Description
II. Immigration, Islam, and the Migrant Crisis
The second of three volumes, The Blackening of Europe: Immigration, Islam, and the Migrant Crisis provides the hard facts about the declining population of indigenous Europeans and probes into the reasons why millions of migrants are waved through at Europe’s borders.
While the media have presented this influx of migrants from primarily Muslim-majority countries as a much-needed boost to the economy, helpless asylum seekers, or just friendly new members of your neighbourhood, the reality is crystal clear in the statistics: migrants are consistently over-represented in unemployment rates, low education levels, welfare benefits, violent crime, and prison populations. Is Europe truly finding a humanitarian solution to benefit all, or simply welcoming groups that refuse to integrate, harbour incompatible worldviews, and aim to conquer through demographics and destabilization?
Breaking down the social, political, and financial costs of the ‘migrant crisis’, Ellis does not shy away from acknowledging the consequences of Europe’s immigration policies. In a time when all are encouraged to promote diversity or keep silent, The Blackening of Europe shines a sobering, necessary light on the decisions that lie before the continent.
See also: The Blackening of Europe (vol. 1): Ideologies and International Developments
Table of Contents
Part III: Demographics: Immigration and Islam
- 7. Immigration: EU and Five Country Profiles
- 7.1 Belgium
- 7.2 United Kingdom
- 7.3 France
- 7.4 Sweden
- 7.5 Germany
- 7.6 Summary
- 8. Islam and Islamism
- 8.1 Re-Politicisation of Islam
- 8.2 Islamism: Counter-Hegemonic Global Ideology
- 8.3 Three Types of Islamists and Three Types of Activities
- 8.4 Demographic Conquest and Islamisation of Europe
- 9. Muslim Immigration: EU and Five Country Profiles
- 9.1 Belgium
- 9.2 United Kingdom
- 9.3 France
- 9.4 Sweden
- 9.5 Germany
- 10. In Statistics: Muslim Fundamentalism and European Opposition
- 10.1 Muslim Views on Integration and Sharia Law
- 10.2 Islamic Fundamentalism and Terrorism
- 10.3 European Opposition to Islam and Immigration
Part IV: The 2015/2016 Migrant Crisis in Europe
- 11. Asylum, Migrant Demographics, and International Responses
- 11.1 Asylum Law, the EU-Turkey Agreement, and the Migrant Crisis as Boon
- 11.1.1 EU Asylum Law: The Dublin Regulation
- 11.1.2 The EU-Turkey Agreement and its Deficiencies
- 11.1.3 Reform of the Dublin System
- 11.1.4 Migrant Crisis as an Economic and Demographic Boon
- 11.2 Migrant Nationalities, Numbers, and Routes
- 11.2.1 Problems with Documentation
- 11.2.2 Problems with Registration and Vanishing Asylum Seekers
- 11.3 Most Asylum Seekers are Young Muslim Males: Three Possible Reasons
- 11.3.1 Dangerous Journey
- 11.3.2 Economic Opportunities
- 11.3.3 Muslim Invasion
- 11.4 Migrant Crisis and Muslim Countries
- 12. Criminal Aspects and Costs of the Migrant Crisis
- 12.1 Migrant Crime
- 12.1.1 Migrant on Migrant Crime
- 12.1.2 Crimes Against Europeans
- 12.1.3 Mass Sexual Assaults
- 12.2 Costs
- 12.2.1 Border Control and Security
- 12.2.2 European Aid: Emergency, Humanitarian, and International
- 12.2.3 Economic Impact on the EU Budget and Member States
- 12.2.4 Small Towns, Tourism, Health, Security, and Safety
- 13. A Critique of Elite Reactions to Migrant Sex Crimes and Terrorism
- 13.1 Migrant Sex Crimes: Non-Disclosure, Blaming Victims, and Sexual Jihad
- 13.1.1 Creating Behavioural Changes
- 13.1.2 Importation: Muslim Misogyny and Sexual Terrorism
- 13.2 Paris and Brussels Terrorist Attacks
- 13.2.1 Prevention Efforts: History and Current Thoughts
- 13.2.2 Political Islam and Muslim Radicalism: Global Phenomena
- Index
- Bibliography
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