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You’ll Never Guess Where Ireland Is Now Sourcing Its National Police

AP Photo/Shakil Adil

You probably will guess; that was rhetorical.

It’s certainly not from within Ireland. That would be racist.

Instead, the government is scouring the ranks of the Third World to import “migrant” cops for the Gardaí, the Irish national police force.

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Ireland has been stacking the ranks of its police force with non-Irish for at least twenty years, with glowing reviews of the practice parroted in the nation’s compromised media.

Via The Irish Times (emphasis added):

Maciej Makowski, or Matt as most Irish people call him, took an unusual route into the Garda.

He had little interest in becoming a police officer when arriving in Ireland from Poland in the mid-2000s…

Many other foreign nationals have followed in Makowski's footsteps since 2007. According to a Garda spokesman, as the force marks its 100th anniversary this year, there are currently members from Belarus, Brazil, Cameroon, China, England, German, India, Iran, Italy, Lithuania, Morocco, Nigeria, Pakistan, Poland, Romania, Russia, Slovakia, Slovenia, South Africa, Spain, Wales and Zimbabwe.

It would be bad enough if Ireland were recruiting from other EU countries. But instead, “migrants” from anywhere in the world who claim asylum status, per official government policy, are eligible to serve on the police force.

Via Garda.ie (emphasis added):

To join applicants must:  

(a)       be a national of a European Union Member State; or  

(b)       be a national of a European Economic Area State, the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland or the Swiss Confederation; or           

(c)       Under the International Protection Act, 2015 and in compliance with the Admissions and Appointments Regulations 2013, as amended, be (i) a refugee or a family member of such a person in relation to whom a refugee declaration is in force and continues to be in force for the entire duration of the Garda Recruit selection and admissions process or (ii) a person granted subsidiary protection or a family member of such a person in relation to whom a subsidiary protection declaration is in force and continues to be in force for the entire duration of the Garda Recruit selection and admissions process;

But it actually gets worse than just granting police powers to migrants from Zimbabwe or Morocco; the Irish Gardai are going out of their way to court “migrants” who aren’t even currently in Ireland, advertising on Pakistani television with a translator.

Via European Commission (emphasis added):

A new recruitment campaign for An Garda Síochána (the Irish police) has been announced, which particularly encourages applications from migrant and ethnic minority candidates. Statistics, albeit incomplete, from the last recruitment drive in 2019 suggest that 9% of applicants then were from minority backgrounds, which was a significant increase from only 2.3% in 2014. Although the number of such recruits is increasing, ethnic minority groups remain underrepresented within Irish police forces: in 2017, only 63 of 13 376 Gardaí (police officers) came from non-Irish backgrounds, according to data from the Garda Representative Association (GRA). The same data shows that there is currently no member with African or Caribbean origin.   

A key obstacle to increasing ethnic minority representation in the police forces in Ireland is age limit, with many of those expressing an interest in joining the forces being over the cut-off age of 35. Another obstacle is legal status: those with precarious immigration status or residing in the country on a time limited visa cannot apply. A more significant barrier, however, is the common practice by police officers of ethnic profiling - mostly of young men. These practices are straining trust in the police on the part of those young men who might otherwise be interested in applying.  

The Gardaí has teamed up with the Immigrant Council of Ireland to spread the word via information sessions on joining the police for people of minority backgrounds. Both in-person and online events are planned.

This is so crazy that I found it difficult to believe at first. But it makes sense, given that the Irish have been some of the most vocal opponents of this global project of ethnic cleansing in the West, spearheaded by offshore interests like international NGOs with a pathological hatred of everything Western.

It should enrage anyone that this is going on in any Western country, particularly Ireland, which has no history of colonialism that is typically used to appeal to white guilt and justify these social engineering projects.

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