This past weekend, Paris once again descended into riots: cars torched, officers attacked, neighborhoods in chaos. These scenes are not random. They are the direct consequence of decades of mass immigration from cultures fundamentally incompatible with Western values, laws, and history. The same forces that are transforming France are already at work inside America.
France was not “conquered” by armies. It was overtaken by demographic transformation — enabled by naive policies, elite denial, and leaders who placed ideology above national survival. America must confront this reality before we suffer the same fate.
The foundation was laid in 1965 with the Hart-Celler Act, signed by Lyndon B. Johnson. This law dismantled America’s traditional preference for immigrants from Europe who shared our values and easily assimilated. Instead, it opened the floodgates to mass immigration from Asia, Africa, and Muslim-majority countries. What was sold as compassion and fairness set the stage for civilizational change.
In the early 1990s, under President George H.W. Bush, the United States began resettling large numbers of Somali refugees following Somalia’s civil war. This program expanded under Clinton. Many of these immigrants were placed in Midwestern communities like Minnesota, where integration challenges, welfare strain, and cultural friction continue to this day.
Then came President Barack Obama, who dramatically accelerated the process.
Obama, committed to multiculturalism and diversity with a special affection towards the Islamic world, deliberately raised refugee ceilings year after year.
During his presidency, the United States issued over 1.1 million green cards to migrants from Muslim-majority countries while Christian refugees were turned down. In 2016 alone, nearly 39,000 Muslim refugees were admitted, including record numbers from Somalia and Syria. Over 54,000 Somali refugees entered the country while Obama was in office. He planned to bring in 110,000 refugees in 2017. These were conscious policy choices, not accidents of history.
Some may ask: “What’s the problem? Isn’t this simply humanitarianism?”
That question ignores the larger issue entirely.
This is not merely about helping individuals. It is about importing, at scale, populations from societies whose core values — on governance, women’s rights, free speech, religion, and law — clash with the Judeo-Christian, Enlightenment foundations of the West. The result is predictable: parallel societies, no-go zones, rising crime, terrorism risks, and the steady erosion of social cohesion.
Europe’s experience proves it. Decades of open-door policies created exactly what we saw in Paris this weekend. Leaders dismissed warnings as “fearmongering” or “racism.” Every concession was framed as tolerance. Every concession became a stepping stone to the next demand. Today, France is reaping the consequences of losing control over its own demographic destiny.
America is one of the last major Western nations still capable of self-preservation. Our republic was built on individual liberty, rule of law, and a shared cultural inheritance. We have a moral obligation to our children and future generations to defend these foundations.
We do not need more parallel societies.
We do not need leaders who treat American values as optional.
We do not need to repeat Europe’s catastrophic mistakes.
What we need: