Mass migration is currently the hottest topic in Europe dividing virtually the entire public. While the left-wing supports an open border policy and mass immigration from the Third World, more and more Europeans are of the opinion that the multicultural experiment has failed and that tighter border control is needed to stop the flow of migrants to European countries.
It is becoming increasingly clear that there are some personal interests of Brussels’ elites behind the support of mass migration, and that proposal and adoption of new ambiguous laws and declarations to speed up the influx of migrants is not just about their excessive humanitarianism. This raises new questions and speculations about what the interests and goals of these elites actually are. Why are many European leaders willing to risk their reputation and popularity with their own constituents by supporting the mass influx of migrants from the Middle East and Africa to the soil of our old continent? If we want to find answers to such questions that will help us understand current events in Europe and the reasons for supporting mass migration, we must first get acquainted with the so-called Kalergi plan, thought of by one of the first architects of the European Union – Richard von Coudenhove-Kalergi – who despite his great role in the formation of the European Union, he remains unknown to the wider European public.
The father of the idea of the European Union
Richard von Coudenhove-Kalergi was an early advocate of European integration and the founder of the Pan-European Movement. He is also considered the father of the European Union. He suggested that the Ode to Joy from Beethoven’s 9th Symphony becomes the anthem of Europe, and he worked closely on the design of the European Union flag. However, his influence was not limited to design of symbols, it went much deeper, to the very foundations on which the EU is built. He was the one who, through his works in which he advocated for the “international integration of European countries on democratic principles”, outlined the main principles and ideas of the European Union.
Kalergi, who, as we shall see, foretold the arrival of a new racially mixed man, was himself of mixed Japanese-Austrian descent, born in 1894 in Tokyo, where his father, otherwise a diplomat of noble birth, served as an ambassador of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. He spent most of his youth on the family estate in Czechoslovakia until he moved to Vienna to study in 1908. After completing his studies, he remained in Vienna, where in 1921 he joined the eminent Viennese Freemasonry Lodge Humanitas, and a year later founded the Pan-European Union movement. This movement was mainly in favour of European integration, which should have gradually led to the establishment of the United States of Europe with a common market, a common currency and the free movement of people. This new European superpower was supposed to include the at-time-time African colonies, which would have enabled a practically uncontrolled flow of Africans to Europe. In addition, Kalergi argued that only with the abolition of sovereign nation-states and the abolition of state borders could lasting peace be established in Europe, as otherwise rivalries would reappear between individual countries, leading to new wars. Thus, in his Pan-European Manifesto, published in 1923, Kalergi advocated for the establishment of a Pan-Europe that would rule Europe and unite all its population in one common state without borders.
Support from international bankers
Kalergi’s ideas garnered much interest and support among many important politicians of the time, such as two-time Austrian Chancellor Ignaz Seipel, Austrian Foreign Minister Karl Renner, Czechoslovakia’s first President Tomas Masaryk, Czechoslovakia’s first Foreign Minister and its second President Edvard Beneš, French President and Nobel laureate Aristide Briand, a French politician and later three-times French President Leon Blum and Konrad Adenauer, an Austrian lawyer and politician who later served as Chancellor of West Germany.
However, Kalergi’s ideas were not only admired by influential politicians, they also enjoyed great support from international bankers. After publishing his most important work, Practical Idealism, in 1925, detailing his vision of a future Europe, his Pan-European Movement received generous financial support of 60,000 gold German marks from the international banker Max Warburg. Max Warburg was contacted by Kalergi through Baron Louis de Rotschild, one of the most influential bankers of the Rothschild family, who is still considered one of the richest and most influential families in the world. Of course, the Rothschilds were also supporters of Kalergi’s Pan-Europe and the idea of uniting European nations into one entity. Through the Rothschilds and with the help of Max Warburg, Kalergi established contacts with many prominent bankers from New York’s Wall Street, such as Max’s brother Paul Warburg, Jacob Schilf and Bernard Baruch. Paul Warburg and Jacob Schilf are known for their key role in the founding of the American Central Bank. It is also interesting to note that Paul Schilf, a great capitalist, financially supported the Russian October Revolution and the Bolsheviks, as it was he who, with his generous financial support, enabled Trotsky to return to Russia.
Kalergi’s efforts for European integration and a united Europe were seen by many only as noble intentions to establish better living conditions and lasting peace, as he himself used such noble rhetoric about the well-being of all mankind. However, this noble rhetoric hid the not-so-noble personal interests and malicious intentions of his chief financiers that resulted in catastrophic consequences, which are unfolding in front of our very eyes today.
“The man of the future will be mixed-race”
Kalergi did not plan to only abolish nation-states, he also wanted to wipe out European nations. They would be replaced by a new kind of people, more in line with his vision of the future European superpower. In Practical Idealism, he vividly described the type of this new man: “The man of the future will be mixed-race. Races and social classes will eventually disappear due to the elimination of space, time and prejudice. The Eurasian-Negroid race of the future, seemingly similar to the ancient Egyptians, will replace the current diversity of people and individuals.” And it was precisely this vision of the future inhabitant of Europe that was admired by the international elite of bankers, Freemasons and other influential people who, after the publishing of Practical Idealism, began to finance the Pan-European Movement. This elite also enabled Kalergi to flee to the United States at the start of World War II, which disrupted his activities in Europe. In the US, he continued his efforts for European integration, with the help of prominent newspapers such as New The York Times, which regularly published his articles. Thus, after the War, Kalergi’s ideas were supported by US President Harry Truman, who allegedly read his article in a newspaper. Following the end of the World War, Kalergi moved to France and until his death continued to work for the establishment of one European country. He was a pioneer of European integration and laid the foundations for a new world order in which diverse nations would disappear through the mixing of people and be replaced by one monotonous population, or rather, one human herd controlled by the international elites.
A pioneer of multiculturalism
Kalergi’s ideas represent a plan for the demographic replacement of indigenous Europeans through the mixing of people and planned migration. Let us recall that Kalergi wanted to include the at-the-time African colonies to the pan-European state, which would have enabled the population of the black continent to move freely to Europe. The result, of course, would be a new population of crossbreds that has no clearly defined identity or sense of loyalty to any particular culture or nation. Such a type of population would best suited to the central authority of international elites, as it is easier to rule over masses of individuals than homogeneous nations that remain faithful to their tradition, culture and religion. The path to the establishment of this absolute power over the mixed human herd is precisely in Kalergi’s plan, which is being implemented to this day by certain Brussels elites, whose goal is to establish a new totalitarianism of one-mindedness and political correctness under the pretext of tolerance and human rights. This is the real reason for the constant support for mass migration, for the various Marrakesh declarations and for the constant praises to multiculturism that is served to us day by day by the regime media. Kalergi is therefore not only a pioneer of European integration, but also a pioneer of multiculturalism and an architect of the new world order.
(The article was originally published in Democracija magazine)