They are moving in entire populations of people to totally replace the native population of white countries.
This hasn’t slowed at all while you were told to care about a fake virus or an Eastern European border skirmish or whichever other stupid nonsense.
It’s all been getting progressively worse.
It’s been a long journey since Orwa Skafe fled the war in Syria seven years ago but thanks to an innovative resettlement scheme he’s found peace in a tiny village 900 metres (3,000ft) up in the Pyrenees. He is one of the first to benefit from a Catalan government programme to relocate refugees in depopulated villages.
Orwa Skafe, one of the few Syrian “refugees” that’s from Syria
The programme, called Operation 500 because it involves villages with fewer than 500 inhabitants, is being run jointly by the regional employment agency, the equality commission and the Association of Micro-villages.
The scheme, which runs for one year, provides participants with a home and a salary of €19,434 (£16,700) paid via the local authority, which also organises work for them. The programme is open to refugees, asylum seekers and immigrants who are legal residents.
So far, 30 families have been accommodated, 24 of them refugees.
“Up till now the system of dealing with refugees has been very centralised and focused on major cities,” said Oriol López Plana, a facilitator at the Association of Micro-villages, which helps participants integrate, learn the language and become independent.
“The programme aims to integrate people in villages where there’s a social network and then, if they want to move to the city, they can.
“There’s a similar system in France. The difference here is we create a social fabric, we run mentoring and communitarian programmes, in both the work and social spheres.”
Skafe, who comes from the coastal town of Latakia where he worked as an English teacher, left Syria in 2015 and went to Haiti because, he says, it was the only place he could go to legally.
“It turned out that Haiti is even more dangerous than Syria,” he said, so he made his way to Spain and arrived in Barcelona in January this year. A month later he was granted asylum.
He now lives in Tírvia, a remote, mountaintop village of 130 souls close to the border with France, although Skafe says in reality the population is more like 50.
…
“I’m learning Catalan, poc a poc [little by little]. Everyone in the village is Catalan. I’m the only foreigner. I don’t understand much but I’m patient and I’m not afraid to learn new languages.
“People are very welcoming, everyone talks to me, they offer me help or to do my shopping. That’s the case for 90%. Of course, there are always people who don’t like strangers.”
This is the hellhole he’s fleeing from
He hopes that his wife and child, who are still in Syria, will be able to join him once he obtains a residency permit, but sees no prospect of returning to Syria.
“I want to stay in the village when the programme ends and I want my family to live here with me. I’m going to work hard to stay here.”
You’re already surrounded by these people, and it’s just getting worse and worse to the point where there is going to be nowhere to run.
Thankfully, everything in the world appears to be coming to a head.
Something is going to have to give.