McNary Kurt - Peter Schweizer Reflection On The Invisible Coup
Peter Schweizer Reflection On The Invisible Coup
The Untold Power Struggle Behind Mass Migration and American Politics
McNary Kurt
Description
For years, the immigration debate in the United States has focused on what happens after migrants arrive—where they live, how they work, and how they integrate. What is rarely examined is how and why mass migration has been allowed to spiral beyond democratic control, and who benefits from that outcome.In Peter Schweizer Reflection on the Invisible Coup, Kurt McNary examines immigration not as a moral talking point, but as a political system—one shaped by elite interests, bureaucratic incentives, and global pressures that operate largely outside public scrutiny. Drawing on government data, policy records, and documented patterns of influence, McNary argues that immigration policy has drifted away from voter consent and toward permanent crisis management.This book challenges the popular narrative that today’s immigration outcomes are the result of accident or incompetence. Instead, it shows how selective enforcement, administrative maneuvering, and narrative control have combined to produce a system that serves powerful interests while leaving citizens, communities, and legal immigrants with little say.McNary explores how immigration has become a tool in broader political struggles—reshaping labor markets, influencing elections, straining institutions, and fueling polarization—while meaningful reform remains elusive. He also examines the role of foreign governments, international advocacy networks, and global economic forces that quietly shape migration flows and policy responses.Urgent but evidence-driven, Peter Schweizer Reflection on the Invisible Coup does not argue against immigrants as people. It argues for democratic accountability. By separating policy from emotion and slogans from facts, this book asks a basic but neglected question: can a nation remain self-governing if major population and policy changes occur without transparent debate or durable consent?For readers concerned about sovereignty, governance, and the future of democratic decision-making, this book offers a clear-eyed examination of one of the most consequential issues of our time—and a case for restoring control through transparency, lawful enforcement, and accountable institutions.
