Richard von Coudenhove-Kalergi and the Genocide of the European Peoples

By Mundilfury | redice.tv

You have most likely asked the question: why is the European Union engaged in such self-destructive behaviour? Normally, admitting a hostile dependency class into your member states at an astronomical financial cost is unthinkable. The loss of social cohesion as a host society grapples with the needs of millions of hostile dependants is deterrent enough. The deluge of migrants, however, continues without any sign of relenting. Why would the elites of some of the most powerful EU member states allow this to continue? Why would EU officials condone and even encourage this activity? Who set this apocalypse in motion? What are some of the underlying ideas that prompted such a radical set of policy changes? Part of the answer may be found in the ideas and writings of one man: Richard von Coudenhove- Kalergi.

Count Richard Nikolas Eijiro von Coudenhove-Kalergi (1894-1972) was a man of mixed-race parentage. His father, Heinrich, was a Bohemian noble from a family of European heritage (Flemish, Czech, Austrian, Hungarian, and Greek) and a long line of nobility (his lineage was linked to an 800 year-old oligarchical family). His mother, Mitsuko Aoyama, was a wealthy Japanese woman.[1] Incidentally, her family was not pleased with the union and disowned her. 

Richard was born on 17 November 1894, and would become the second eldest of seven children. Two years after Richard was born, the family moved from Tokyo [2] into Ronsperg Castle in…

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