Invisibleflash
Diamond Member
You've seen it play out in real time. Replacing Europeans with third world people. How is the Kalergi Plan not true?
AI (Exact copy from Google.)
The "Kalergi Plan" (or Coudenhove-Kalergi Conspiracy) is a far-right, antisemitic conspiracy theory that falsely claims there is a deliberate plot to replace white Europeans with non-white immigrants, destroy European culture, and create a population devoid of identity to be ruled by a Jewish elite.
Wikipedia +1
Key Aspects of the Conspiracy Theory:
Fighting Online Antisemitism +1
AI (Exact copy from Google.)
The "Kalergi Plan" (or Coudenhove-Kalergi Conspiracy) is a far-right, antisemitic conspiracy theory that falsely claims there is a deliberate plot to replace white Europeans with non-white immigrants, destroy European culture, and create a population devoid of identity to be ruled by a Jewish elite.
Key Aspects of the Conspiracy Theory:
- The Claim: It alleges that immigration policies in Europe are not driven by economic or humanitarian needs, but by a decades-old, secret plan to bring about "white genocide".
- The Target: The conspiracy theory is highly antisemitic, often framing Jewish elites as the masterminds plotting to turn Europe into a "mixed" population that is easier to control.
- Origin: The theory is named after Richard Nikolaus von Coudenhove-Kalergi (1894–1972), an Austrian-Japanese politician and founder of the Pan-European Union, who advocated for a united Europe.
- Fabrication: The "plan" is a complete fabrication coined by Austrian neo-Nazi writer Gerd Honsik in the early 2000s, according to researchers and fact-checkers.
Wikipedia +3
- Misinterpreted Writing: Believers base this theory on a distorted reading of Coudenhove-Kalergi's 1925 book Praktischer Idealismus ("Practical Idealism"). In this book, he predicted that a mixed-race "Eurasian-Negroid" future would replace the diverse peoples of Europe. He presented this as a natural, long-term historical development due to globalization, not as a political goal he was advocating for.
- Nazi-era Attacks: The Nazis targeted Coudenhove-Kalergi in the 1930s and 40s, burning his books and calling him a "cosmopolitan bastard" because his vision of a diverse, peaceful, and united Europe directly challenged their race-based ideology.
- Modern Re-emergence: The theory gained traction in far-right circles during the 2015 European migrant crisis, often pushed by extremist groups to promote the "Great Replacement" narrative.
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