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Ending Britain’s Open Door Chaos

A stark message to entitled migrants: Britain is not your free ride. It’s time to earn your keep or leave.

The UK is at a crossroads. Every day, the news echoes with more migrant arrivals, more hotel placements, more taxpayer burden, and more strain on our already stretched public services. But there’s a growing, uncomfortable truth many are too afraid to say: Britain is being taken advantage of — and enough is enough.

This isn’t about race. It’s about respect, responsibility, and national survival.

Take the case of student visas. Once intended to welcome talented learners from around the world, the system is now exploited as a backdoor route to asylum. One migrant recently admitted that he arrived on a student visa, only to apply for asylum within three months. This isn’t education — it’s manipulation.

A trusted source said they have seen it firsthand. Foreign students disrupt lectures, scrolling on phones, disrespecting professors, speaking over others in their native language, and getting friends to “clock them in” while absent. In one class, 70 were registered — but only 58 turned up. The rest? Ghosts on the system, still reaping the benefits. This is not just dishonest. It’s an insult to genuine students and to the integrity of our education system.

The Solution: Ban in-person education for overseas students unless on a scholarship. Let them study remotely through institutions like the Open University. Universities still profit, and public order is maintained.

And what about those crossing the English Channel in small boats? With entitled migrants saying “Britain must help.” No. Britain may choose to help — selectively, responsibly, and conditionally. Migrants should not have an entitled attitude and think they will be rewarded with hotels, benefits, and housing while British citizens sleep rough, wait for years on council lists, or are scared to walk their streets. British citizens come first.

Here’s what I would implement if I were Prime Minister for a single day:

Policy Proposals:

  1. No automatic housing – All asylum seekers must earn their accommodation through public works (e.g., housing, infrastructure, or farming).
  2. Tagging for accountability – Electronic tags for all new arrivals until immigration status is reviewed and verified.
  3. Biometric tracking – Implement an unremovable chip system to reduce identity fraud and monitor national security risks.
  4. No benefits for 5 years – All welfare claims are suspended until a probation period of five years is completed. (Migrant would have to earn their keep through government schemes, which would provide food, shelter, and basic money to survive).
  5. Prefab migrant villages – Set up modular, self-sufficient housing zones where asylum seekers contribute to their upkeep, (food & shelter would be provided based on working and having a basic wage).
  6. End bogus student visas – Replace in-person education with distance learning for non-essential disciplines.
  7. Five-year probation for stay – All asylum and immigration cases must undergo a second review after five years based on behaviour, contribution, and integration.
  8. Community contribution logs – Migrants must clock in and out of government-assigned jobs (digitally tracked) to maintain eligibility.
  9. Immediate deportation for committing crimes including fraud, theft, and violence – Anyone caught lying, evading tags, or committing a crime is deported within 72 hours.
  10. Enforce maximum cap – Annual limits on asylum grants to maintain manageable public service loads.

The pen is mightier than the sword, Governments need to listen to British Citizens. People are scared. Crime is rising. Streets are changing. Communities feel alienated. The silent majority are starting to speak.

This is not xenophobia. It’s common sense. And if you don’t speak up now, there may not be much left to defend tomorrow.

Conclusion – Supporting Our Own First

Downsizing immigration isn’t just about border control — it’s a direct route to budget recovery. Billions currently spent on housing, benefits, and legal processing for new arrivals could be redirected to those who need it most: disabled people, carers, veterans, and low-income families. These are the citizens who have paid into the system and deserve security, not sacrifice. Reducing immigration pressures would ease the welfare burden, shorten waiting lists, and allow the disabled community to live with dignity — free from poverty, fear, and the feeling of being pushed to the sidelines in their own country.

Further Reading:


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Andrew Jones Journalist
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Andrew Jones is a seasoned journalist renowned for his expertise in current affairs, politics, economics and health reporting. With a career spanning over two decades, he has established himself as a trusted voice in the field, providing insightful analysis and thought-provoking commentary on some of the most pressing issues of our time.

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