Europe has fallen: Due to state-tolerated and promoted illegal mass migration, almost one in five people will be born abroad by 2025.
- peterfreitageos
- Nov 1, 2025
- 7 min read
On February 14, 2025, US Vice President JD Vance used the 61st Munich Security Conference (MSC) – an event from which populist left- and right-wing parties were excluded – to address Europe's departure from certain democratic principles. His speech met with little approval in the hall, and the majority of leading media outlets in Europe reacted with open rejection.
This is hardly surprising, since attempts are being made to publicly sell precisely those issues that deeply affect the core of democracy as necessary safeguards. Thus, an electoral coup in Romania is not scandalized, but rather staged as a victory against the right. What would have been a warning sign in the past is now done for the common good, and when Brussels announces it will block social networks in the event of unrest, no one objects.
In a world full of risks, silent prayer is high on the list of dangers. In England, silent prayer within earshot of an abortion clinic is enough for a conviction, as a 51-year-old veteran experienced when he prayed for his unborn son, whom he and his former partner had aborted. In October 2024, Scotland warned its citizens living in "safe access" zones that even silent prayer in one's own living room could lead to legal proceedings. This is not satire. This is reality.
“In Britain and across Europe, I fear, freedom of expression is in retreat,” says Vance, pointing to similar developments in the US, where the Biden administration forced social media platforms to censor so-called “misinformation.” This included, among other things, the claim that the coronavirus originated in a Chinese laboratory—a conspiracy theory that has since proven to be an obvious fact.
By 2025, almost one in five people in Europe will have been born abroad.
Never before have so many people from predominantly Muslim regions lived in Europe. JD Vance calls mass immigration the most pressing issue of our time and asks the MSC attendees how many more acts of violence it will take before Europe finally changes course.
“Europe has fallen,” reads the headline of Sky News Australia on July 15, 2025.
While Europe is still trying to calm itself down, Australian media from the other side of the world are providing a more precise analysis. Sky News Australia names the causes of the unrest in Spain, France, and England without embellishment and paints a picture of a continent being overwhelmed by uncontrolled migration.
Since last year, a systemic failure has been intensifying in England. One of the most prominent cases involves Lucy Connolly. The mother of a young girl reacted in July 2024 with an angry online post to the knife attack at a dance studio in Southport, in which three girls aged 6, 7, and 9 were killed. Lucy called online for immediate mass deportations and wrote that hotels housing migrants should be set on fire.
Lucy's story doesn't begin with the inhumane letter, but in 2011. Her 19-month-old son, Harry, was sent home from the hospital despite his pleas. The next morning, Lucy found her baby boy dead in his crib. A hospital investigation revealed that crucial measures had not been taken. The coroner documented a series of catastrophic failures by the hospital. To this day, no one has been held accountable.
This woman knows exactly what the parents of the three girls are going through. She has felt that sense of loss herself. She has endured the lingering horror when parents have to bury their little daughters because a system has actively capitulated. She knows the world's silence after the cry.
Lucy is not a racist. She is desperate. Four hours after the post went online, she deleted it.
Nevertheless, the justice system took action: 31 months in prison for a woman who had never been in conflict with the law before.
Demonstration of power by the state
Instead of addressing the root causes, the British government is shirking its responsibility by transforming the justice system into a disciplinary machine. Social work, therapy, and courses are being replaced by harsh prison sentences, the likes of which England has never seen before.
Lucy is not an isolated case. The Times reports 30 arrests per day for social media posts whose content is interpreted as hate speech. These certainly include right-wing extremists, but far more are people like Lucy Connolly, expressing their growing feeling of losing their country and being condemned to watch (or serving time in prison).
In July 2024 , a father with no prior criminal record also reacted online to the brutal murder of the three little girls in Southport . He was sentenced to 28 months in prison. His posts read: “We must protest. Nothing more. At the Dasbery Hotel ( accommodation for asylum seekers ).” He later added: “We must march to the Dasbery with torches and pitchforks.”
Such posts shouldn't be online. Nevertheless, they reveal how helpless people feel these days. These posts reflect the feeling of no longer being safe in one's own country. Many see the fact that Muhammad is the most common first name for newborns as a symbol of political failure. And the fact that law-abiding citizens are being placed in high-security prisons where 80% of the inmates are Black and Asian is a strange coincidence.
A recently introduced law in England places the debate about grooming gangs under the general suspicion of Islamophobia . It doesn't concern the dissemination of hatred or violence at all. The issue is that even discussing grooming gangs is considered racist and Islamophobic .
This is a lot to take in. In England, it's now a crime to speak about groups of Muslim men who abuse white children. The Rotherham case shows how far the government is willing to go in defending its current course: over 1,400 mostly white children were victims of organized abuse networks over a period of 15 years. Police officers mocked the victims, a social worker arranged a forced marriage between a minor victim and her abuser, and fathers were arrested for trying to get their daughters back.
Is this still tolerance, or is it simply indifference towards one's own population?
Laws like these fuel social division. Anyone who witnesses rape, robbery, and humiliation in their own country will eventually fight back. You don't have to be a racist to do that. Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez seems to disagree.

