Migration's Silent Siege: Worse Than Bullets? Hungary's Warning and the Demographic Doomsday, By Richard Miller (Londonistan)

At the UN's gleaming halls in New York, where diplomats sip fair-trade lattes and pontificate on peace, Hungary's Péter Szijjártó dropped a truth bomb that echoed like a border fence slamming shut. "Migration waves provide an opportunity for people with bad intentions, including terrorists, to move freely and unhindered," he declared on September 23, 2025, during a terrorism summit. No attacks on Hungarian soil in years, he boasted, while open-door neighbours like Germany and France reel from jihadist stabs and rammings. It's a stark flex: Hungary's ironclad policy, fences, pushbacks, zero tolerance, works. But thetwist cuts deeper: Arguably, mass migration's slow-burn havoc trumps terrorism's flash-bangs. Terror snuffs lives in bursts; unchecked inflows torch life-years via housing hell, delaying families, cratering birth-rates, and birthing a "passive genocide" of native futures. Bold? Yes. Backed by data? Let's unpack Szijjártó's salvo, tally the terror toll, and weigh the grim calculus, because if bombs kill bodies, borders-killing demographics doom dynasties.

Hungary's foreign minister didn't mince words: Terrorism's "greater than ever," fuelled by global wars and the migrant tsunamis they spawn. Budapest's frontline, migrants storming fences, sometimes violently, makes it a lab rat for Europe's experiment in openness. Result? Zero major attacks since the 2015 Bataclan echoes faded elsewhere. Contrast: France tallied 14 jihadist-linked incidents in 2024 alone; Germany six, per Europol's 2025 TE-SAT report. Italy led with 20, but Hungary? A lone Right-wing arrest, no explosions.

Szijjártó's maths: 3,495 global attacks in 2024, 99% of Germany's serious cases Islamist-fuelled. A 2023 Insa poll? 71.1% of Germans peg Muslim-majority inflows as a "security risk." Post-Magdeburg Christmas market ramming (six dead, 299 hurt, December 2024) and Aschaffenburg toddler stabbing (January 2025), that sentiment's no surprise. Hungary's stance: No policy pivot under pressure, efficacy over empathy. Critics cry xenophobia; Szijjártó counters with stats: Open borders = open season for bad actors.

X lit up post-speech: "Szijjártó nails it — migration's Trojan horse for terror," one thread fumed, linking to Europol's jihadist arrest spike (405 in 2024, mostly male, young). Fair? Terrorism's a migration multiplier; studies show attacks catalyse outflows, but inflows embed threats. Hungary's fence? A firewall.

Szijjártó's right, Europe's bleeding. Europol: 58 EU attacks in 2024 (down from 120 in 2023), 34 completed, 449 arrests. France: 14 hits, echoing 2015's 130 dead. Germany: Six, plus foiled plots (99% Islamist). Casualties? Dozens yearly, Magdeburg's six, Bielefeld's five stabbings (May 2025, Syrian perp with Islamist ties).

But zoom out: Terrorism's lethality is episodic. Global 2024: 3,495 incidents, yet deaths under 10,000, harrowing, but dwarfed by cancer (10M) or roads (1.2M). In Europe, jihadists caused 12 injuries, six deaths in 2023. Life-years lost? Finite, a 30-year-old's bomb death: ~50 years. Multiply by victims: Thousands annually. Acute agony, yes; but contained.

Enter the scalpel: Mass migration's "passive genocide," not machetes, but mortgages. Terrorism kills outright; inflows inflate housing, delaying homes, kids, legacies. Data screams yes.

UK's fertility freefall: 1.41 births/woman (2024, record low), down 18.8% since 2010, G7's steepest plunge. Why? Housing hell: Average price £268k, London £669k; rents £1,365/month (Rightmove, July 2025). Young renters (under 35 homeownership: 38%, down from 59% in 2000) cite costs as top barrier to babies, 49% delay/forego kids. Ipsos: 30% blame childcare/housing; Westminster schools merged (June 2025) over birth bust.

