One Hundred Years of History: The Islamists Disgard the Communists Once in Power!
"It's very effective because if you go against Muslims, that's they have the cover of religion." ~ Trevor Loudon
In a candid discussion on global migration patterns, researcher and author Trevor Loudon highlighted the deliberate orchestration of third-world and Islamic immigration into Western nations as a strategy rooted in communist ideology. He pointed out that "30% of Australian voters are not native born," emphasizing how such demographics are not accidental but part of a broader design. "This is all over the Western world," Loudon asserted.
"This is a very conscious deliberate policy by the Chinese, the old Soviet communists, anybody they could to increase the third world immigration into Western countries and primarily Islam. That they knew would cause conflict that they knew would cause social breakdown, demoralization, all of this kind of thing. So this is not accidental."
Loudon traced the origins of this tactic back a century, linking it directly to the Bolshevik Revolution. "This is a hundred years in the planning since the Bolshevik Revolution," he explained. "The communists have been pushing this on every Western country. They get the left into power. The left opens the doors."
Drawing on specific examples, he cited Minnesota as a case study of this infiltration, describing it as "run by communists" from early Finnish immigrants expelled from the Russian Empire in 1905 to modern politicians. There, he claimed, authorities intentionally created "a magnet for Muslim migrants" because "they knew that the Muslims would be a great ally in destroying the conservative movements and bringing down the country and just creating chaos." This pattern, Loudon warned, has paved the way for an "upsurge of Islamic migration to the west and third world migration in general, but particularly Islamic," with repercussions now evident in Europe and spreading to American cities like those featuring figures such as Ilhan Omar or mayoral candidates in Minneapolis.
Delving deeper into historical alliances, Loudon revealed how Soviet leaders strategically courted Muslim populations to avoid internal conflict. Upon seizing power in Russia, the Bolsheviks "immediately persecuted the Christians and the Jews. They shut down churches and synagogues and slaughtered priests and rabbis. But they didn't do that to the Muslims because the Muslims were in wild territory out Central Asia."
Instead, they "infiltrated the mosques and madrasas" to forge "Soviet Islam," deploying it as early as the 1920s to "start flooding Muslim refugees, Muslims into the West." This included backing organizations like the PLO and the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine. Ultimately, Loudon portrayed Islam as an ideal "battering ram against the west" for communists, who lack religious cover themselves. "It's very effective because if you go against Muslims, that's they have the cover of religion," he noted. "Communism doesn't have the cover of religion. Islam does. So, it's a perfect tool for the communist to push."
Loudon stressed that this agenda remains "planned scientifically organized in Moscow and Beijing and Havana," underscoring the enduring threat to Western stability.