The Soros Method of Chaos
In June of 2016, George Soros wrote an editorial about the seven pillars to the EU crisis. The main goal in his writing was to encourage large numbers of Islam extremists to funnel into the EU:
If the EU made a commitment to admit even just 300,000 refugees each year, and if that commitment were matched by countries elsewhere in the world, most genuine asylum-seekers would calculate that their odds of reaching their destination are good enough for them not to seek to reach Europe illegally, since that would disqualify them from being legally admitted.
There is a common thread to convince an individual that it is in their best interest to open their wallet rather than suffer a looming threat being presented before them. In the case of the EU, and in the case of the USA, the looming threat presented is always
If you allow an insane amount of immigration then you won’t have to worry about illegal immigration
That certainly makes sense if you’re the atypical pacifist who would rather not make waves. However, the realist understands that to stop the immigration one must solve the issue at hand by presenting a solution to the departures from their homeland rather than buying expensive culturally clashing band aids.
The second pillar he recommended was
provide Greece and Italy with sufficient funds to care for asylum-seekers
based on the looming threat that the EU has to protect its borders. Soros describes the sad state of affairs for EU by marginalizing its border security by pointing out refugee camps are unaccommodating. He would love to see nations globalize under the idea of servitude to helping fellow man. There once was a 50 year experiment under the same ideal, comrade.