The German state exists to help everyone except for the German nation over which it rules.
There has been a staggering 78% increase in refugee arrivals to Germany in the first 4 months of 2023, with 102,000 asylum seekers arriving to the country. The total for the entirety of 2022 was 218,000.
At the current rate Germany will see over 350,000 refugees arrive in 2023, assuming the rates of arrival don't further increase. This will be the highest number of arrivals since the year 2017, and should be viewed as a harbinger of further increases.
These numbers serve to compound the massive demographic change which Germany has experienced since the 1980s, and which has only excellerated since 2015. Recent figures from the German Federal Statistical Office (Destatis) show that the total number of foreign born persons in the country has exceeded 15.2 million people, and now constitute 18.4% of the overall German population. A further 5 million people were born to two parents who were themselves born outside of the country.
A full 24% of the German population was either born outside of the country or born in Germany to two foreign parents. This represents roughly 20.2 million people in a country of 87 million and whose native population has been experiencing fertility decline since 1969.
The most recent ethnic statistics, again from the Federal Statistical Office, show that 87.4% of the German population is of ‘European’ extraction, but a mere 74% of the population is of German origin. These numbers are most certainly slightly inaccurate, however. As certain third generation immigrants (largely Turks with grandparents who migrated in the 1960s and 1970s) are now classified as ‘European’.
This constant inflow of refugees and migrants is putting huge demand on the German state and its constituent Länder are demanding more funding at a time when Germany is in recession and giving billions of Euros to the Ukrainian war effort.
A new package of 3 billion more Euros for Ukraine was announced just days ago. This announcement comes on the heels of a series of major crimes sweeping Germany, only making the underlying criminality of many recent arrivals more evident. The German state would be better advised to use these funds to protect its own borders and population.
Inflation continues to surge in Germany, currently just shy of 9% year-on-year, and like in most other European countries, such as Sweden, food is rapidly becoming unaffordable for many German families.
The German state is forcing its population to make massive continual sacrifices in terms of quality of life and standards of living, all while dissolving the bonds which made it one of the most successful nation-states on the planet.