Germany’s Great Replacement, but After the Election! By Richard Miller (Londonistan)

The article from American Renaissanceentitled "German Government Plans to Fly in Thousands of Migrants After the Election at Taxpayers' Expense,"

https://www.amren.com/news/2025/02/german-government-plans-to-fly-in-thousands-of-migrants-after-the-election-at-taxpayers-expense/

carries a tone of deep frustration and sorrow over a perceived betrayal unfolding in Germany. It paints a picture of a nation reeling from a recent election on February 23, where the conservative Christian Democratic Union (CDU), led by Friedrich Merz, emerged victorious with promises of tougher border controls. Yet, just days after the vote, the first of many planned flights landed in Berlin on February 25, bringing 155 Afghan migrants—a move that feels like a gut punch to those who hoped for a shift in policy. The piece laments how this resumption of migrant airlifts, paused before the election amid public outcry over violent crimes, seems to mock the very voters who turned out in record numbers, yearning for security and change.

There's a palpable sense of loss here, a mourning for a Germany that many feel is slipping away under the weight of decisions made far from their control. The article highlights the financial burden—tens of thousands of Afghans flown in since 2021 at taxpayer expense—and the social strain, nodding to warnings from scholars like Susanne Schröter about rising crime linked to these arrivals. For those who supported Merz's rhetoric of border enforcement, the sight of planes touching down so soon after the election must sting bitterly, a reminder of promises unkept. The piece suggests a government playing a cruel game: halting flights before the vote to appease an angry populace, only to restart them once the ballots were cast, leaving citizens to foot the bill and bear the consequences.


This isn't just about policy—it's about trust shattered. The sympathy lies with those who feel duped, who voted for a vision of stability only to see the same patterns of mass migration resume unabated. The article captures their exhaustion, their fear of a future where their voices don't matter, and their country changes in ways they can't stop. Whether one agrees with the stark framing, the emotion is raw: a people grappling with a sense of powerlessness as planes land and the costs—both monetary and cultural—pile up, all while the leaders they chose seem to turn away.

I am reminded of the Charlie Brown cartoons, where Lucy promises to hold the football while Charlie takes a kick, but she always pulls the ball away so Charlie falls flat on his back. Charlie does not seem to ever learn, being eternally trusting. That is the way of national suicide as the mainstream cannot be trusted under any circumstances. This same problem applies to Australia as well, and the US is one of the few countries to begin to break the "black magic" spell.

https://www.amren.com/news/2025/02/german-government-plans-to-fly-in-thousands-of-migrants-after-the-election-at-taxpayers-expense/

"Afghans will be flown in right after the election by the thousands and land in Berlin, Leipzig, and Hannover in taxpayer-funded charter flights.

The Afghans were supposed to actually have been flown in before the election, but after the terror attacks carried out by Afghans in Aschaffenburg against a daycare group and against the Verdi demonstration in Munich, the government decided to push the flights back until after the vote. Now, a total of 3,500 Afghans will arrive a week after the election takes place.

The news was announced by the Foreign Ministry led by Green Party politician Annalena Baerbock, who said this was due to logistical reasons. However, the NGOs have accused the government of caving to public pressure due to the terror attacks and pressure from the right.

The migrants have already been transported to Pakistan, where they are safe. Accommodation and other support for the migrants is expected to reach into the millions of euros in costs.

The German government had originally promised Pakistan that the Afghans would only be in the country until March 31, as Pakistan wants to get rid of them and has already embarked on a nationwide deportation crackdown on Afghans. Some of the Afghans who were supposed to leave for Germany have already been sent back to Afghanistan. However, the German government has faced logistical issues due to the sheer number of flights required and is unable to meet its own deadline.

So far, 36,000 Afghans have already been flown into Germany over the past three and a half years. These Afghans allegedly supported the Bundeswehr, the German air force, until it withdrew in June 2021. The German embassy in Pakistan sparked a scandal when it said it received pressure from Baerbock's Foreign Office to issue visas to Afghans with forged papers, with prosecutors in Berlin and Cottbus still investigating.

The left-liberal government is trying to draw attention away from the thousands more Afghans expected to arrive in the country and is even trying to organize a deportation flight to Afghanistan before the election as a sort of "show of force." The only time a previous deportation was carried out in such a manner was in August 2024, which garnered great publicity and media coverage just before the state elections in Saxony, Thuringia and Brandenburg. Only 24 Afghans were loaded on the plane.

As already reported by Remix News, it is not just high-profile terror attacks. Afghans have some of the highest rates of criminality and poor integration in the country overall, and have been responsible for numerous assaults, rapes, and even murders. This group also features extremely high rates of unemployment. 

 

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Monday, 31 March 2025

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