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Author: madysen@ewrmedia.com
Southern Border

Economic War Room host Kevin Freeman is joined by investigative author and researcher Peter Schweizer for a timely and deeply consequential conversation on how immigration systems, citizenship rules, and political participation frameworks are being exploited as tools of strategic influence against the United States.

In Episode 384, Schweizer—president of the Government Accountability Institute and author of The Invisible Coup—outlines how population movement is increasingly being treated by foreign governments and ideological networks not simply as a humanitarian phenomenon, but as a long-term instrument for political and institutional disruption.

Immigration as a Strategic Tool — Not an Accident

There is a growing distinction between organic migration and migration that is deliberately encouraged, shaped, or leveraged to destabilize a target country.

Schweizer explains how hostile actors have learned that immigration systems offer a unique strategic advantage: there is no battlefield, no missile to intercept, and no military target to strike. When legal and humanitarian systems are used as the delivery mechanism, traditional tools of national defense become largely ineffective.

This approach can generate lasting political, social, and demographic consequences that quietly reshape public safety, local governance, and national cohesion over time.

The Red–Green Axis and Civilizational Pressure

Freeman and Schweizer also explore what is often described as the “Red–Green” alliance—the tactical cooperation between revolutionary left movements and Islamist networks.

Despite sharp ideological differences, both movements share a common objective: weakening Western political institutions and cultural foundations. The explains why this alliance is widely understood by its own participants to be transactional rather than permanent, and how civilizational pressure is now being applied through migration patterns, political mobilization, and institutional engagement rather than open confrontation.

A key focus will be the use of highly organized minority voting blocs and local political structures—such as primaries, city councils, and school boards—as entry points for long-term influence.

Mexico’s Institutional and Demographic Leverage

The program also examines Mexico’s role in long-term political and cultural influence inside the United States.

Schweizer describes how migration is increasingly treated by Mexican state institutions as a strategic opportunity to maintain political connectivity with expatriate populations, expand civic engagement infrastructure inside U.S. communities, and shape public narratives through government-backed educational and media initiatives.

Special attention should be given to how these strategies affect high-impact states such as Texas, California, and Arizona—where demographic trends can directly alter statewide political outcomes.

China’s Use of Birthright Citizenship

One of the most consequential segments of the episode focuses on China’s exploitation of U.S. birthright citizenship laws.

Schweizer explains how organized birth tourism operations have enabled Chinese elites—often connected to state, military, and intelligence institutions—to secure U.S. citizenship for their children, who are then raised and educated in China under Communist Party systems.

The discussion also explores why this represents a long-term demographic and political investment, rather than a short-term legal loophole, and what it could mean for future U.S. elections and family-based immigration pathways.

Policy Gaps and Practical Countermeasures

The episode concludes with a forward-looking discussion of specific reforms needed to restore the link between citizenship, allegiance, and national sovereignty.

Among the policy solutions that will be addressed:

  • ending birth tourism practices,
  • tightening screening standards for visas and residency,
  • prohibiting political contributions from non-citizens and foreign-linked permanent residents,
  • enforcing existing restrictions on foreign political activity, and
  • strengthening congressional oversight of immigration and naturalization systems.

Freeman and Schweizer emphasize that the objective is not to end legal immigration, but to ensure that America’s immigration system remains compatible with national security, democratic integrity, and constitutional governance.

Don’t miss this episode of Economic War Room—a critical briefing on how modern geopolitical competition is increasingly being waged through law, demographics, and institutions rather than through conventional warfare.

Watch the full episode here: https://rumble.com/v75uowg-the-four-horsemen-of-the-american-apocalypse-the-yellow-horse-guest-peter-s.html?e9s=src_v1_sa%2Csrc_v1_sa_o%2Csrc_v1_ucp_a 

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