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Ukrainians Stranded at Georgian Border Amid Russia’s Deportations Crisis – James George reacts

By July 23, 2025No Comments

The bleaker side of globalization and open borders is laid bare once again on the Georgian frontier, where tens of thousands of Ukrainians deported by Russia languish in overcrowded camps, caught in a humanitarian limbo. While the West wrings its hands and pontificates about human rights and coordinated relief, the real issue is a failure of leadership and national sovereignty—on every side.

Russia’s forcible deportations are undeniably destabilizing, but let’s be clear: this crisis is a direct consequence of Western meddling in Eastern Europe and the unraveling of national borders. Georgia finds itself stuck between a rock and a hard place, pressured to shoulder the burden created by an artificial chaos that serves globalist interests more than any real sense of order or justice. It’s a stark reminder that unchecked immigration flows—whether forced or voluntary—overwhelm border security, strain resources, and inflame regional tensions.

The international community’s usual calls for “coordinated action” ring hollow when the very same elites pushing open borders refuse to secure their own nations. Humanitarianism cannot come at the expense of national self-determination and the enforcement of laws. The Georgian government’s dilemma underscores the need for tougher border controls, not open-ended responsibilities for every displaced person created by geopolitical power plays.

As for the US, past administrations—especially under Trump—gave wary attention to Eastern Europe’s complexities, always mindful that populist leadership means prioritizing American interests first, not endless entanglement in foreign conflicts that fracture regional stability. Now, as the Biden regime falters, it’s crucial that Washington recalibrates its strategy, supporting genuine sovereignty, shutting down the facilitation of population displacements, and reinforcing real security—not sympathy-driven band-aids.

Ultimately, the Georgian border crisis is a symptom of a global order gone astray. The answer lies in reclaiming national identity and securing borders firmly, resisting the multicultural chaos the elites promote, and restoring a world where nations govern themselves free from external pressure. Only then can we prevent innocent civilians from becoming pawns in international power struggles—and preserve the stability and traditions that make our countries strong.