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Trump versus the Internationalist Narrative on Global Migration

Dismantling the artificial storyline that the inundation of the West is inevitable, noble and good.

President-Elect Donald Trump is steaming his way to the White House equipped with a mandate from the American people to crack down on unchecked massive illegal immigration. Along the way, he will have to grapple as well with an entrenched internationalist effort to normalize the authorized global migration that has helped fuel the astonishing movement of vast numbers of people into the nations of the West.

The Organization for Economic Co-Operation and Development is a multi-national entity committed to using multilateralism “to find solutions to social, economic and environmental challenges.” The United States is a member, along with 37 other countries, including all the leading nations of Europe, Canada, Australia and New Zealand.

On Nov. 14, OECD released its International Migration Outlook 2024 report. While claiming to seek “balance” in migrant flows so as to not unduly burden host nations, the tone of the paper overall can be expressed by three words: bring them in.

‘Set a New Record’

“Permanent-type migration to OECD countries set a new record in 2023 with 6.5 million new permanent immigrants, a 10% year-on-year increase, and 28% above 2019 levels,” the report states. “About a third of OECD countries experienced record immigration levels in 2023, particularly the United Kingdom, but also Canada, France, Japan and Switzerland.”

OECD celebrated “the upward trend in immigration employment” in host nations in 2023. Ten OECD countries, “including Canada, the United Kingdom and the United States, as well as the [European Union], had the highest immigrant employment rates on record,” the summary notes. For the OECD, this is a sign of successful “integration,” not the mass importation of cheap, exploitable labor at the expense of working citizens of its member nations.

New banner Perpective 1Tellingly, OECD also hailed the expansion of international agreements on migration around the world, including the Los Angeles Declaration on Migration and Protection pact that Joe Biden’s Secretary of State Antony Blinken heavily leaned on to validate a gross abuse of humanitarian parole provisions in US immigration law that allowed more than 400,000 migrants to enter the US through the administration’s Cuban, Haitian, Nicaraguan, and Venezuelan (CHNV) program.

How’s this for a sobering quote? “In 2023, more than 150 million people living in OECD countries were foreign-born. The United States alone hosted nearly a third of them,” the report crows.

This means the US, a nation of 335 million people, had some 50 million foreign-born residents last year. That’s 15 percent of the entire population, with the critical caveat that the actual number of illegal aliens is unknown and undoubtedly at least two if not three times higher than the outdated estimate of 11 million so often quoted.

Migration Madness: How to Get Into the UK In One Easy Step

A section on immigrant “integration” highlights OECD’s hostile attitude towards those citizens of its member nations who do not want to see their countries so fundamentally transformed in such a short time. “The fight against discrimination and racism remains high on policy agendas,” the bolded text declares. Several of the usual government endeavors so commonplace throughout the West today are called out for recognition.

In Australia, a “Multicultural Framework Review” was created to “explore ways for the government and local communities to work together to support a cohesive multicultural society.” In Norway, the government launched an “Action Plan Against Racism and Discrimination.” Its operation hones in on employers and “areas impacting young people in particular, such as education.” “Diversity advisers” are to have “expanded roles” in Norwegian schools to win the hearts and minds of the young natives for acceptance of their new foreign neighbors. Similar efforts in Belgium, Germany, Finland, France, Ireland, Poland, Spain and Sweden are also extolled.

How does this anti-hate immigration protocol work out in practice?

“A record surge in asylum seekers claiming to be gay has seen numbers nearly triple in just one year, according to official figures revealed,” UK site GB News reported Nov. 17. “In 2023, some 2,133 people secured UK residency by demonstrating that returning to their homeland would be inhumane due to their sexuality, compared to 762 in 2022,” the site relates.

Here’s where it becomes cause for concern.

“Eight countries saw all asylum claims based on sexuality approved,” GB News added. Among those eight: Afghanistan, Libya, Syria and Yemen. This is how simple it is for terrorists to game a woke system and waltz into the heartland of a leading Western nation.

In January 2020, President Trump told attendees at Klaus Schwab’s annual World Economic Forum gathering in Davos to “put their own citizens first.” He was sternly rebuked by OECD Secretary-General Angel Gurria. “How can you deal with things like migration, how can you deal with things like climate, for that matter, how can you deal with investment flows that go across borders, if not multilaterally? Clearly the multilateral approach is the way to go,” a scarf-swaddled Gurria told CNBC from his outdoor seat overlooking the Swiss Alps.

Now Trump is back. If he wants to truly put a stop to the tidal wave of migrants into America, he will have to do something about the globalist entities facilitating it.

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Liberty Nation does not endorse candidates, campaigns, or legislation, and this presentation is no endorsement.

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Joe Schaeffer

Political Columnist

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