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this is a video and audio podcast. the video is here https://youtu.be/VWaZzR9zlJ8
A mass invasion doesn’t have to look like soldiers crossing a line. Sometimes it looks like paperwork, policy, and perfectly legal pathways that can be scaled by governments who think in decades, not news cycles. We pick up Peter Schweizer’s The Invisible Coup and read three passages that frame the border crisis and immigration system as a set of tools foreign powers can use against the United States, then we ask the uncomfortable follow-up: why don’t more people talk about this openly?
We walk through three case studies with very different methods and the same strategic intent. First, Cuba’s Mariel boatlift and the claim that “open arms” can be turned into a weapon of mass migration. Next, Mexico and the long-game influence strategy Schweizer calls “Reconquista,” where demographic change and political organizing become instruments of leverage. Then we get to China, birth tourism, and the “natal iceberg” problem, including how visa policy and birthright citizenship can create generational consequences for national security, security clearances, and critical industries.
From there, we zoom out to the incentives at home: cheap labor, electoral math, wage pressure, and how aligned interests can produce outcomes that look like a slow-motion transfer of power. Whether you agree with Schweizer or not, you’ll leave with sharper questions about immigration policy, border security, and what “sovereignty” means when the rules are easy to exploit. Subscribe, share this with a friend who argues about the border, and leave a review with your answer: is the border crisis a failure, or a weapon?
Key Points from the Episode:
• Peter Schweizer’s core thesis that the US is being dismantled through legal mechanisms
• The Mariel boatlift as an early example of weaponized mass migration
• The idea that strategy matters more than chaos in border outcomes
• Mexico’s alleged long-range “Reconquista” plan framed as human rights messaging
• China’s birth tourism and how visa guidance can expand birthright citizenship routes
• A “natal iceberg” warning and why investigators say it keeps growing
• The claim that domestic elites benefit from open-door incentives
• The definition of an “invisible coup” as slow structural reshaping
• Questions about whether the border crisis is failure or weapon
Other resources:
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