Migration's hand? Net inflows (745k, 2024) swell demand without supply, prices up 70% vs. incomes. Studies: 1% immigration hike lifts rents/homes 1% (Saiz, 2007); UK lost 157k births (1996-2014) to costs. Globally: 3B face shortages by 2030; migrants compete, spiking tensions. Australia: Investor tax breaks + migration = affordability nosedive.

Life-years calculus: Delayed first birth by 3-4 years (expensive markets) = fewer kids, smaller families. A millennial's 40-year delay? 20-30 lost reproductive years. Scale to millions: Billions in "stolen" futures. Economic hit? Shrinking workforce funds boomers, UK ratio workers/dependents plummets. Passive genocide? Yes: Native lineages snuffed by spreadsheets, not shrapnel.

Terrorism shocks, Bataclan's 130 haunt. But migration's the marathon menace: 1% inflow = 3.3% price spike (Spain study). UK: 49% childless by choice/cost; Reddit rants: "Immigration jacks prices, kills fertility — ironic 'fix' for low births." Global echo: U.S. immigrants added $3.7T housing wealth (1970-2010), but recent surges exacerbate shortages. Hungary's hedge: Strict caps preserve affordability, births (1.6, stable).

Critics: Migrants fill jobs, build homes. But net cost: Demand outpaces supply, pricing youth out of progeny. Passive genocide? It's cultural self-sabotage, natives edged to extinction by policy paralysis.

Szijjártó's UN mic-drop validates Hungary's holdout: Borders blunt terror's blade. But the criticism's deeper cut — migration as demographic dynamite — rings truer still. Terrorism scars; inflows sterilise societies, one unaffordable flat at a time. Life-years lost to cramped rentals dwarf bomb blasts. Solution? Hungary's blueprint: Caps, fences, integration iron fists. Ditch DEI dreams for build-baby-build, vouchers, tax tweaks, migration moratoriums till homes abound. X consensus: "Migration's the real bomb — ticking on fertility."

Terror's the spark; migration the inferno. Hungary's yelling from the ramparts — will we listen, or let the slow bleed win?

https://rmx.news/hungary/migration-leads-to-terrorism-says-hungarys-foreign-minister/

"Migration leads to terrorism, says Hungary's foreign minister

"Migration waves provide an opportunity for people with bad intentions, including terrorists, to move freely and unhindered," Péter Szijjártó said at a UN meeting

Hungary's foreign minister made the connection between mass immigration and terrorism while speaking in New York on Tuesday at the United Nations headquarters.

"The Hungarian government is not willing to change its migration policy due to any kind of pressure, as the measures are effective, and keeping illegal immigrants out is the right way," said Minister of Foreign Affairs and Trade Szijjártó .

According to a statement from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade, reports Szijjártó's comments came during a meeting on the fight against terrorism at the UN, writes Hungarian news outlet Hirado.

The threat of terrorism is greater than ever before, he said, with wars around the world and the resulting waves of migration largely contributing to the dangerous times we live in.

Notably, Hungary has not suffered any terror attacks in recent years, whereas countries that have welcomed mass immigration, such as Germany and France, have suffered from serious attacks for years. In both countries, investigators have also actively foiled a wide variety of attacks, with the vast majority perpetrated by Islamic extremists.

In fact, for the most recent half-year data from Germany, it was found that 99 percent of serious terror cases were perpetrated by radical Islamists.

There were 3,495 terrorist attacks in the world last year, Szijjártó underlined, also noting that Hungary sits on the frontline of illegal migration, with migrants often trying to force their way into the country, sometimes violently.

"Terrorism is usually one of the main reasons why people leave their homes. Migration waves provide an opportunity for people with bad intentions, including terrorists, to move freely and unhindered between different parts of the world," he said.

Hungary has long pointed to neighboring Germany, and its acceptance of mass immigration, as the primary factor driving terrorism in the country.

Germans, in particular, appear to recognize the risk. A poll from 2023 found that 71.1 percent of respondents believed immigration from Muslim countries posed a security risk for Germany. Since then, Germany has been hit with a spate of such terror attacks." 

 

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Saturday, 18 October 2025

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