Rep. Brandon Gill Highlights Low-Trust “Infinity Thirdworlders” As Central To Welfare Fraud Scams

Gill

Rep. Brandon Gill pointed out the elephant in the room during a Republican Study Committee anti-fraud roundtable that he hosted Thursday – the propensity for foreigners from low-trust third world societies to engage in low-trust third world behavior.

In a video the congressman posted to his social media account Thursday, he can be seen saying “A lot of this is being done by foreigners.”

Gill posited that first world welfare programs are incompatible with third world people.

“When you bring in infinity third worlders into American society from low-trust countries, you kind of expect low-trust behavior,” he said.

“This is really the kind of stuff that the American people are sick of,” Gill said.

The full video can be seen here:

First world nations have historically offered great wealth for those willing to put in the work for it through a job. The notion of tax-funded welfare programs work when there is ample money to fund them, but low incentive to use them – when only the very poorest rely on them to survive, but the aid they receive is much lower than compensation from working.

Due to thirdworlders’ extremely low bar of acceptable wealth, welfare not only satiates them but provides ample reason to not become productive members of the working class.

Additionally, welfare programs, as Gill pointed out, are being fraudulently taken advantage of and even paying out large sums of money to unproductive and unqualified individuals instead of providing basic assistance to those in need.

“Investigators have found a large underworld of fraud in Minnesota’s welfare programs. In one scandal, 57 people were convicted of stealing benefits from a children’s food program. In another scandal, investigators allege that Medicaid programs for housing, autism and assisted living have been looted. A third scandal is the apparent widespread fraud in daycare programs, as profiled by a YouTuber,” the CATO Institute said in February.

Low-trust nationalities (such as those from the third world) require a higher level of government supervision and control to prevent a breakdown of societal functionality. When released into a high-trust society without the same guardrails and controls they naturally take advantage of the freedoms their society never earned.

One of the more viral examples of this phenomenon in recent years was the able-bodied Indian use of wheelchairs at airports.


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