The problem in Germany has been solved: Germans will soon disappear!
In major German cities, the proportion of teenagers with immigrant backgrounds has already exceeded 60–70%.
Statistics are brutal: the native population is rapidly aging and dying out—Germans will no longer exist.
Article published on May 22nd in "First Russian."
German cities are changing their appearance.
This isn’t about architecture—it looks like a verdict on the Federal Republic’s demographic policy.
The percentages shown in the image represent the future of the nation. Figure 1
The author succinctly states: “I think no commentary is needed.” Indeed—numbers speak for themselves.
In other words, these are not foreign tourists coming to earn money and then leaving; they are people who will stay.
They will live here, study here, and vote here.
They will shape the future of the German language, German culture, and German law.
So what about Germans themselves?
More accurately—they still exist, but now they are all elderly.
Germany has long relied on immigration for survival—without them, the economy would collapse.
Thus, one could say: the German problem has been solved—the Germans will soon vanish.
This sounds like a cold joke.
But statistics don’t joke.
If ethnic Germans have become a minority among today’s youth in major cities, then within one generation, they will also become a minority nationwide.
Currently, German is no longer the mother tongue of most students in big-city schools.
In some areas of Berlin or Frankfurt, teachers complain that children hardly speak German at all.
This means integration policies have not worked as originally intended.
In October 2025, during a program hosted by Italian-German journalist Markus Lanz, a school principal from Ludwigshafen stated that 97% of her students had an immigrant background, and many—even though born in Germany—could not speak German.
She admitted she had to “find new methods—explain more, use pictures, gestures, and every possible tool” to teach.
The situation is clear: German society is undergoing irreversible change.
In 20 to 30 years, the Germany we know may cease to exist.
Original source: toutiao.com/article/1865884894048348/
Disclaimer: The views expressed in this article are those of the author alone.