liberals are using immigrant identity politics and aboriginal identity politics as a pretext for this assault.

Immigration does not enrich a nation. In pushing together different peoples with different identities and interests into the same country, it creates conflict which would not otherwise exist.

If people want to be happy they should live close to their family and honour their family. We do this by living in separate, homogenous nations whose governments represent the native people of that nation. We can then deal with each other based upon mutual respect.

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