Su Casa Es Mi Casa

Fiction & Literature
Cover of the book Su Casa Es Mi Casa by Frank Kyle, BookLocker.com, Inc.
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Author: Frank Kyle ISBN: 9781634909266
Publisher: BookLocker.com, Inc. Publication: February 12, 2016
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Frank Kyle
ISBN: 9781634909266
Publisher: BookLocker.com, Inc.
Publication: February 12, 2016
Imprint:
Language: English

Welcome to Darwin’s world, where the hawk kills the dove and the lion eats the gazelle, where the strong destroys the weak, and the keen-witted defeats the dull-witted. Most people think of illegal immigration as a result of various failures—political, moral, or economic. Yet, more fundamentally it is simply a mechanism of survival—survival of the fittest, those whose numbers increase and eventually dominate an environment.

Immigration is a problem only for those who are displaced by the growing numbers of intruding groups. Naturalistically, migration is what species do—expand, dominate, and conquer in order to survive. It is simply the way of life. Immigrants flee overpopulated environments having insufficient economic, natural, or residential resources and invade environments having surpluses of these resources. Or they flee hostile environments and migrate to those that are safer and more hospitable. When invading groups encounter the inhabitants of an invaded environment, conflict occurs if the invasion means displacement and competition for the native population.

When Europe’s populations were trapped in poverty and hopelessness or were the victims of persecution, Europeans migrated to other regions of the world. Some migrated to North America, where they destroyed or displaced the indigenous peoples. Today, populations are once again on the move in large numbers. Muslims are abandoning their failed societies and migrating to the successful societies of Europe.

Migrant populations are hardy, desperate, ingenious, hardworking, and aggressive. Resident populations are often complacent and welcoming, thus often caught unaware. When the resident population believes its culture and economy are threatened, the relationship between the two groups becomes adversarial.

Possible outcomes are one side wins and the other loses, assimilation occurs, or both sides remain in a continuing state of conflict. Su Casa Es Mi Casa offers a droll, surreal microcosmic depiction of the conflict. The invaders and invaded are two families. The setting is not a nation but a single suburban home. The outcome is not one of assimilation but winner takes all.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Welcome to Darwin’s world, where the hawk kills the dove and the lion eats the gazelle, where the strong destroys the weak, and the keen-witted defeats the dull-witted. Most people think of illegal immigration as a result of various failures—political, moral, or economic. Yet, more fundamentally it is simply a mechanism of survival—survival of the fittest, those whose numbers increase and eventually dominate an environment.

Immigration is a problem only for those who are displaced by the growing numbers of intruding groups. Naturalistically, migration is what species do—expand, dominate, and conquer in order to survive. It is simply the way of life. Immigrants flee overpopulated environments having insufficient economic, natural, or residential resources and invade environments having surpluses of these resources. Or they flee hostile environments and migrate to those that are safer and more hospitable. When invading groups encounter the inhabitants of an invaded environment, conflict occurs if the invasion means displacement and competition for the native population.

When Europe’s populations were trapped in poverty and hopelessness or were the victims of persecution, Europeans migrated to other regions of the world. Some migrated to North America, where they destroyed or displaced the indigenous peoples. Today, populations are once again on the move in large numbers. Muslims are abandoning their failed societies and migrating to the successful societies of Europe.

Migrant populations are hardy, desperate, ingenious, hardworking, and aggressive. Resident populations are often complacent and welcoming, thus often caught unaware. When the resident population believes its culture and economy are threatened, the relationship between the two groups becomes adversarial.

Possible outcomes are one side wins and the other loses, assimilation occurs, or both sides remain in a continuing state of conflict. Su Casa Es Mi Casa offers a droll, surreal microcosmic depiction of the conflict. The invaders and invaded are two families. The setting is not a nation but a single suburban home. The outcome is not one of assimilation but winner takes all.

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