September Turns Silent No More with Travel Advisory as Far-Right Streets Erupt, Global Share Markets Prepare as Sentimental Analysis Changes

Bureau: The last quarter of 2025 has begun not with silence but with a quiet storm. September, traditionally seen as a transition into the year’s final stretch, has unexpectedly become a defining month in global politics. It is a month where the Right has found its collective voice, where cultural and ideological tides have shifted, and where the future of trade, sovereignty, identity, and even share markets is being rewritten.

The symbolic beginning was marked by the Shanghai Cooperation Organization, where Narendra Modi, Vladimir Putin, and Xi Jinping met with warmth, laughter, and camaraderie. This image of unity at the epicenter of right-wing leadership now feels prophetic, as nationalist movements gather momentum worldwide—from London to Sydney, from Warsaw to Washington. What may have looked diplomatic in form now appears to be the quiet inauguration of September as the global month of the Right.

Adding to this momentum was the conclusion of Ganesh Utsav. Once revived by Bal Gangadhar Tilak to awaken political unity against colonial rule, it has transcended borders. Ganesh Chaturthi is now celebrated across continents, its underlying spirit of cultural solidarity embraced by far-right communities—even among Christians. Once rulers of empires by conquest, Christians now feel themselves cornered by Muslim migrant waves, while Hindus preserve a distinct role: not conquering land, but dominating the intellectual sphere through their immortal Sanatani Vedic literature. While missionaries and Sharia activists march on the streets, Hindus fight an intellectual war with philosophy and ideas.

But September is not just about symbols. It has become the month of one of the largest global mobilizations of the Far Right in recent history. In Britain, peaceful right-wing protests are scheduled, while across Europe, the Americas, and Oceania, the Right is gathering under banners carefully worded to avoid running afoul of laws that still favor progressive politics.

Countries now in the spotlight include India, United Kingdom, Scotland, Ireland, Northern Ireland, Wales, France, Germany, Italy, Poland, Netherlands, Serbia, Spain, Greece, United States, Australia, New Zealand, Japan, Tibet and Israel. They are not coordinated by design, but bound by sentiment: enough is enough. Enough of unchecked migration, enough of being sidelined in their own homelands, enough of watching cultures erode under policies passed without the people’s consent.

Australia erupted with the “March for Australia” rallies in Sydney, Melbourne, and Perth. Arrests were made, but the anger was unmistakable. Attacks on Indigenous protest sites by extremists revealed just how emboldened such groups have become. Even India expressed concern for its diaspora caught in the upheaval.

In the United Kingdom, demonstrations continue outside hotels housing asylum seekers. Protesters accuse politicians of using “Migrant Hotels” as tools for demographic engineering, a strategy critics call “Ballot Jihad.” For many, it echoes India’s own election tactics of herding voters into accommodations—except here it is not logistics, but constitutions and demographics being reshaped.

Northern Ireland bore the scars of riots targeting the Roma community, injuring over a hundred police officers. In towns like Ballymena, entire Roma neighborhoods have disappeared. These are not just riots; they are forced displacements born of resentment and fear.

Poland has surged with Stop Immigration protests in more than 80 cities, spearheaded by the far-right Confederation party. It is the largest mobilization in years, signaling a decisive mood shift. Germany too is witnessing AfD’s growing influence, igniting mass marches and fierce debates over asylum and integration. France’s streets have filled with demonstrations, with Marine Le Pen’s National Rally harnessing discontent. In Italy, the government’s new Security Decree has hardened policing powers, sparking defiance but strengthening right-wing control of law and order.

Across the Atlantic, the United States has seen “Workers over Billionaires” rallies across 900 cities during Labor Day. While framed as economic justice, they are tightly interwoven with anger over immigration, labor laws, and cultural divides. Earlier, clashes in Brooklyn between pro-Palestinian and pro-Israel groups showed how foreign conflicts bleed into American streets.

The Netherlands has faced anti-asylum protests in Helmond, amplified by Geert Wilders’ rhetoric. Spain has seen violence in Murcia and Torre-Pacheco, while Madrid’s migrant children’s center became a flashpoint for Vox before authorities blocked protests. Greece too is marked by rising hostility over asylum enforcement, fueled by misinformation and public anger. Serbia remains a battleground, with protests reflecting the clash between nationalist governance and democratic aspirations.

Amid this turbulence, Hindus prepare for their own global assertion—not on the streets, but intellectually. On September 27, the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh celebrates its 100th anniversary. Born in India, but watched across the world, the RSS represents a century of discipline, solidarity, and right-wing ideology rooted in tradition rather than aggression. Its centenary is set to become the largest peaceful assertion of right-wing identity this year, a striking contrast to chaotic protests elsewhere.

The world in 2025 is more polarized than in recent memory. Far-right movements are no longer fringe; they are mainstream, fueled by anger at migration, economic insecurity, and cultural erosion. Christians and Muslims clash over politics and territory, while Hindus maintain cultural sovereignty through philosophy, preserving what centuries of invasion could not erase.

But beneath the identity wars lie profound economic consequences. As far-right momentum builds, trade agreements once grounded in liberal free movement face reevaluation. Europe risks stricter border controls that could strangle Schengen itself. The U.K., already outside the EU, may harden further, straining trade across the Channel. Poland ties its anti-migrant politics directly to EU budget battles, threatening vetoes in Brussels. Germany, Europe’s engine, faces instability in its industrial heartlands as supply chains buckle under migration debates.

In the U.S., anti-migrant sentiment collides with dependency on immigrant labor in agriculture, construction, and services. If policy shifts follow protests, food costs will rise, industries will automate, and Latin America’s remittance economies will falter. Australia faces a crisis in education and healthcare if migrant workers and students are curtailed, threatening its property market. New Zealand, dependent on seasonal agricultural workers, risks food price surges.

Sector by sector, risks sharpen. Energy faces labor shortages in infrastructure projects and disruption to climate cooperation. Agriculture could see soaring food prices as migrant labor dwindles. Technology may suffer talent losses to Asia if visa regimes tighten in the West. Defense could fracture NATO while strengthening SCO and BRICS, destabilizing arms supply chains. Financial markets already show volatility, with Europe’s stock exchanges facing rising risk premiums, the pound and euro under pressure, and Asia—especially India and China—positioned as safe havens.

September has turned from silence into a roar. Travel advisories rise, protests spread, and markets tremble. What began as symbolic gestures and cultural festivals has become the month when the Right demanded to be heard, when borders, economies, and identities collided, and when the foundations of 2026’s global order were quietly but decisively redrawn.

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