At the heart of Europe, a silent but inexorable crisis has turned into a deafening roar. From the coasts of Italy to the streets of Paris and the suburbs of Malmö, Europeans face a brutal reality: illegal immigration, fueled by organized crime networks, is not just a migratory challenge, but an existential threat to their security, cultural identity, and prosperity.
In 2025, with more than 200,000 irregular entries annually on average since 2016, and estimates of illicit gains of up to 6 billion euros a year for the mafias, the continent has reached a point of no return.
The only thing left for Europeans is to unite in a determined fight for survival, before it’s too late. This article explores why this battle is not an option, but an imperative necessity.
The Deadly Business of Organized Crime: Illegal Immigration as the Engine of Delinquency
Illegal immigration is not a spontaneous phenomenon; it is a criminal empire in expansion. According to the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), around 55,000 inmigrants are victims of illicit trafficking from Africa to Europe each year, generating income close to billions of dollars. In the European Union, criminal networks facilitate these routes with low risk and astronomical benefits: between 4.7 and 6 billion euros annually.
These mafias do not just transport people; they extort, kidnap, and traffic drugs and weapons in parallel, turning European borders into extensions of their global operations.
A paradigmatic example is the Mediterranean, where three million irregular entries are estimated annually on a global level, with Europe as the main destination. In Spain and Italy, the «pateras» and overloaded boats are not isolated acts of desperation, but shipments programmed by cartels operating from Libya and Morocco.
The result: not only lives lost—more than 1,000 drowned in 2025—but entire communities plunged into chaos.
This is not an alarmist view; it is a documented reality. In a September 2025 criminal intelligence analysis, it examines how the «beast»—the death train in Mexico, analogous to European routes—links immigration, crime, and national security, contributing to a cycle of violence that threatens the continent’s stability.
The Rise of Insecurity: Crimes that Change the Social Fabric
One of the most controversial arguments is the link between illegal immigration and crime. Although studies conclude that immigration does not increase crime in general, and that Spaniards commit more crimes in absolute terms according to the INE, qualitative evidence paints an alarming picture in specific contexts.
In Sweden and Germany, for example, sexual assaults have increased by 31% since 2020, with 47% of cases attributed to foreigners, and rapes by 42%, with 37% involving non-Europeans. In France, bakeries like Sylvie’s in Paris report a 24% drop in sales due to gangs of addicted immigrants who steal, fight with knives, and harass women, leaving the police «impotent.»
These are not anecdotes; they are symptoms of «no-go zones» in Malmö or Marseille, where the presence of thousands of unemployed and unintegrated men fosters organized violence. In the United Kingdom, Pakistani, Afghan, and Moroccan grooming gangs have assaulted British girls, eroding social patience to the point of violent eruptions.
Crime is not inherent to immigrants, but the lack of control allows criminal elements to infiltrate, overburdening prisons and welfare systems. In Spain, foreigners represent a disproportion in certain crimes, despite being a minority, and per capita GDP falls while subsidizing those who consume more than they contribute.
The Cultural Threat: Demographic Replacement and Erosion of Identity
Beyond security, illegal immigration accelerates a demographic replacement that threatens Europe’s cultural survival. With massive entries since 2015—more than a million «refugees» who turned out to be economic immigrants faking persecution—churches are converted into mosques funded by foreign money, and Sharia centers emerge in the United Kingdom.
In Italy and France, millions of men have transformed entire towns, leaving locals «powerless» in the face of political indifference.
Public opinion reflects this panic: 39% of Spaniards see extra-EU immigration as both a problem and an opportunity, but 29% consider it purely negative. In Europe, governments are adopting tougher stances, influenced by Trump, with emphasis on deportations and firm borders, as in Hungary and Poland, which preserve their cultural cohesion.
White Europeans, less than 5% of the global population, face an «attack» that erases their history: «It’s time to defend your homes, women, and children.»
Although reports highlight benefits—greater labor force and mobility—the risks outweigh when immigration is uncontrolled: overload of services, loss of opportunities for locals, and cultural erosion.
The Awakening: From Passivity to Resistance
European public opinion has evolved: from the post-2015 welcome to demanding rights for irregulars only in basic health care, with greater support for withheld wages but rejection of total amnesty.
In Spain, locals expel immigrant squatters who traffic drugs, fed up with the pillage. The rise of the far right is inevitable: «Society is waking up to the consequences.»
Fight or Perish
Europe can no longer ignore this calculated invasion. The EU’s failed policies, which prioritize «orderly immigration» over security, have turned the continent into a battlefield.
The only thing left is united resistance: impenetrable borders, mass deportations, and policies that prioritize citizens.
Precise data is urgently needed to act, not excuses. Europeans, the time of complacency is over. Fight for your survival, for your children, and for a continent that remains yours. The alternative is submission.
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