Sunday, September 24, 2017

Europe: The Great White Death?

In this mailing:
  • Drieu Godefridi: Europe: The Great White Death?
  • Amir Taheri: The Kurdish Referendum Imbroglio

Europe: The Great White Death?

by Drieu Godefridi  •  September 24, 2017 at 5:00 am
  • It will take only 30 to 40 years for the Muslim population to become the majority in Europe. — Charles Gave, French financier, website of the Institut des Libertés.
  • What is of concern, is that there is a sub-group of the European population which is in the process of very efficiently wiping itself out of existence.
  • That uttering this truth causes such mayhem and furious condemnations in the media reveals that in Europe, not only is the "native" population dying, but free speech as well.
(Image source: Eric Chan/Wikimedia Commons)
A riveting -- thanks to its subject -- paper was posted the September 4, 2017 on the website of "Institut des Libertés," the think tank of the great French financier Charles Gave. In it, he asks: Does the native population -- by which he means the white population -- of Europe face extinction?
His answer is "yes": "It is not good or bad. IT IS", Gave writes. His basic argument is that with a "native" rate of fertility of 1.4, a "migrant" -- by which he means Muslim -- rate of 3.4 to 4 children per woman, and taking the initial Muslim population to be 10% of the total, it will take only 30 to 40 years for the Muslim population to become the majority. Indeed, writes Gave, with a "native" rate of 1.4 for a population of 100, after only two generations you merely see 42 "native" children born.

The Kurdish Referendum Imbroglio

by Amir Taheri  •  September 24, 2017 at 4:00 am
Massoud Barzani, president of the autonomous Kurdistan Regional Government. (Image source: U.S. Department of Defense)
What is the first thing you should do when you have dug yourself into a hole? The obvious answer is: stop digging. This is the advice that those involved in the imbroglio over the so-called independence referendum in Iraqi Kurdistan, due to be held on September 25. But still in the suspense of writing this column, would do well to heed.
The idea of holding a referendum on so contentious an issue at this time is bizarre, to say the least. There was no popular demand for it. Nor could those who proposed it show which one of Iraq's problems such a move might solve at this moment. In other words, the move was unnecessary, in the sense that Talleyrand meant when he said that, in politics, doing what is not necessary is worse than making a mistake.
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