Polish professor: Here’s how France and Germany plan to flood Poland with immigrants

"The relocation mechanism was invented precisely to send these immigrants back to Poland, mainly from Germany"

By Remix News Staff
8 Min Read

Although Poland is rapidly changing demographically through immigration over the last years, it is still the largest and most powerful country in Eastern Europe that has an almost entirely homogenous population. That is why the EU is dead set on changing that through the EU migration pact, according to political science professor Tomasz Grosse.

The EU’s migrant relocation mechanism was invented precisely to send these immigrants back to Poland first and foremost, said Prof. Grosse during an appearance on Radio Wnet, as reported by Polish news outlet Do Rzeczy. “The Brussels elites have never had any intention of solving the migration problem,” he added.

Grosse recalled in his conversation with Łukasz Jankowski that the left-wing leadership of the European Union could have made a very simple decision to stop the influx of immigrants to the continent a long time ago, but no such actions were taken.

“Because there is a myth among the liberal elites that the more migrants, the better for the EU labor market. No one cares about voters, no one cares about crime, no one cares about the fact that migrants do not take up jobs but remain on the welfare systems,” he said.

In Poland, this professor warned that “integration centers” (CICs) are already being built using taxpayer money across the country to accommodate the next stage of mass migration and are required by law under the terms of the new EU migration pact. All of their addresses have been leaked to the Polish press.

However, Prime Minister Donald Tusk and other Polish pro-migrant politicians originally claimed that due to Poland accepting hundreds of thousands of Ukrainian refugees, the country would be exempted from accepting illegal immigrants who entered Europe.

Professor Grosse now refutes these assertions. He said the EU Commissioner for Internal Affairs and Migration Magnus Brunner admitted that Poland will not be exempt from the obligation to accept illegal immigrants due to the provision of mass aid to refugees and immigrants from Ukraine

The authorities also claim that the CICs will not be accommodation centers, but information and service points where immigrants will benefit from Polish language lessons or psychological care for children. The opposition, in turn, warns that this is part of preparations for a mass flood into Poland of non-European immigrants.

Relocation mechanism

Prof. Grosse said that it is clear to anyone interested in European politics that the European Commission would not agree to any concessions for Poland.

“The relocation mechanism was invented precisely to send these immigrants back to Poland, mainly from Germany. Since that was the idea, it was impossible for the EC to suspend this instrument,” he said.

Grosse pointed out that the European Commission has been pushing the issue of relocating immigrants forward for at least several months.

“Those who have been trying for a long time, but also during the presidential campaign, to have Poland unilaterally terminate the migration pact are right,” he said, adding that this was also the goal of the referendum boycotted by Donald Tusk and the Civic Platform.

Illegal immigrants also to the EU peripheries – including Poland

“In parallel to the relocation mechanisms, on a much larger scale, there is the procedure of sending immigrants from Germany to Poland, under the pretext that they came to Germany through Poland,” he added.

Wnet’s Jankowski asked about the quotas of immigrants – quotas are the terminology used by the EU establishment – ​​planned to be sent to Poland. Grosse indicated that likely 10,000 migrants will be coming to Poland per year, with the migration pact assuming that the European Commission may increase these quotas in a crisis situation, and Europe still has such a crisis situation.

Grosse explained that the establishment’s concept is currently to shift the costs of the “crazy migration policy” from the countries governing the EU – Germany or France – to the European peripheral countries, such as Poland.

“However, we now have a government that was not by accident supported by Brussels for many years against the previous government, because it is the government that distributes this policy, acts as the viceroys,” said Grosse.

The point, as he explained, is for the voters of the peripheral countries to either not be familiar with the process of sending illegal immigrants to their countries, or to accept this process with a smile, to perceive it as beneficial.

It is worth noting that the EU migration pact includes, among other things, the facilitation of deportation procedures, but the essence of the project is the parceling out of illegal immigrants from Africa and the Middle East not only to Western Europe but also to EU member states that have so far protected their borders by not letting in foreigners who are alien to civilization. Countries like Hungary are a top target.

According to the pact, if a member state refuses to let in immigrants, taxpayers of that state will have to pay €20,000 for each foreigner not admitted.

Share This Article

SEE EUROPE DIFFERENTLY

Sign up for the latest breaking news 
and commentary from Europe and beyond