Conspiracy Realism by Srdja Trifkovic • July 5,
2012
Anyone
claiming that international bankers, multinational company executives, members
of the Bilderberg Group, elite academics, senior judges, United Nations
officials and European Union strategists are working together to undermine the
remnants of sovereignty and identity of old Christian nations through mass Third
World immigration would be dismissed by our bien pensants as a conspiracy
theorist. A wacko unfit for polite
society.
Enter Peter Sutherland (66),
a remarkable man. Addressing the House of Lords sub-committee on immigration on
June 21, Mr. Sutherland said that the EU should “do its best to undermine” the
“homogeneity” of its member states in order to make them truly multicultural.
He was addressing the
peers in his capacity of head of the Global Forum on Migration and Development,
but that is only one of Peter Sutherland’s many affiliations. He is also: · the
UN’s special representative for migration; · non-executive chairman of Goldman
Sachs International who made $200 million from the bank’s flotation in 1999; ·
former chairman of Allied Irish Bank, the biggest in the country; · former
member of the European Commission; · “Consulter of the Extraordinary Section of
the Administration of the Patrimony of the Apostolic See,” offering advice on
the Vatican’s finances; · former Director General of The World Trade
Organization (WTO); · former chairman of oil giant BP, with a salary of
$1,000,000 a year; · former Attorney General of Ireland; · Chairman of the
Council of the London School of Economics; and last but by no means least, · a
regular participant in meetings of The Bilderberg Group, which the BBC report on
his remarks to the Lords tactfully described as “a top level international
networking organization often criticized for its alleged
secrecy.”
The future prosperity of
many EU states depended on them becoming “multicultural,” Sutherland told the
peers, “however difficult it may be to explain this to the citizens of those
states.” An ageing or declining native population in countries like Germany or
southern EU states was the “key argument … for the development of multicultural
states,” he said. “It’s impossible to consider that the degree of homogeneity
which is implied by the other argument can survive because states have to become
more open states, in terms of the people who inhabit them,” according to
Sutherland. “At the most basic level individuals should have a freedom of
choice” because anyone should have the right to work or study in the country of
his or her preference.
Criticizing the UK
government's current attempt to cut net immigration to “tens of thousands” a
year through visa restrictions, Mr. Sutherland urged EU member states to adopt
“a global approach to the issue” and “accommodate more readily those from other
backgrounds.” He bewailed the fact that many Europeans “still nurse a sense of
[their] homogeneity and difference from others… And that’s precisely what the
European Union, in my view, should be doing its best to undermine.” This is the
most explicit statement of intent to date by an authoritative member of what is
de facto world government. Nations should disappear by being cured of the sense
of difference from others, dissenters should be coerced into submission, and
everyone in the world is entitled to live anywhere in the world.
It is noteworthy that, in
Sutherland’s view, the EU has not done enough to advance his agenda. As it
happens, Brussels has decreed many years ago that countries of the European
Union no longer have the power to decide on who comes or stays within their
borders. In 1999, the Treaty of Amsterdam transferred responsibility for
immigration policies from individual member-countries to the EU Council of
Ministers, acting on proposals from the unelected European
Commission.
The all-out EU effort to
undermine “homogeneity” is over a decade old. Its founding document is the
European Council agreement signed in Tampere (Finland) in October 1999, which
mandated granting immigrants all those rights enjoyed by host-country citizens.
It also demanded relaxation of asylum policy, since European freedoms should not
be regarded “as the exclusive preserve of the Union’s own citizens” and will not
be denied to those “whose circumstances lead them justifiably to seek access to
our territory.”
The European Union
Presidency statement on racism of March 21, 2002, declared that the EU “bases
its very existence in the idea that “all peoples and individuals constitute one
human family.” With his plea that “individuals should have a freedom of choice,”
Sutherland is knocking on an open EU door, and he knows it. For a cultural
radical like him no given status quo is ever satisfactory, however. Brussels can
and should do more, for as long as there are Britons, Germans or Italians who
are still proud of who they are and who still believe that their countries
should somehow belong to them and their offspring.
It is to be feared that
Europeans may get physically eradicated well before their “sense of difference”
is destroyed though state education and judicial fiat. Even on current form
Europe is well on the way to population replacement. In France—to take the most
drastic example—of close to 800,000 live births in a nation of just under 60
million, Muslim immigrants (predominantly from North Africa) and their
French-born descendants currently account for close to
one-third.
Short of a sudden
reversal of policies and demographic curves, even without Sutherland’s radical
measures there will be no “Europeans” a century from now. They will literally
disappear as members of ethnic groups that share the same language, culture, and
ancestors, and inhabit lands associated with their names.
Peter Sutherland embodies
the Western elite class: he is deracinated, authoritarian, rich, arrogant,
contemptuous of the common people, powerful and dangerous.
In other words, a few
details of the physique notwithstanding, he is Barack Obama’s older brother.
It is therefore unsurprising that in his remarks to the House of Lords he
praised the United States as the model of multicultural openness that Europe
would be well advised to emulate.
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