Trump Is Aligned with Europe’s Future
Like it or not, Time magazine has reported that “European Politics Are Swinging to the Right.” This may not surprise those who have already written off Western Europe as hopelessly ruined by the irreversible influx of millions of Muslims, with cultural problems that will unfold for generations to come.
The article chronicles the election victories of the New Right across Europe, but skeptics are warning that it’s already “too little, too late” to make a difference.
Former Soviet Bloc politician Angela Merkel, now Chancellor of Germany, represents the socialist states of the European Union. The name for her Christian Democratic Union was well chosen to serve as a storefront for attracting traditional voters, while undercutting both Christianity and democracy. The US and EU have forged an alliance over the years based upon the welfare state and media control of public opinion.
Eastern Europe was the first to stand up to runaway immigration. It is now becoming the true Europe in the minds of many tourists—and at a much greater bargain.
The Time article suggests that the Trump candidacy has unmasked the real convergence of the Democratic and Republican elites, now forming a democracy-stifling establishment that essentially rules the election process. “Don’t vote for Trump” is the only voice allowed these days, though few in the public realize how they’re being had.
Trump is apparently in synch with where Europe is heading. He is the leader and spokesman. Voter awakening across Europe points to the future, the article asserts: “But the insurgency is not limited to Europe. All the rising rightist parties are aligned with Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump in what they encourage voters to fear: migrants taking your jobs, Muslims threatening your culture and security, political correctness threatening your ability to speak your mind and, above all, entrenched elites selling you out in the service of the wealthy and well-connected.”
Even the politically cataclysmic withdrawal of Britain from the EU shows Trump riding the wave of Europe’s swing to the right: “Trump, notably, has voiced his enthusiastic support. He has even linked himself to the insurgent forces that drove the Leave vote by saying on Twitter that he would soon be known as Mr. Brexit.”
After all, NATO stood impotently by while Western Europe was being flooded with third world immigrants. Trump’s wall building strategy to stem the flood of illegal immigrants is now official policy in Eastern Europe, “a Trumpian promise to build a barrier along the border with Hungary to keep any more asylum seekers from getting in.”
The populist revolution throughout Europe is certainly causing fear in the minds of many Democratic and GOP incumbents who have politically aligned themselves with the failed policies of welfare-based governments. But Trump and his European allies belong to the future, not the past, as the article summarizes:
“Trump and his doppelgängers along the Danube have been able to capitalize not only on fears of migration but also on angst over economic inequality, often with what seem like the same slogans in different languages. On immigration: Send them back! On Muslims: Keep them out! On the media: Full of lies! On the Establishment: Crooked! On the elections: Rigged! Even their tactics seem to run in parallel, especially when it comes to the politics of fear.”