It looks like notorious billionaire George Soros wants to inflame an all-out revolution in Europe, Polish political analyst Adriel Kasonta notes.
George
Soros, a Hungarian-born American business magnate, apparently despises
the idea of national sovereignty, considering it an obstacle to his new
"open borders" agenda.
It this does sound alarming since the total number of migrants and refugees that arrived in Europe in 2014 amounted to just 219,000.
He
quoted the Hungarian Prime Minister who warned: "Everything which is
now taking place before our eyes threatens to have explosive
consequences for all of Europe… If Europe does not return to the path
of common sense, it will find itself laid low in a battle for its fate."
Billionaire George Soros does not share this stance: "[Orbán's] plan
treats the protection of national borders as the objective and the
refugees as an obstacle. Our plan treats the protection of refugees
as the objective and national borders as the obstacle," the notorious
magnate said in response to Orban's warning, as quoted by Kasonta.
"[Activist
like Soros] are trying to rip off our birth right to sovereignty and
stigmatize people by accusing them of upholding an outmoded Christian
identity," the Polish analyst stressed.
Kasonta bemoans the fact that the current refugee crisis in Europe "is already creating damage that will be hard to repair."
He warns that the continental nationalism has caught a second wind and could undermine European peace and well-being.
Kasonta cited prominent French thinker Alexis de Tocqueville who wrote on the eve of the 1848 revolution that "we are sleeping on a volcano… A wind of revolution blows, the storm is on the horizon."
Is inflaming a revolution in Europe what George Soros really wants?
"A few weeks ago, Hungarian Prime Minister
Viktor Orban accused the billionaire financier of funding activists
trying to encourage the continued flow of refugees heading to the
continent from the Middle East and beyond," Adriel Kasonta, an editorial
board member at the Central European Journal of International and
Security Studies, writes in his article for the American Conservative.
Kasonta
notes that Orban has nailed it, since the statement voiced by the
Hungarian Prime Minister in fact expressed the emotions of many
Europeans regarding the continent's place in the world and the future
of national sovereignty.
According to the Polish analyst, a recent report of the International
Organization for Migration has indicated that around 760,979 asylum
seekers have poured into Europe this year. Furthermore, about 218,394
migrants reached European shores in October, according to the United
Nations refugee agency (UNHCR).It this does sound alarming since the total number of migrants and refugees that arrived in Europe in 2014 amounted to just 219,000.
"It is essential to not only look at the
economic, political, and humanitarian aspects of the crisis, but also
consider the state of the European psyche in order to understand what is
happening in the continental European mind," Kasonta stressed.
The Polish analyst elaborated that it is
actually Soros, who shares part of the blame for bolstering the migrant
influx. Activists like Soros, Kasonta says, are encouraging migrants
to flow into Europe and persuade Europeans "to regard borders and
sovereignty as things of the past."
He warns that the continental nationalism has caught a second wind and could undermine European peace and well-being.
Kasonta cited prominent French thinker Alexis de Tocqueville who wrote on the eve of the 1848 revolution that "we are sleeping on a volcano… A wind of revolution blows, the storm is on the horizon."
Is inflaming a revolution in Europe what George Soros really wants?
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