Brussels warned Europeans to accept as the “new norm” mass migration from the third world because neither walls nor policies will secure a “homogenous and migration-free” continent.
“It’s time to face the truth. We cannot and will never be able to stop migration,” EU Commissioner for Migration Avramopoulos, warned in an opion article for POLITICO, published on Monday by the title: Europe’s Migrants Are Here to Stay.
Avramopoulos, the consumate Eurocrat, believes “human mobility will increasingly define the 21st century”, and that mass migration is an issue Brussels has committed Europe to “for the long haul”, adding: “Migration is deeply intertwined with our policies on economics, trade, education and employment — to name just a few.”
Brussels very clearly sees asylum not as a temporary respite from conflict and war, but instead as a way of permanently importing third world populations into the EU to replace whites.
He made it clear that he believes that no member of the EU can be exempt from mass migration.
“It is naïve to think that our societies will remain homogenous and migration-free if one erects fences,” he pointed out, alluding to the Visegrad countries.
“It is unwise to think that migration will remain on the other side of the Mediterranean, if one only shows solidarity in financial terms,” he added. “It is foolish to think that migration will disappear if one adopts harsh language.”
“At the end of the day, we all need to be ready to accept migration, mobility and diversity as the new norm and tailor our policies accordingly.
“The only way to make our asylum and migration policies future-proof, is to collectively change our way of thinking first,” the migration commissioner said.
“They have found safety in Europe, but we also need to make sure they find a home,” Avramopoulos because mass migration is “not only a moral imperative” but “also an economic and social imperative for our aging continent — and one of the biggest challenges for the near future”.
To this end, the Commission is working to “enhance legal channels for economic migration with a more ambitious Blue Card for highly skilled workers and kick-start targeted labour migration pilot projects in key third countries”, he said.
These migrants however are far from “highly-skilled workers” and revisions to the Blue Card scheme clearly contradict this, stating that it would be necessary to provide newcomers with education, employment, and vocational training, as Breitbart had reported earlier.
People from non-European backgrounds living in Europe are much more likely to be unemployed or on low wages, stressing the need for enhanced “integration measures”.
But insisting on forcing European Union nations to accept third world migrants could lead to the bloc’s break-up, Poland’s president Andrzej Duda has warned.