We learn that the EU population declined last year again. Some of this can be allocated to Covid deaths, but the tale of the declining European stock can not be denied. Add to this the addition of the hordes of “immigrants” and we can see where this is headed. Here we go:
The EU has an aging population, with one in five people over the age of 65.
At the same time, fewer babies are being born, with the rate having fallen from 10.2 live births out of every 1,000 population in 2001 to 9.1 in 2020, according to Eurostat’s Demography of Europe 2022 report.
This means the natural change of the EU population is negative. While it’s been that way for about a decade, this decline had been masked by the net positive impact of migration, which was temporarily frozen due to the pandemic’s travel bans.
The data comes as the world nears its 8 billion mark. Despite natural declines in Europe and in several other countries, the world is on the whole seeing numbers continue to climb, albeit at the slowest rate of growth since 1950. India is set to become the most highly populated country on the planet as of 2023, overtaking China, according to the UN. An increasing population means there will be a greater demand for food, water and energy, placing more pressure on the world’s resources.

More information at Statistica
H/T : Zero Hedge
Back on 2017 I did a post that proposed Europe might be better off with Russian invaders:
Combine the mass importation of “refugees” with Africa’s exploding population rate and you have effective genocide. If this continues, within a century Europeans will face a situation as grim as whites do now in South Africa. Another century after that and no one will even remember Europeans.
If Russia invaded, Europe would fight back. But to be conquered by Russians would be infinitely better than to be displaced out of existence by uncountable hordes of Africans, because there would still be such a thing as the future.
This is the insane reality of what’s actually happening.
The Truth About ‘Refugees’
While India may be the fastest growing economy, it is Africa population that is on the move and Europe is where many are headed. Four billion people before 2100, meaning that Africa will have a population on par with Asia. Back in a 2015 tweet:
The wise thing would be to change course.
Other than that all is well in the swamp




