National Pulse editor-in-chief Raheem Kassam has warned a mass replacement of Ukraine’s hollowed-out population with Third World migrants is looming. “Ukraine, what’s the plan for the future of Ukraine? Because, clearly, the plan isn’t to keep young Ukrainian men alive to rebuild the nation after all of this is done,” Kassam said while co-hosting the War Room with Donald Trump’s former chief strategist, Stephen K. Bannon.
“There’s nothing left. So, who do you think they intend to import into Ukraine to rebuild the country? If I can put it so bluntly, Ukraine will be the first African nation in Europe in 10 to 15 years’ time if this thing continues the way it is. They are going to mass import… They’ve got a base for mass migration like you’ve never seen before, and they’ve got a ‘moral imperative’ for it as well: ‘We have to rebuild! Of course! We need all these people! Bring ’em in, they’re academics and doctors,’ and so forth,” he explained.
Bannon concurred, comparing it to the way U.S. open borders advocates claim “the illegal alien invasion is what’s keeping the economy even going.”
The United Nations (UN) estimates that 5,872,700 Ukrainians are in other European countries, with 358,300 elsewhere. The country’s population is estimated to be between 33 and 35 million, but this includes people in regions already incorporated into the Russian Federation, with Crimea alone having a population estimated at around 2.5 million. The Ukrainian government has already expressed fear that its refugees will never return.
THE BRITISH PRECEDENT.
The need for outside help with post-war reconstruction was used to usher in the accelerating mass migration era in the United Kingdom, which was still 99.9 percent white and overwhelmingly British and Irish as recently as 1951. Open borders advocates claimed black nurses from the Caribbean, in particular, were the backbone of the newly established National Health Service (NHS) in the post-war period to justify the current policy of issuing over a million visas every year, mostly to migrants who are not coming for work.
In fact, claims that immigration was essential to Britain’s post-war reconstruction are largely mythical. In 1961, out of a total of 55,000, only around 6,365 immigrant student nurses were in the NHS, and not all were Caribbean.
Substantial net emigration from Britain, particularly to the former colonies of Australia, Canada, the United States, and America, occurred throughout the post-war decades, suggesting there was not really a pressing need for foreigners to fill out the economy. Migration overall is currently a drag on Britain’s economy and infrastructure.
"What's the plan for the future of Ukraine? Clearly the plan isn't to keep young Ukrainian men alive to rebuild the nation… If I can put it so bluntly, Ukraine will be first African nation in Europe in 10-15 years time. They're going to mass import…" —@RaheemKassam pic.twitter.com/IvMpOGyz7L
— Anne Luty (@anneluty) May 20, 2024