COMING FRIDAY: ‘Destination Dover’ Documentary from National File Exposes UK Government Complicity in Migrant Invasion

National File’s new documentary on the UK illegal migrant crisis, Destination Dover, presented by Jack Hadfield, will release on all platforms on Friday.

At the tail end of 2020, National File’s expert team, led by Jack Hadfield, spent days down on the south coast of England, the British equivalent to the U.S.-Mexico border, watching as government boats and illegal migrants swarm into our once green and pleasant land. Now the resulting documentary, Destination Dover, a first for National File, is set to be released on Friday.

While it’s a little larger than the Rio Grande, there are only 20 miles between Great Britain and France across the English Channel, and the journey over the waves is one that armies of invaders have taken throughout the years. From the Romans, to the Saxons, to the Normans, outsiders have dreamed about reaching the British Isles, and great generals have looked across the waters from the European continent to the island nation, but not in a millennium have any of them managed to conquer the land that lies beyond the sea.

Now, Dover has become the landing point for a new type of invasion. Just like in Texas, Arizona, California, and all over the southern United States, illegal immigrants are flooding across the English Channel, assisted by the governments of France and Britain. After landing, the migrants are greeted by a sight that Napoleon and Hitler could only dream of seeing: the storied White Cliffs of Dover.

The National File team scoured the beaches and ports to document illegal alien landings and learn the perspective of native Britons who are suffering the consequences of the globalists’ mass migration plan, and even speaking to the migrants themselves to discover how they reached the United Kingdom, and more importantly, why they wanted to make the crossing that has been impossible for almost a thousand years.

See Hadfield’s interviews regarding Destination Dover: