Britons Murdered in Britain Since the Death of Stephen Lawrence

Daily Stormer
September 10, 2016

Maybe multiculturalism was a bad idea to begin with?

Are kebab stands really worth all this trouble?

Stephen Lawrence has been cited in the British Houses of Parliament over 2,000 times by more than 500 MPs, Lords and Ladies. All of the Britons murdered by first and second-generation immigrants featured in this video have NEVER been mentioned AT ALL and very few occupied more than a few column inches in the mainstream press. All died since Stephen lost his life in 1992.

Just as Muslim paedophilia was covered up for more than two decades in Rotherham, Rochdale, Keighley etc., the hard facts and statistics of alien-on-Brit murder have been suppressed by the powers-that-be.

What you see here is the tip of the iceberg.

91 years ago, an Austro-Japanese aristocrat called Richard von Coudenhove-Kalergi published a book called ‘Praktischer Idealismus.’ In that book he said this:

“The man of the future will be mixed-race… The Eurasian-Negroid race of the future… will replace the diversity of peoples…
Now we stand at the threshold of the third epoch of the new times: Socialism. Russian Bolshevism constitutes a decisive step towards this purpose where a small group of Communist spiritual aristocrats govern the country and consciously break with the plutocratic democratism which nowadays controls the rest of the world…

A pacified and socialised Occident will no longer need masters and rulers, only leaders.”

Along the way to the melting pot of his dreams, Count Coudenhove-Kalergi didn’t bother to mention that a great many of us would, of necessity, lose our lives to the outsiders with whom we were to be bred.

In ‘Praktischer Idealismus’, the Count tells us, very specifically, who the ‘leaders’ of the Eurasian negroes of the future will be. ‘Blood aristocracy (folks like him) and …..”

Forgive the coyness, all will be revealed in ‘Diversity Kills,’ part 2 – ‘Coudenhove-Kalergi’s Heroes and Sponsors.’

P.S. Coudenhove-Kalergi was the founder and first leader of the Pan European Union, the forerunner of the EU. The current President of the European Council, Jean-Claude Juncker, his immediate predecessor, Hermann van Rompuy, and German Chancellor, Angela Merkel, have all been recipients of the ‘Coudenhove-Kalergi Prize.’