
AlexAP
Fuchsia
- Joined
- Nov 3, 2020
- Posts
- 14,157
- Reputation
- 29,622
- OP
- #51
1. 65% is still not minority.Only 65%? it should be above 90%
Also, as you can see the survey was done in 2011 and there have been more immigrants waves since.
I don’t think it’s a leap to assume the demographics have decline since then.
I can’t find much date on Berlin, but a recent survey of Frankfurt shows that Germans a minority
More than half of residents living in the German city of Frankfurt have a migrant background, according to new statistics.
Figures show 51.2 per cent of people living there are either non-German, German citizens born abroad or Germans who are the children of immigrants.
![]()
More than half of Frankfurt has a migrant background
The figures show 51.2 per cent of people living in Frankfurt are either non-German, German citizens born abroad or Germans who are the children of immigrants.www.dailymail.co.uk
(Merkel saying she didn’t regret her open border policy)
![]()
Merkel says she would let a million migrants into Germany again
She told the annual summer press conference in Berlin: 'When people are standing at the German-Austrian border or the Hungarian-Austrian border, they have to be treated like human beings.'www.dailymail.co.uk
i think I’ll listen to Full blooded Germans over the opinion of a Bolivian immigrant thanks.
When I visited Berlin last year I was absolutely shocked how much it had changed. Its sadly losing it soul and culture and the problem with migrants all coming from the one location is they dont integrate rather they form their own groups and become the majority in many locations which was quite obvious.
Although "only" 25% of the German population is of foreign origin, almost 40% of children are on that category. In some states it's as high as 45%. The reason for that is that immigrants (especially non-Europeans) are disproportionately young and also have way more children than ethnic Germans. Germany as a whole has had catastrophic birth rates since the 1970s. It's age structure is the most precarious of any western European country. For ethnic Germans, the situation is even more dismal.
These are not just numbers. You can feel that in real life too. Europe is definitely changing fast, and you'll be able to see and feel that in the cities, the train stations, and as of recently even by visiting small towns and villages. In the cases of Sweden and Germany, even the smallest towns are becoming "diversified" as the government is trying to spread out the migrants across the territory. It's becoming harder and harder to escape "diversity" (or, more accurately, third-worldization), and in my opinion that's why we're about to witness a massive reaction against it. Multi-racialism and Multiculturalism have been imposed upon the population from above. Poll after poll shows that the vast majority of Europeans oppose these radical changes. Now, as long as the diversity is concentrated in the ghettoes of major urban areas, it isn't as noticeable and most people's daily lives won't be affected. But when it starts spreading into every neighborhood, every town and every village, as is happening right now, what you get is an explosive situation and millions of people feeling like their way of life is under attack. And isn't it?
ALSO the new German chancellor WANTS MORE IMMIGRANTS
![]()
New German chancellor encourages more immigration
Olaf Scholz says he will allow multiple citizenships, meaning immigrants can retain their existing nationality while also becoming Germanswww.telegraph.co.uk
@gamma
2. Frankfurt is not Berlin.
3. Non-German doesn't mean non-white. A large number of immigrants are whites from Eastern Europe, and many of them are actually ethnic Germans who lived in Eastern Europe for centuries and returned to Germany (Spätaussiedler).