With multiculturalism and woke insanity changing the face of Western Europe, great numbers of conservative Europeans are looking eastward and requesting Russian green cards to live in the Europe they knew and loved. Who would have thought that Europeans would want to flee to Russia of all places.
Yes, NORMAL Europeans have always been a part of Russia’s history. Here’s an excerpt of an article penned by noted ballerina Natalia Osipova titled Russia Needs New Migrants. This excerpt may be somewhat cryptic since it is translated from Russian.
“The second huge flow of potential migrants, which we did not seriously think about until the Olympics broke out, are Europeans and, more broadly, peoples of Christian cultures. The desperate cries for help from the French, outraged by the Olympic sabbath, are a symptom: the Anglo-Saxon elites with their project of multiculturalism, globalization, inclusiveness, transgenderism and other LGBT things have had enough of everyone. Many people in Europe understand that the Eurocentric civilization has reached a dead end. And realizing that they will not be able to change Europe, they want to change at least their lives. The Europe of the childhood of the current generation of 30-50-year-old Europeans has disappeared. And they see part of that good old Europe in Russia. We can open the gates to people who share our values and ideals. In fact, they are European values and ideals. … If we open the borders to those who bring with them the remnants of European culture on the soles of their shoes, we will strengthen Russia. Now Russia is more European than Europe. It is worth comparing the ideal, luxurious picture of the ceremonies in Olympic Sochi, it is worth remembering the world-famous and still unrivaled scene with the flying away bear of the 1980 Olympics, and then once again reviewing the shock content from the opening of the Paris Olympics. We ourselves must understand and accept why people want to come to live and work here. Sometimes it seems to us that we have nothing special that Paris does not. We often whined that we are worse. But many foreigners, according to Yesenin, see better from afar: “The big is seen from a distance.” Do we need people? Who want to love Russia and raise children here without the dictate of a crazy state that tells them fairy tales about parent number one/two/three? The idea of gathering people who have not lost the foundations of culture and civilization here may be very attractive for both citizens of the country and foreigners. It is both innovative and traditional. It fully corresponds to our historical experience. Bagration, de Richelieu, Barclay de Tolly came to us this way, and even Catherine the Second came to us this way. And it was here that she became Great.”