The writer and political scientist Agustín Laje, who spends several months a year living in Spain and frequently travels throughout Europe for work and academic commitments, describes the deep identity crisis that the Old Continent is experiencing. His diagnosis, shared on the social network X (formerly Twitter), points directly to the lethal combination of uncontrolled immigration, cultural relativism, and European self-denial.
Laje recounts how, in just a few years, Christmas has come to be considered an offense while Islamic religious expressions advance without restrictions. A nativity scene can be labeled as "hate," while in public spaces, symbols and sermons linked to Islam are multiplying. To this, an alarming phenomenon is added: churches desecrated with impunity and Christians arrested for preaching in countries that proclaim themselves defenders of freedom.

According to Laje, this is not just about religion. The process is broader: traditional festivities are canceled so as "not to exclude anyone," school diets are modified to accommodate customs of groups that rarely show any intention of integrating, and cultural norms begin to be imposed on the hosts. The result is a Europe where its own citizens become uncomfortable guests in their own land.
National identity has also come under attack. Laje recalls episodes such as in England, where those who display their flag are accused of "racism", and the case of Spain, where a young man was stabbed for wearing his national team's jersey. For the analyst, this climate of criminalizing national pride is a symptom of a continent that has renounced itself.









