Diversity is Our Strength — Especially in Organised Crime!
Europol's latest report on organised crime in Europe paints a picture that diversity advocates might find... inconvenient. A sprawling network of roughly 400,000 individuals involved in serious and organised crime operates across the continent, involving perpetrators from 118 different nationalities. Drug trafficking, human smuggling, fraud, cybercrime, and violence form the backbone of this shadow economy. The report highlights how porous borders, failed integration, and ethnic enclaves have enabled these networks to thrive with remarkable efficiency.
This is "diversity" in action, just not the kind celebrated in corporate brochures or political slogans.
The Europol Findings in Context
Scale: Hundreds of thousands active in criminal enterprises. This dwarfs many official economies and employs far more people than most legitimate industries in smaller EU nations.
Multinational Nature: Spanning 118 nationalities means fluid alliances, language barriers overcome by necessity, and sophisticated logistics that cross borders with ease. Albanian, Moroccan, Turkish, Nigerian, Vietnamese, and Eastern European groups feature prominently in various sectors; a true rainbow coalition of illicit enterprise.
Enablers: Open borders, asylum policies, chain migration, and "diversity" policies that choose demographic change over social cohesion have created parallel societies where criminal networks recruit, launder money, and operate with relative impunity. Cultural incompatibilities, language gaps, and distrust of authorities in some migrant communities further insulate these groups.
Proponents of mass immigration and multiculturalism often tout "diversity is our strength." Here it is: strength in numbers, diversification of criminal portfolios, and resilience through international supply chains! When integration fails, you don't just get vibrant neighborhoods, you get vibrant black markets.
The Diversity Cult's Blind Spot
The modern Western elite's obsession with demographic replacement as an unalloyed good rarely confronts downstream realities. Crime statistics across Europe consistently show overrepresentation of certain non-Western immigrant groups in violent offenses, drug trade, and organised crime. Official reports (when not suppressed) from Sweden, France, Germany, and the UK reveal patterns that transcend "poverty" or "racism" excuses:
Second- and third-generation migrants often maintain higher offending rates than natives.
Ethnic gangs carve out territories, exploiting welfare systems while undermining trust and social capital.
The "diversity" imperative discourages honest discussion, profiling, or targeted policing, enabling networks to grow.
This isn't isolated criminality. It's systemic. Open borders and multiculturalism import not just labour or "enrichment," but the social patterns, low-trust norms, and clan-based organisation common in high-crime source countries. Europol's 400,000-strong figure is the predictable outcome: diversity does bring strength, to those willing to exploit weak institutions and fragmented societies.
Critics who warned about this, from Enoch Powell to modern populists, were smeared as bigots. Meanwhile, ordinary Europeans bear the costs: higher taxes for security, eroded public safety, and neighbourhoods transformed into no-go zones. The elite, insulated in gated communities, continue preaching tolerance while the data piles up.
Strength for Whom?
True social strength requires cohesion, shared values, high trust, and assimilation. Importing groups with vastly different time-preferences, impulsivity levels, and criminal propensities (as shown in cross-national IQ/crime studies) doesn't build resilience, it fragments it. The result is parallel societies where criminal entrepreneurs thrive precisely because of diversity: multiple languages, ethnic loyalties, and mutual suspicion hinder effective law enforcement.
Europe's experiment demonstrates the inverse of the slogan: Diversity can be a source of strength for organised crime networks. For native populations facing declining trust, strained welfare states, and cultural erosion, it looks more like a weakness. The data from Europol and national statistics make the pattern clear, yet the cult of diversity demands we ignore it.
Realism isn't hatred. Acknowledging that not all groups contribute equally to social order (or crime rates) is basic pattern recognition. Until policymakers prioritise borders, assimilation, and repatriation for failed integrations, Europe's multicultural "paradise" will continue delivering strength to the wrong people. The 400,000-strong crime network is proof enough.
