The Great German Replacement: A Conspiracy Unravelled, By Richard Miller (Londonistan)
Picture this: Germany, the heart of Europe, a land of bratwurst, beer, and Beethoven, is undergoing a seismic shift. Official stats from the Federal Statistical Office (Destatis) scream it loud and clear, over one in four people in Germany now has a "migration background." That's 21.2 million folks in 2024, a whopping 25.6% of the population, up from 24.7% in 2023. First-generation immigrants make up 19.4%, and second-generation kids born to two foreign parents clock in at 6.3%. Meanwhile, the native-born German population, those without any migration history, has plummeted by 734,000 to a measly 69.3%. The youth? Over a third of 20–39-year-olds are migrants or their kids. The average migrant is 38.2 years old, a full decade younger than the native 47.4. This isn't just a trend; it's a takeover.
Since 2015, 6.5 million newcomers have flooded in, Syrians, Ukrainians, Turks, you name it. Asylum seekers (31%), job seekers (23%), and family reunifiers (21%) dominate the reasons. But here's the concern: only a measly 23% came for work. So much for the "migrants fuel the economy" fairy tale pushed by the globalist elites. The real story? A demographic earthquake, shaking the foundations of German identity.
Now, let's get to the crucial part: chain migration. It's not just people moving in; it's a self-perpetuating cycle. Migrants settle, bring their families, and those families bring more families. It's like a pyramid scheme, but instead of cash, it's citizenship and influence. Since 2015, family reunification has been a massive driver, 26% of women cite it as their reason for coming. Once they're in, they're not just grilling kebabs or driving Ubers. They're voting, organising, and storming the halls of power.
Look at the Bundestag. In 2021, 11.3% of MPs had a migration background, despite 26% of the population being migrants or their kids. Underrepresented? Sure, for now. But the numbers are climbing. The left-wing Linke party already boasts 28.2% of its MPs with migrant roots. Fast-forward a decade, and with the younger, fertile migrant population (average age 38.2, remember?), they'll be calling the shots. These new parliamentarians aren't just sipping coffee in Berlin; they're pushing for looser borders, more asylum, and policies that keep the migration floodgates wide open. It's a feedback loop, an infinite regress of replacement.
Nationalists on the internet point to the "Kalergi Plan," a supposed scheme by globalist puppet masters to dilute European populations with mass migration. Named after Richard von Coudenhove-Kalergi, a 20th-century aristocrat who dreamed of a mixed-race Europe, this theory claims elites are orchestrating a demographic swap to erase national identities. Why else would politicians keep the borders porous despite public outcry? Why else would only 23% of migrants be here for jobs, while the rest strain welfare and infrastructure? Follow the money, global corporations and NGOs are raking it in, while native Germans foot the bill.
Even Chancellor Olaf Scholz, a Social Democrat, is talking tough on deportations, promising to boot out criminal migrants. Why the flip? Because the public's fed up, and the AfD's polling at historic highs. Yet, every new migrant MP pushes for more open borders, more asylum, more reunification. It's a vicious cycle: more migrants, more pro-migrant policies, more migrants. Infinite regress, anyone?
Let's cut the BS. Germany's not just diversifying, it's being remade. Native Germans, aging and shrinking, are being outpaced by a younger, growing migrant wave. By 2040, with 60% of the population projected to be elderly, who's going to hold the line? Not the native kids, there aren't enough of them. The migrant youth, already a third of the 20–39 bracket, will dominate. They'll vote, they'll govern, they'll reshape Germany in their image. And this is exactly what the shadowy elites want: a borderless, rootless Europe, easy to control.
"Germany's migrant population is surging, with new data from the Federal Statistical Office (Destatis) revealing that more than one in four people now living in the country has a migration background.
In 2024, the number of residents with an immigration background rose by 4 percent, or 873,000 people, compared to the previous year, reaching a record 21.2 million. This represents 25.6 percent of the total population, up from 24.7 percent in 2023.
The term "migration background" includes both those who have immigrated themselves (first-generation migrants) and those born in Germany to two immigrant parents (second-generation). Nearly 16.1 million people — 19.4 percent of the population — were immigrants themselves, while an additional 5.2 million, or 6.3 percent, were born in Germany to two foreign-born parents.
In contrast, the native-born population without any migration history fell by 1 percent (734,000 people) to 57.4 million, now comprising 69.3 percent of the country.
The youth of Germany's migrant population stands out. Among people aged 20 to 39, more than one in three (34 percent) had a migration background in 2024. Among those over 65, that figure drops to 14 percent. The average age of someone with a migration background is 38.2 years, nearly a decade younger than those without one, who average 47.4 years. Those with only one immigrant parent had the youngest average age of all groups at 25.1.
Migration since 2015 has played a major role in these shifts, with nearly 6.5 million people living in Germany in 2024 immigrating after 2015.
Between 2015 and 2021, the largest groups came from Syria (716,000), Romania (300,000), and Poland (230,000). From 2022 to 2024, Ukraine dominated the figures, with 843,000 arrivals, followed by Syria (124,000) and Turkey (112,000).
The main reasons cited for migrating to Germany since 2015 were to seek asylum (31 percent), employment (23 percent), and family reunification (21 percent). Among women, family reunification was especially significant, cited by 26 percent alongside 30 percent who cited flight. Among men, 32 percent cited flight and 28 percent employment.
The new figures confirm that Germany's migrant population is growing rapidly, leading to demographic pressures and concerns over integration.
Furthermore, the common claim among left-wing politicians that migration is fuelling Germany's workforce does not stand up to scrutiny, with fewer than a quarter of newcomers citing employment as their reason for the move."
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