This article was originally published in Danish on December 5, 2017.
A major new report from Statistics Denmark[1] on immigrants in Denmark 2017 is out – unnoticed by most media. The fact that 94% of Syrian women are on welfare, that Somali men are eight times more violent than the average man in Denmark (not Danish men!) and that 42% of all male immigrants born in 1987 have been convicted of violating the Danish Criminal Code is not really news, although it is nice to have the numbers.
We know it already: Our guests exploit the Danish social system, which they are remarkably well informed about even before they arrive and undermine it so that Danes in need cannot get the help they are actually entitled to. Immigration simply means the downfall of the welfare state, nothing less. And the police no longer have time to deal with ordinary crime; all resources are now being used in vain attempts to curb the guests’ criminality. The media turns a blind eye – the facts are simply not politically correct and must therefore be silenced.
However, a few voices have spoken out cautiously in the darkness. Michael Jalving and Niels Lillelund in Jyllands-Posten and Pernille Vermund in Ekstrabladet. The latter wants public benefits to be reserved for citizens, but as the guests are simply provided with Danish passports, it won’t really help – they will simply be removed from the statistics over time. We have previously mentioned Statistics Denmark’s fraud with the concepts of immigrants and descendants. A report on the situation of immigrants and descendants with Danish citizenship would be extremely interesting, but we are unlikely to get it. As previously mentioned, Michael Jalving wants a stop to new immigration, but does not want to remove the guests who are already here – just like Morten Uhrskov Jensen. Both gentlemen are therefore helping to support the approx. 500,000 who are included in the statistics and who drain the Danish treasury for far more than the 33 billion we are talking about if you include everything from the asylum process onwards, including childcare, schools, doctors, hospitals, interpreters, police, terror protection, the judiciary, prisons, of which this group are major consumers, nursing homes, forced placements, etc. etc. etc.
We must therefore allow ourselves to ask the fair question to all those who complain about the state of things: What are you going to do about it?
The problem will not go away by itself. The Danish People’s Party has shown that you can’t vote your way out of it – it changes nothing! Since the 70s, there have been written and spoken warnings against the conditions that prevail today. Nothing has helped.
What are you going to do about it? How do you intend to restore Danish sovereignty in Denmark and ensure that Danes’ savings in the welfare state are reserved for their own children? How do you intend to ensure that Denmark will still be the country of ethnic Danes in 100 years? We want to hear from you with constructive ideas that will really make a difference!
Povl H. Riis-Knudsen
Translated by means of AI
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See also Facts about immigration 2017 (Book in Danish).
[1] The central statistical office in Denmark. It collects all of society’s statistical information for use in administration, research, education, etc. Another waste of taxpayers’ money and a burden on the already busy business sector to provide internal information on demand.

