Denmark’s Fourth Realization

Across Europe, a new political realism is taking shape, and nowhere is it clearer than in Denmark. While Norway still clings to the failed dogmas of multiculturalism, the Danes are beginning to articulate what philosopher Eva Selsing calls the Fourth Realization: the recognition that integration has not merely stumbled but collapsed entirely. From the halls of the Danish parliament to the streets where young activists unfurl banners demanding remigration, Denmark is redefining the boundaries of permissible speech and policy on the migration question.

In the following essay, Norwegian publisher Tore Rasmussen examines how this awakening came to be — tracing it from the intellectual groundwork of Martin Sellner’s Regime Change from the Right to the disciplined activism of Generation Identity in Denmark. Rasmussen argues that what is unfolding is not a local anomaly but the early expression of a wider European reorientation: from integration to remigration, from guilt to sovereignty, and from abstract moralism to civilizational self-defense.

As a Norwegian, I follow Danish politics closely. Our histories and languages are deeply intertwined, from the Reformation and the long shadow of the Kalmar Union to Norway’s eventual independence from Denmark in 1814. That old bond matters again today because Denmark is articulating a truth the rest of Europe must face: integration has failed, institutions are being hollowed out from within, and remigration is the only measure commensurate with the crisis. Philosopher Eva Selsing has called this the Fourth Realization. She is right.

The First Realization was the early, naïve belief that all migrants would naturally assimilate into European society. The Second Realization was that deliberate integration policies were required for many immigrants to adapt successfully. The Third Realization, as Frederik Vad, a Social Democrat member of the Danish parliament, recently admitted, is that some citizens with ethnic-minority backgrounds are now undermining democracy from within. The Fourth Realization, most recently articulated by Eva Selsing in the Danish newspaper Berlingske, goes further still: The entire experiment has failed. Integration has proven an illusion, and only repatriation, not further social engineering, can preserve Europe’s civilization.

This awakening did not arise spontaneously. It was forced into the public square by Generation Identity (GI) in Denmark — young activists who, despite repression and misrepresentation, have kept the national conversation anchored to first principles: demography, sovereignty, and ethnocultural continuity. What is often missed abroad is how they have done it. Much of GI’s effectiveness comes from applying Martin Sellner’s metapolitical framework from Regime Change from the Right: campaign-based activism, asymmetric pressure, and disciplined message control designed to shift the nation’s overall political stance to the right without violence.

Mr. Sellner argues that movements win by structuring their activism as focused, time-bound campaigns with a single clear demand. The Danish chapter of GI has done exactly that, using Remigration as its unifying banner. Instead of scattering energy across countless grievances, they run serial campaigns, such as the Fourth Realization, that maintain message discipline and make media framing predictable.

Mr. Sellner also emphasizes actions that are lawful, visual, and impossible to ignore. Generation Identity’s banner drops are textbook examples: drops are done by small, coordinated teams, using banners that employ striking visuals and institutional backdrops and voice a single, uncompromising demand. The photographs and videos are pre-planned deliverables, not afterthoughts, and convey the strategic core of the operation.

Another of Mr. Sellner’s key insights is timing actions to piggyback on existing news cycles. Generation Identity activists executed this perfectly earlier this year when they appeared at a conference held by MP Frederik Vad at the Danish parliament. As Mr. Vad was presenting his “Third Realization,” the activists reframed the moment on-site as being insufficient, instead steering journalists toward the Fourth Realization. As Mr. Sellner puts it: Don’t create the wave, surf it.

Martin Sellner also warns that slogans must be specific. Generation Identity’s Remigration booklet, which lays out particular concrete measures, such as an asylum moratorium, deportation of criminals, repatriation incentives, and a pause on new citizenships, serves as a model. It translates moral intuition into administrative reality, giving journalists and politicians something quotable and concrete, on the movement’s own terms.

At the continental level, Action Radar Europe, a Europe-wide platform for discussing identitarian issues and announcements, mirrors Mr. Sellner’s idea of a “federated network”: shared aesthetics and messaging, locally executed actions, and cross-border amplification. This structure keeps operations resilient under national repression while advancing a coherent European narrative.

Finally, Martin Sellner insists on limiting risks and designing actions that are lawful, camera-friendly, and morally clear. The young Danish activists follow that script faithfully. This is why attempts to label them “extremist” so often backfire, exposing instead the system’s soft totalitarian reflex against dissent.

As a Norwegian, I am grateful for the Danish activists’ clarity. From 1537 to 1814, we were formally under Danish rule. Today, we face a more subtle, yet more sinister subordination: this time a subordination to white guilt, demographic arithmetic, and the dictates of the European Union. The lesson of our shared past is clear: sovereignty must be defended anew in every era. The Danish Fourth Realization is not merely an acknowledgement; it is a lighthouse for the rest of us in Northern Europe.

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