Why is it that only whites are expected to justify promoting their group interests? No other group is even asked why they do it, they just do.   The answer I've invariably gotten is that it's to ensure that the promotion of our group's interest is within certain boundaries, to prevent us from "writing a blank check" as it were with which we can later justify anything. It's to ask, "where does it end" in a sense.   However nobody ever asks where this integration project ends. When does flooding white nations with outsiders end? When does forced association end? While it is never presented as starkly as "White people having their own nations is racist, white people having their own communities is racist" that is in fact the effect when there is no limit to the logic of restorative justice. The logic that whites benefit unfairly from some nebulous abstraction we call "whiteness", to further pathologize white behavior, and that justifies pursuing this third worldist agenda simply has no natural end.   The reality though is far more prosaic. Whites make the nicest nations, with the most humanistic laws, so people want to move to these nations. And because they advocate for themselves collectively they inevitably feel they have the right to these nations as they rarely tolerate any restriction to their entrance, it would be a blow to their pride because it would mean the interests/wishes of the nation is fewer of them. That reminds them this nice place isn't their's. Even further some acknowledge this is to at the expense of white people but simply embrace that as activists for their own communities. They know whites asserting their interests would terminate a favorable situation for their group so they buy into the memeplex whose sole purpose is the marginalization of white interests but particularly the intersectional marginalization of heterosexual white men. Because those men are the protectors of their group and most forthright in asserting said interests.   http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/james-di-fiore/black-lives-matter-toronto-yusra-khogali_b_14635896.html