When Donald Trump declared in July 2025 that "immigration is killing Europe," the professional class scoffed. But behind the predictable outrage from legacy media and NGO elites, the numbers, headlines, and gut-level instincts of ordinary citizens say otherwise. With over 385,000 illegal crossings into the EU last year alone, an 18% rise on 2022, Europe is not just enduring a migration crisis. It's committing civilisational suicide.
While journalists fuss over tone and researchers massage statistics, entire neighbourhoods from Malmö to Marseille are being transformed beyond recognition. The very idea of European cultural continuity, of shared language, values, and traditions, is under threat. And so is public safety. Europe isn't just at a crossroads. It's in retreat.
Since the 2015 wave of Middle Eastern and African migration, Europe has floundered. Instead of enforcing borders, it outsourced patrols to people-smuggling NGOs and placated voters with empty gestures. The UK threw £800 million at France to stop the Channel crossings. Result? A 50% increase in 2025, over 23,000 migrants arrived, many on dinghies watched but not stopped.
And it's not just Britain. The EU's own Frontex figures paint a picture of porous frontiers and policy paralysis. Countries like Hungary and Poland resisted. Others, like Sweden and Germany, opened their gates, and are now counting the cultural and human cost. Trump's warning echoes reality: Europe has "lost control," and it shows.
The migrants arriving in droves do not simply "enrich" Europe. Many come from societies where clan loyalty, honour killings, and totalitarian religion still rule. When these values collide with liberal, secular Western norms, the result is not harmony, it's friction, if not chaos.
Sweden once prided itself on social trust and peaceful streets. Now it reports 61 "vulnerable areas," effectively no-go zones, where shootings, gang turf wars, and ethnic separatism flourish. In these zones, even ambulances need police escorts.
A 2025 poll found 62% of Germans believe immigration has harmed cultural cohesion. In Britain, 54% blame migration for undermining shared values and straining public services. These aren't fringe opinions. They're mainstream, and growing. The populist Right is rising because the establishment won't even admit there's a problem.
The pro-immigration lobby love to cite broad-brush studies claiming migrants commit fewer crimes. But these often exclude illegal entrants, fail to disaggregate by nationality, or gloss over specific urban realities. Crime isn't distributed evenly, it spikes in places where integration has failed, or never even been attempted. Take the 2025 Epping assault in the UK by an Ethiopian migrant, or the 2023 Cologne sex attacks. Or the Swedish police report linking a 30% rise in gang shootings to second-generation migrants. These aren't statistical flukes. They're warning flares.
Yes, a Cato Institute study claims illegal immigrants commit fewer murders in Texas. But most EU nations don't even track immigration status in their crime stats. It's wilful blindness, to keep a lid on diversity's pathologies.
And people aren't buying it anymore. They see what's happening in their towns, in their schools, on their streets, and they know they've been lied to.
While Europe agonises over "human rights" treaties and the legal niceties of turn backs, China acts. Its navy intercepts unauthorised vessels with precision. In 2023, it expelled nearly 50 foreign boats from the South China Sea. Result? Near-zero illegal entries. The secret? Political will. Naval power. Offshore processing. Europe could do the same, if it cared more about its citizens than its image in Geneva.
This is not just a culture war. It's a humanitarian disaster. Over 3,000 migrants drowned in the Med last year, victims of smugglers emboldened by Europe's lax enforcement. And the survivors? Many wind up in taxpayer-funded hotels, with Britain now spending over £900,000 a day to house 32,000 arrivals.
At £41,000 per migrant per year, the UK could fund a local school or hospital for every group of 20. But instead, public money is burned to manage a crisis that should never have existed.
The facts are clear: mass, uncontrolled immigration is reshaping Europe, culturally, demographically, and politically. Trump called it what it is: an invasion.
And like any invasion, it can be stopped. Europe still has borders. It still has navies. What it lacks is courage. The courage to defy a managerial elite that treats national identity as a museum relic, and sovereignty as a hate crime.
If China can secure its coasts, so can Britain. If Australia can shut down illegal boats, so can Italy. The question is: will they? Or will they let Europe continue to unravel while they virtue-signal from conference panels?
Trump has handed Europe a mirror. What it does now, or refuses to do, will determine whether there is any Europe left worth defending.
https://www.infowars.com/posts/immigration-killing-europe-trump
"US President Donald Trump has ramped up his rhetoric on immigration, claiming it is "killing" Europe and warning that European leaders must act immediately or risk losing control. The warning comes as the continent continues to grapple with a protracted migration crisis that has spanned more than a decade.
Large numbers of migrants have been entering the EU since 2015, largely caused by upheavals in the Middle East and Africa, and later the Ukraine conflict. According to the EU Commission, there were 385,445 irregular border crossings in 2023, an 18% increase from 2022.
"You're allowing it to happen to your countries, and you've got to stop this horrible invasion that's happening to Europe," Trump said during a five-day visit to Scotland focused on his business interests, including golf resorts.
"Immigration is killing Europe," the president added, urging leaders to take immediate action. "You better get your act together, or you're not going to have Europe anymore."
Trump also used the occasion to highlight his administration's hardline stance on immigration within the US, boasting about stepped-up enforcement along the southern border.
"As you know, last month we had nobody entering our country. We removed a lot of bad people who got in," he said.
Since returning to the Oval Office in January, Trump has reinstated strict immigration control, including mass deportations and expanded detention efforts. He has pledged to carry out the largest migrant removal operation in US history despite widespread criticism and protests across the country.
The migration crisis in Europe has been met with varied responses across the continent. While some countries initially welcomed asylum seekers, many have since reintroduced border controls and tightened immigration laws amid concerns over security and rising crime.
In April, US Vice President J.D. Vance echoed the president's concerns, describing its migration policy as one of the Europe's greatest threats. He warned that uncontrolled migration risks "destroying the fundamental cultural bedrock of Europe."