Mass Immigration and Cultural Clash: Europe’s Path to Subjugation, By Richard Miller (Londonistan)
Europe is at a crossroads, and the warning signs are flashing red. In his op-ed for Israel National News (July 16, 2025), Giulio Meotti argues that mass immigration, particularly from Muslim-majority countries, is paving the way for Europe's cultural subjugation under an Islamic caliphate. While some frame this as a free speech issue, the real threat lies in unchecked immigration and the cultural differences of migrants who reject Western values. Demonstrations in Berlin and Hamburg, where Islamists openly call for a theocracy, expose a grim reality: Europe's open-door policies and failure to assimilate migrants are eroding its cultural foundations. This blog piece defends Meotti's view, arguing that mass immigration, combined with incompatible cultural values, risks transforming Europe into a shadow of its former self.
The Immigration Crisis: Numbers and Impact
Meotti highlights a stark truth: Europe's demographic landscape is shifting irreversibly due to high immigration and differing birth rates. Since 2015, Europe has absorbed millions of migrants, many from Muslim-majority countries in the Middle East and Africa. Germany alone took in over 1.5 million migrants between 2015 and 2020, with 2023 seeing a net migration of 1.1 million, per Eurostat. These numbers aren't just statistics, they're reshaping societies. In Germany, the fertility rate among native-born citizens is 1.4 children per woman, below replacement level, while migrant communities often have higher birth rates, projected to make Muslims 20% of Germany's population by 2050, according to Pew Research.
This demographic shift brings cultural challenges. Meotti describes Berlin and Hamburg rallies where Islamists, waving Shahada flags and calling for a caliphate, demand a theocratic system that rejects democracy, gender equality, and secular law. These aren't fringe voices, posts on X claim that migrants aim to "impose Sharia law and build their caliphate," reflect growing concern that many newcomers have no interest in assimilating. Unlike earlier waves of immigration, where integration was a shared goal, some modern migrants openly advocate values at odds with Europe's liberal traditions, creating parallel societies where Western norms are sidelined.
The heart of the issue isn't migration itself but the cultural incompatibility of certain migrant groups. Meotti points to "no-go zones" for Jews, Sharia patrols, and schools banning miniskirts to avoid "noises," signs of a cultural takeover. In Germany, reports of mass sexual assaults, like the 2015 Cologne New Year's Eve attacks involving over 1,200 women, linked to migrants from North Africa and the Middle East, shocked the public. Some X posts, claim "demographic warfare" through mass migration, amplify fears that some migrants aim to impose Islamic norms, from forced marriages to strict religious rules in schools.
These cultural differences aren't abstract. European values, individual liberty, gender equality, and secular governance, clash with theocratic ideologies that prioritise submission over freedom. Meotti cites Turkish President Erdogan's quip: "Democracy is a tram, you ride it as long as you need it and then you get off." This mindset, echoed by rallygoers in Berlin, sees Western systems as tools to exploit, not principles to embrace. When courts, as in Berlin, overturn bans on pro-caliphate demonstrations, they enable this clash, signalling weakness rather than tolerance. Europe's leaders seem to welcome an "unchecked Islamic conquest," deluded by ideals of multiculturalism.
Meotti's warning of "submission" isn't hyperbole, it's a glimpse into a future where Europe's identity erodes. In cities like Malmö, Sweden, dubbed "Nordic Gaza" by critics on X, high migrant populations correlate with rising crime and social fragmentation. A 2024 Swedish police report noted a 15% spike in violent crime in migrant-heavy areas, with "no-go zones" where police struggle to operate. In Germany, Meotti describes schools where teachers wear bulletproof vests and publishers censor books critical of Islam, fearing backlash. These aren't signs of integration but of a society bending to accommodate incompatible values.
The economic toll is equally stark. Germany's welfare system, strained by 1.3 million migrants in 2023, faces billions in costs for housing, healthcare, and benefits, per the Federal Employment Agency. Meanwhile, native taxpayers bear the burden, fuelling resentment.
Meotti's critics might argue that multiculturalism enriches Europe or that most migrants integrate peacefully. But this ignores the evidence: when significant numbers reject Western values, the social fabric frays. The Berlin caliphate rallies, protected by courts, aren't isolated incidents but symptoms of a broader failure to enforce assimilation. Unlike past immigrant groups, like Italians or Poles who embraced European norms, some modern migrants form enclaves where Sharia-like practices prevail, as seen in London's "Sharia patrols" reported by The Telegraph in 2019. This isn't diversity, it's division.
