The New German Government, More of the Same Great Replacement, By Richard Miller (London)

It's a cold, gray morning in Berlin, the kind where the sky seems to press down on the city like a lid on a boiling pot. I am here on business flying in from the even more depressing London. I sit at my desk, scrolling through the digital detritus of the internet, when a headline from Jihad Watch stops me dead: "Germany: New 'conservative' government won't close borders, will fly in thousands of Afghan Muslims." The words hit like a slap, not because they're surprising, but because they're so depressingly predictable. Here we are, in 2025, watching Germany—or what's left of it—double down on a decades-long experiment in self-destruction. The so-called conservatives, led by Friedrich Merz of the CDU, have taken the reins, promising a break from the Merkel-era madness. And yet, what's their first act? Not securing the borders, not protecting the citizens who've borne the brunt of unchecked migration, but chartering taxpayer-funded flights to haul in 3,500 Afghans from Pakistan. It's a scene so absurd it could be satire, except the punchline is a nation on life support.

I dig deeper, cross-referencing the story with other corners of the web. Remix News confirms the logistics: these Afghans will land in Berlin, Leipzig, and Hannover, conveniently timed for a week after the election—too late for voters to realize they've been duped again. The Foreign Ministry, still clinging to the Green Party's utopian delusions under Annalena Baerbock, shrugs it off as a "logistical" necessity. Logistical, sure—like scheduling your own funeral. Natural News piles on with the grim stats: over a quarter-million Afghans already in Germany since the 2015-16 crisis, a community with a crime rate dwarfing that of native Germans—7.8 percent for serious offenses versus 0.002 percent for citizens. Only one in four has a job. And yet, here comes Merz, the "conservative," not just refusing to stop the bleed but opening the wound wider.

I lean back, staring at the screen, the absurdity sinking in. This isn't conservatism—it's surrender with extra steps. Posts on X echo the sentiment, raw and unfiltered: "Germany has chosen national suicide," one user writes, quoting the Jihad Watch piece. Another calls it "horrific," a slow-motion catastrophe unfolding before our eyes. They're not wrong. I think back to the promises Merz made, the tough talk on migration after that Afghan asylum seeker stabbed kids in Aschaffenburg. Reuters reported his pledge to crack down, to close the borders, to lean on the far-right AfD if needed. It sounded like a lifeline, a flicker of sanity in a country drowning in guilt and naivety. But now? The mask is off. The CDU's "new" government is just Merkel 2.0, a sequel no one asked for, with the same plot: flood the nation with people who don't integrate, don't work, and—too often—don't respect the culture that took them in.


The internet's memory is long, and it doesn't forgive. I pull up older Jihad Watch stories—Afghan migrants attacking a gay pride parade, a judge praising a rapist as "well-integrated," a mayor shutting down migrant homes after they harassed elderly women at a funeral. These aren't outliers; they're patterns. The Diplomat notes the fear among Afghans already in Germany, worried about deportation under a rising AfD. Good—let them worry. If you've got no job, a rap sheet, and a grudge against the West, maybe you don't belong in a country that's already buckling under the weight of its generosity. But Merz isn't deporting anyone. He's flying in more, as if the solution to a broken system is to break it harder.

I sip my coffee, now cold, and wonder how it got this bad. The establishment narrative—pushed by the likes of DW and the BBC—keeps insisting Germans want this, that 68 percent oppose mass immigration but somehow keep voting for it. Bs!. The numbers don't add up, and neither does the logic. The CDU's dip in the polls after Merz's border stunt, as Reuters noted, proves people aren't as dumb as the elites think. They see the terror attacks—like the ones in Munich and Aschaffenburg—linked to Afghans who shouldn't have been here. They see the unemployment, the strain on schools and hospitals, the no-go zones sprouting like weeds. And they see a government that doesn't care, that's more afraid of being called racist than of letting its people die.

This isn't about compassion anymore—it's about control. The globalists, the Greens, the guilt-ridden post-war generation—they've turned Germany into a petri dish for their borderless fantasy. Merz was supposed to be the antidote, but he's just another symptom. Flying in thousands of Afghans isn't a policy; it's a middle finger to every German who thought their vote might matter. I close my laptop, the screen's glow fading, and stare out at the gray Berlin sky. The pot's boiling over now, and no one's turning down the heat. Germany's atonement for its past is complete, alright—not with redemption, but with erasure. It is the Great Replacement, German style!

https://jihadwatch.org/2025/02/germany-new-conservative-government-wont-close-borders-will-fly-in-thousands-of-afghan-muslims

 

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Friday, 04 April 2025

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