Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Μεγάλη Αντικατάσταση" in Greek language version.
...this narrative is highly compatible with concrete conspiracy narratives about how this replacement is desired and planned, either by 'the politicians' or 'the elite,' which-ever connotes Jewishness more effectively.
This conspiracy theory, which was first articulated by the French philosopher Renaud Camus, has gained a lot of traction in Europe since 2015.
As for the grand replacement, this has been widely seen as a paranoid fantasy, which plays fast and loose with the statistics, is racist in that it classes as immigrants people actually born in France, glosses over the fact that around half of immigrants are from other European countries, and suggests that declining indigenous France will be outbred by Muslim newcomers when in fact it has the highest fertility rate in Western Europe, and not because of immigration.
In fact, although white supremacists in the United States and elsewhere have long claimed the white race is under attack, the Great Replacement theory itself originated in France with philosopher Renaud Camus (though Camus himself rejects violence).
Where the great replacement is an identifiably Islamaphobic screed, Lane’s written works reveal an underlying fear-fantasy of a Jewish conspiracy that seeks the eradication of Lane’s chosen people.
...this narrative is highly compatible with concrete conspiracy narratives about how this replacement is desired and planned, either by 'the politicians' or 'the elite,' which-ever connotes Jewishness more effectively.
Where the great replacement is an identifiably Islamaphobic screed, Lane’s written works reveal an underlying fear-fantasy of a Jewish conspiracy that seeks the eradication of Lane’s chosen people.