From a conservative perspective, the solution isn't xenophobia but pragmatism. Immigration must be controlled, choosing migrants who share democratic values. Europe's current approach, open borders and minimal vetting, invites chaos, as Meotti argues. The demographic math is unforgiving: without change, Europe risks becoming, as Alexander Kissler puts it, "decadent," not tolerant, a civilisation surrendering its identity.
If mass immigration continues unchecked, Europe could face:
Cultural Fragmentation: Parallel societies will grow, with enclaves operating under Sharia-like rules, eroding secular governance. Cities like Brussels, projected to be majority-Muslim by 2030, could become flashpoints.
Social Conflict: Rising tensions between native and migrant communities, as seen in 2024 riots in France, could escalate, fuelled by economic strain and cultural divides.
Political Backlash: Far-right parties, like Germany's AfD, are gaining traction, with polls showing 20% support in 2025. But can it get power in time to save Germany?
Loss of Identity: Europe's heritage, its art, laws, and freedoms, could be supplanted by a theocratic vision, as Meotti fears, where "caliphate means submission."
Giulio Meotti's warning about Islam's potential subjugation of Europe isn't alarmist,it's a wake-up call. Mass immigration, when paired with cultural differences that reject Western values, threatens to unravel Europe's social fabric. Berlin's caliphate rallies, rising crime, and "no-go zones" are symptoms of a deeper failure to control borders and enforce integration. For conservatives, this isn't about hate but survival, preserving the freedoms and culture that define Europe. If leaders don't act, the continent risks becoming a cautionary tale of a civilisation that welcomed its own demise.
https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/411518
How Islam will subjugate Europe
Allowing uncontrolled free speech when your enemies make use of it to advance your destruction is the epitome of idiocy. Are we witnessing the dumbing down of Europe? Opinion.
"Islamists march through the streets of Berlin, protected by the democracy they deeply despise. They call for a caliphate, they dream of a theocracy. And to all those who don't want to believe it: try holding the same demonstration with the same signs in Cairo, Baghdad, Riyadh, Amman, Beirut, or Abu Dhabi."
Ahmed Mansour captures the terrible paradox of European democracy.
Islamists call for the establishment of a caliphate during the demonstration in Berlin.
Berlin police wanted to ban the demonstration, but a court overturned the ban. Caliphate supporters were then allowed, separated by gender, to call for the establishment of theocracy in Europe.
Erdogan, "the moderate," said it clearly: "Democracy is a tram, you ride it as long as you need it and then you get off." Millions of Muslims in Europe must be thinking something like this.
What happened in the German capital was tantamount to a declaration of bankruptcy for the rule of law. The grand coalition led by Friedrich Merz had promised to repress Islamic extremism. But what we are seeing is the exact opposite: a judiciary that capitulates to the Islamists and a political system that stands by while our values are trampled.
"The Caliphate is the solution," shouted the Islamists who took also the streets in Hamburg. They waved flags depicting the Shahada and raised their index fingers, the symbol of the Islamists. It's all perfectly legal. The police said that "calling for the advent of the Caliph is not a crime."
The Caliphate is no longer unstoppable in Europe, simply because population composition and birth rates have long since revealed their irreversible reality. Accelerated incredibly by high immigration, it seems unstoppable, even desired and promoted by a policy that attributes a disastrous Nazi gene to the Germans and hopes for a better East than the West.
Caliphate means submission. There are Muslims and those who convert to Islam. And Germany is already unrecognizable:
There are "no-go zones" for Jews, justices using Sharia law, schools banning miniskirts to avoid noises, muezzins calling for prayer, publishing houses censoring books critical of Islam, teachers critical of Islam forced to teach in bulletproof vests, street signs in Arabic, Sharia patrols in the streets, mass sexual assaults, attacks on those who disobey Islam in schools, a surge in forced marriages and students demanding the introduction of strict Islamic rules.
Alexander Kissler sums it up well: "A country that tolerates repeated calls for an Islamic caliphate is not tolerant, but decadent."
And we know how decadent civilizations end."
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