Peter Sutherland, the notorious mass migration and multiculturalism campaigner dubbed the ‘father of globalisation’, has died.
Remember Peter Sutherland, the Goldman Sachs banker who wanted to ‘undermine national homogeneity’? Well, he’s dead, and hiding my jubilation at this fact is almost impossible ☠????. pic.twitter.com/MlZmNkuwHA
— William(™) ???? (@JWilliamXIII) January 7, 2018
Sutherland, 71, was a key player on a host of globalist bodies and multinational corporations, including the European Commission, the World Trade Organization (WTO), and Goldman Sachs International, throughout his life.
As the United Nations Special Representative for Migration and non-executive chairman of Goldman Sachs International in 2012, he infamously remarked that the European Union should “be doing its best to undermine” the sense of national “homogeneity” in Britain and Europe, in order to pave the way for multicultural societies.
“The United States, or Australia and New Zealand, are migrant societies and therefore they accommodate more readily those from other backgrounds than we do ourselves, who still nurse a sense of our homogeneity and difference from others,” he told the House of Lords.
“And that’s precisely what the European Union, in my view, should be doing its best to undermine.”
The Ireland-born globalist argued that the supposed threat of an ageing population was the “key argument … for the development of multicultural states”, and…