Kosovo’s Present is Europe’s Future

Kosovo on the Thames, the Seine…and the Potomac

http://www.wvwnews.net/story.php?id=3524

http://www.wvwnews.net/story.php?id=3496

by John http://www.wvwnews.net/story.php?id=2774

The independence of Kosovo as a second Islamic state in the heart of Europe is now a fact. Serbia and Russia will continue to contest it, as they should, but their efforts will come to nothing, as they must. The battle for Kosovo was lost not in 2007 or in 1999, but a century ago, when the birthrate among its Albanian population vastly outpaced that of its Christians. The “revenge of the cradle” has ridden to power in Kosovo on the inexorable logic of one-man, one-vote. Or should we say, http://www.wvwnews.net/story.php?id=3289?  

I will go into more depth on what the economist Milica Bookman calls the “demographic struggle for power”—in her tragically out-of-print book on the subject—in a further post this week, analyzing the latest failed attempt to explain the clash of civilizations between Mideast and West, Worlds at War. But for now, I’d like to reflect on what the fate of Kosovo portends for the homelands from which most of our ancestors came. It’s often reported, correctly, that Kosovo was “spiritual heartland” of Serbia. Since most of us aren’t http://www.wvwnews.net/story.php?id=3505, and have no special love for the Serbs (in 1992 I wanted to sign up with the Croatian army to fight them, but cooler heads prevailed), it’s easy for us to skim lightly over this. So let me put in starker terms: For Serbia, read “England,” and for Kosovo read “London.” Or “Paris,” or “Rome.” So as you read the news accounts of Kosovo’s secession, and the reports of Kosovars dynamiting historic Serbian churches, imagine the demolition of Westminster Abbey, Notre Dame, or St. Peter’s Basilica. Imagine it all taking place quite democratically, by valid majority vote. You’ve just ridden a time machine through the next 60 years. You may have wondered, as I did, why the U.S. bombed Yugoslavia in 1999—to halt the admittedly brutal behavior of Milosevic, whose attempt to hold onto Kosovo was futile, and 50 years too late. (On the day New Yorkers marched outside of the U.N. against that illegal American intervention, I was probably the only Croat holding a sign.) Why did the Western powers so enthusiastically support the attack? In part, because it let them off the hook. The better sort of European remembered some real atrocities committed by ethnic Serbs (although they were far from the only ones) in Bosnia. But there was something more going on. The Europeans were enacting a little drama in their heads, acting out a mystery play intended to teach a lesson to their descendants: The lesson was “You will never act like this. You will not resist. When the Moslems come to power, you will go quietly and cooperate.”

It’s well-known, and widely (if quietly) lamented, that birthrates among Islamic immigrants and their children are vastly higher throughout Europe than those of native peoples. I’ve read at least one prediction that France will have an Islamic majority within 50 years—assuming the Moslems’ stern desert creed proves resistant to our contraceptive culture. (Hard to know who to root for there….) Indeed, Eurocrats openly advocate the mass importation of (still more!) young and fertile immigrants from the Middle East, the better to fund the cozy retirements which the dying peoples of Europe voted themselves after World War II. It’s hard to imagine a more perverted scheme for keeping oneself in office, than to sell your motherland into the seraglio, to auction it off piece by piece to an intolerant, alien civilization. It’s as if members of the Byzantine government in the 15th century were to gradually dismantle the walls protecting the city, to use the stones for Roman baths. As Burke once said, “People will not look forward to posterity who never look backward to their ancestors.”

Perhaps the lesson of this sellout is rather simple (and applicable to America): Guess what, Mr. Chamber of Commerce? Immigrants aren’t robots whom we can program to do our grunt-work and then unplug, but human beings with human rights and the prerogative to organize politically and make demands. Cheap Labor Isn’t Cheap.

http://www.takimag.com/blogs/article/kosovo_on_the_thames/

While the Serbs are justified in complaining about the loss of Kosovo by demographic warfare carried out with NATO air cover, a sad fact is that the Serbs, like whites everywhere, brought a lot of this down on themselves. The leaders of Socialist Yugoslavia were mainly Serbs and Croats who enforced affirmative action programs in the vain hope of “modernizing” the clannish Kosovars and converting them to the Marxist, multicultural vision. They suppressed their own ethnic histories, jailed their own dissidents, and persecuted their churches, which were the main transmission belts of cultural awareness. And Yugoslavia’s Christian population had one of the highest abortion levels in the world. While ethnic Albanians were enjoying large, government subsidized families, the Serbs and Croats were killing their children in the womb. All across the West the wages of poisonous ideology, misleadership, lack of self awareness, and personal selfishness are paying off in displacement and eventual genocide.

2008-02-27