Wednesday blog
We now know that Birmingham (twinned with Karachi, Mogadishu and Gaza) is becoming a no-go area for certain people. And the police, from the little I understand, have to consult with what are called ‘community leaders’ on the very rare occasions they want to venture out of their comfortable police stations and actually do some policing.
And now we see anti-immigration riots in Dublin yesterday after a 12-year-old girl was reportedly sexually assaulted by one of Ireland’s new ‘guests’. It could seem as if some Irish don’t want their country going the same way as UK cities and towns like Birmingham, Rotherham, Rochdale, Oldham, Leicester, Oxford etc etc etc etc:

But will the Irish manage to prevent their rulers turning their country into a crime-ridden, misogynistic, sectarian Third-world hell-hole?
I doubt it because I’ve read something called the “Project Ireland 2040” issued in 2018:

The Irish government website tells us: “Project Ireland 2040 is the government’s long-term overarching strategy to make Ireland a better country for all of its people”.
Here are just a few key points from Project Ireland 2040:
- Guide the future development of Ireland, taking into account a projected 1 million increase in our population, the need to create 660,000 additional jobs to achieve full employment and a need for 550,000 more homes by 2040;
- Of the 1 million extra people,
- 25% is planned for Dublin, recognised as our key international and global city of scale and principal economic driver,
- 25% across the other four cities combined (Cork, Limerick, Galway and Waterford), enabling all four to grow their population and jobs by 50-60%, and become cities of greater scale, i.e. growing by twice as much as they did over the previous 25 years to 2016, and
- with the remaining 50% of growth to occur in key regional centres, towns, villages and rural areas, to be determined in the forthcoming regional plans – Regional Spatial and Economic Strategies (RSESs)
Some interesting issues arise with this plan. Firstly, most governments can barely plan beyond next week, so how can the Irish government plan for more than 20 years ahead? Secondly, there are general elections in Ireland every 5 years and presidential elections every 7 years. So what would be the point of one government or one president producing a 20-year plan? This would only make sense if the main political parties and the presidential candidates were almost indistinguishable from each other and if they were all pursuing almost exactly the same polices dictated to them by the Bilderberg Brussels bureacrats and Davos WEF billionaires. This would make Irish elections meaningless as whichever party or presidential candidate won would follow the same policies
The 2040 ‘population increase’
But the main problem with Plan 2040 is the expected increase in population of about one million people. The Irish birth rate is around 1.9 children per woman down from 4 children per woman in the 1960s and 1970s. The UK is at 1.8. But replacement level is 2.1 children per woman. So, the indigenous Irish population is actually declining.
Ooops! Where are the extra one million people going to come from? Hmmm, I wonder. OK, I remember now – the extra more than one million people will come from Africa, the Middle East and lovely places like Crapistan. That’s 50,000 a year for 20 years – about 1,000 a week.
Of course, the supporters of the ‘everybody welcome’ brigade will claim that all of these wonderful people being imported by Ireland’s rulers are highly educated, very Westernised and eager to roll up their sleeves and get to work paying taxes to support Ireland’s ageing population. On the other hand, some cynics may suspect that most migrants will be poorly educated, barely literate, low-IQ, violent, lazy, unemployable, West-hating, benefits-scrounging, deeply criminal human flotsam and debris who will impose a massive economic burden on the working Irish, destroy communities and strain public services like health, education and policing as has happened in so many other Western European countries.
Will the Irish let their country be destroyed?
The Irish population is around 4.8 million. Let’s assume that the indigenous population will decline to about 4 million by 2040 because of the falling birth rate and a long history of native Irish emigrating to the UK and other English-speaking countries in search of new opportunities. Then, of the 5.8 million people who (the Irish government predicts) will be living in Ireland by 2040, around 1.8 million – almost one in three ‘Irish’ – will be from Africa, the Middle East or places like Crapistan.
Let me just repeat that – one in three Irish will be from Africa, the Middle East or Crapistan! Moreover, this isn’t the ranting of some anti-migration nutjob. This is all clearly laid out in the Project Ireland 2040 report.
Am I really the only person who has realised what the Irish government’s plan will do to their country?
Ludicrously, the Project Ireland 2040 plan has nice pictures of rolling Irish countryside and happy white Irish families.














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