"Racism is incompatible with democracy."
What we are seeing in Torre-Pacheco presents us all with a great challenge. We must raise our voices, act decisively, and defend the values that unite us.
Spain is a country of rights, not of hate.
Sánchez would probably interpret the post differently, but the people of Spain are currently acting exactly as he said, defending the values that unite Spain. They have had enough of the youthful migrant gangs from North Africa who indiscriminately attack white people. The riots were triggered by an attack on a pensioner by three North African youths, who was brutally beaten. The police are cracking down. Those who resist are being arrested.
"Was this a civil war?"
A video from Barcelona shows how entire streets are dominated. In certain districts of Paris, the situation is no different. Officially, the Champions League match was the trigger for the unrest in Paris. In reality, the disturbances are said to have begun two hours earlier on the Champs-Élysées with political slogans. The situation escalated when the rioting group from the Champs-Élysées encountered the celebrating football fans.
Millions of migrants have entered the country in recent years, many illegally. Two German tourists documented their journey to the hotel: "Was there a civil war here?"
Equating criticism with extremism
Those who speak out of concern for their country's stability are defamed by a discourse that no longer distinguishes between asylum seekers and lawbreakers. The desire for order is not synonymous with rejection. Many clearly state that someone who integrates and respects the values of their host country enriches society. An open society thrives on this kind of coexistence. But it certainly doesn't thrive on people who blatantly hate, destroy, and take over Europe.
JD Vance: “Democracy falls apart when people feel that their thoughts and concerns are meaningless.”
A system that secures itself through fear fears above all else open dialogue. But that is precisely what Europe needs: answers to questions. Why do men come without their families? Why do they discard their documents before entering the country? Why do governments remain silent about the number of illegal immigrants? Why do politicians tolerate this flood of illegal arrivals? Why is no one discussing what this means for Europe? Those who ask these questions are not racists. They are realists.
France's new welcoming culture seamlessly continues Merkel's legacy.
A new trend is emerging in England: illegal migrant camps on public land. Tents have now been erected on Park Lane, one of London's most expensive areas. Somewhere must be housed the 20,000 Afghans who, according to reports, were secretly brought into the country by the government itself. The costs are estimated at £7 billion, which, of course, will be borne by taxpayers.
When states invite others to take over, a new term is needed, because occupation, invasion, or colonization don't apply here. For most European states, the welcoming culture for illegal migrants is an open secret. In 2015, Angela Merkel opened the borders. Ten years later, France followed the same course. A court ruled on July 11, 2025, that every resident of the Gaza Strip automatically receives asylum. With this, France is sending a political signal in the style of Merkel and even opening the doors to Europe for Hamas.
It will be interesting to see whether Macron will utter a similarly nonchalant statement as Merkel, who said on September 22, 2015: "I don't care if I am to blame for the influx of refugees, they are here now."

Sources
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o1EzVTZGuyU , July 14, 2025; 7:20 PM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wNVNgMizgVY , July 14, 2025; 7:37 PM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PmlI4ICp-OI , July 14, 2025; 4:07 PM
https://shorturl.at/cZtDM , July 13, 2025; 7:12 PM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IPqSFuz9HSo , July 15, 2025; 5:17 PM
https://shorturl.at/zskTj , July 15, 2025; 6:03 PM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=REK27F_wn7Q , July 15, 2025; 6:45 PM
https://www1.wdr.de/nachrichten/nah-dran-grossbritannien-102.html , July 15, 2025; 7:47 PM
https://shorturl.at/Da9UG , July 16, 2025; 1:57 PM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mZIGqmdy8Is , July 16, 2025; 2:38 PM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=snUAqJNBXPI , July 17, 2025; 11:15
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vUNeQ0Ln59o , July 17, 2025; 11:44
https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-england-northamptonshire-17678224 , 17.7.2025; 14:20
https://www.edwest.co.uk/p/the-troubling-case-of-lucy-connolly , 17.7.2025; 14:23
https://www.gbnews.com/news/free-speech-sarah-pochin-hmp-kirkham , 17.7.2025; 14:33
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4ybHTZnxzVI , July 18, 2025; 2:28 PM
You might like
Petition, free Lucy Connolly: https://petitionplatform.co.uk/petition/305
JD Vance's speech on February 14, 2025 in Munich/Security Conference: https://www.youtube.com/live/pCOsgfINdKg?feature=shared
Grooming gangs in England: https://www.welt.de/debatte/kommentare/article255087808/Grossbritannien-Die-wehrlosen-Offer-der-politiken-Korrektheit.html

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