Third
world migrant crisis in the US is actually worse than it is in Europe
While
we’re all distracted with the European problem, our nation sinks and drowns.
Olivia Murray |
May 11, 2026 www.americanthinker.com
Listen,
I’ll be the first one to admit that I’ve been hyperfocused on the migration
problem consuming Europe, writing on it fairly frequently.
When
you see what Western gems like Paris, London, Berlin, Brussels, and Edinburgh
have become, it’s easy. The crime rates are surging, from vandalism to rape and
murder, infamous and unforgettable images make it into our news feeds—like the
African migrant cooking his breakfast on a Western war memorial or the freaky
East African-looking guy grinning from his taxpayer-paid flat balcony after
going on a stabbing spree—and Arab delinquents are caught destroying historic
walls that have been standing for centuries.
And
while we do have our own examples of the migration problem in the U.S., like
Laken Riley’s murder and the Somali fraud scandal, they’re relatively rare, or
framed in the media as being small scale occurrences—tempting us to think it’s
worse in Europe than here. But I think we’re being extremely naive, living in “the
white,” fat, dumb, and (relatively) happy.
I
first realized that things are actually more dire here than they are in Europe
when I went to the U.K. a couple of months back. In the small towns, things
still felt and looked distinctly English, Irish, and Scottish (respectively).
Small towns in the U.S., even in places like Alabama where I live? Athens,
where my kids go to school, is full of Haitians, I’ve seen gaggles of Islamic
women covered from head-to-toe in their burkas in Moulton where I go to buy local
farm goods, and I refuse to go to Walmart anymore after being jostled down the
aisles by diminutive Central Americans one too many times, with not an
English-speaking customer to be found. (I was the only American in a sea of
foreigners, literally, in my own home country.)
When
I visited Blackpool? Only white English people. I didn’t see a single migrant.
When
I visited Inverness, Dún Laoghaire, Wrea Green, Dingwall, and Fort Augustus?
All Anglos, with a few Asians working the sushi restaurant at which we dined.
Again, not a single African or Arab third-worlder.
The
big cities? When I went to Dublin, I saw a whopping two
Muslims, women with hijabs, participating in the St. Paddy’s Day celebrations,
speaking English, and decently Westernized. Not ideal, but at least they know
the language, having probably been born there. (I wrote on my trip to Ireland
for the AT newsletter, so here’s a quick AT subscription plug for
access to exclusive essays that won’t appear on the site.)
Okay,
that’s all anecdotal you might say, and fair enough—but let’s look at some
numbers.
14.1%
of the EU’s population in 2024 reportedly
consisted of foreign-born individuals. In Germany, where the numbers are
notoriously bad, the overall migrant population is around 20%.
The
U.S.? We have a population of roughly 342 million—and around 100 million are
foreigners who need to be deported/repatriated:
That’s
a whopping 30% of our population being non-Americans, whether they have “legal”
status or not.
Consider
that the 10-12 million number was what they said…back in the 1970s:
Also
consider that since Hart-Celler, which eliminated the prioritization of
immigrants from Western nations to instead permit all the net negative
individuals from the darkest corners of the globe, some
60 million “immigrants” have flooded into the U.S.—then they reproduced
like rabbits. Europe, just by virtue of being small and with limited
room for growth, has less migrants. The U.S., with tons of space and a massive
economy, is bearing the brunt.
While
we’re all distracted with the European problem, our nation sinks and drowns.