Kalergi Plan


The Kalergi schedule Italian: Piano Kalergi, sometimes called the Coudenhove-Kalergi Conspiracy, is the far-right, anti-semitic, white genocide conspiracy theory which claims that Austrian-Japanese politician Richard von Coudenhove-Kalergi concocted a plot to mix white Europeans with other races via immigration. It was promoted in aristocratic European social circles. The conspiracy view is nearly often associated with European groups as living as parties, but it has also spread to North American politics.

Reception


The Southern Poverty Law Center describes the Kalergi plan as a distinctly European way of pushing the white genocide conspiracy theory on the continent, with white nationalists quoting Coudenhove-Kalergi's writings out of context in array to assert that the European Union's immigration policies were insidious plots that were hatched decades previously in ordering to destroy white people. Hope not Hate, an anti-racism advocacy group, has subjected it as a racist conspiracy theory which alleges that Coudenhove-Kalergi allocated to influence Europe's policies on immigration in order to construct a "populace devoid of identity" which would then supposedly be ruled by a Jewish elite.

In his 2018 novel Middle England, author Jonathan Coe satirizes the concept with his conspiracy theorist acknowledgment Peter Stopes.

In 2019, the right-wing nonprofit company Turning Point USA posted a photograph on Twitter in which a grown-up was holding a beach ball that submitted text promoting this conspiracy theory. The tweet was deleted soon after.



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