This European Country Could Be America’s Future

Spain just crossed a line that should make every American sit up and pay attention. One in five people living in the country wasn’t born there. Ten million foreign-born residents in a nation of roughly 48 million. And the guy running the show? He’s about to hand out amnesty like candy at a parade — to half a million illegal migrants — while his own citizens scream at him to stop.

Sound familiar? It should.

The Numbers Don’t Lie — They Scream

Spain’s National Institute of Statistics just dropped a report that reads like a warning flare. According to data reported by El País, foreign-born population in Spain has exploded — jumping by two million in just the last three years. Two million. That’s not a trickle. That’s a fire hose pointed straight at a country’s social fabric.

Where are they coming from? About half hail from the Americas — Colombia, Venezuela, and others. Morocco tops the individual country list at 1.1 million, a number that’s doubled in 20 years. Colombia sits at nearly a million. Venezuela clocks in around 700,000. And here’s a stat that should stop you cold: 26 percent of Spain’s entire population between ages 20 and 64 is foreign-born. More than a quarter of the working-age population.

Let that marinate for a second.

Pedro Sánchez: The Socialist Who Doesn’t Listen

Now meet Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez, a man who governs with the listening skills of a brick wall. His plan? Grant mass amnesty to 500,000 illegal migrants — and his government is reportedly gearing up to process as many as 750,000 requests. The requirements to qualify are softer than a hotel pillow: prove you’ve been in Spain for a while, flash a valid passport, and don’t have a criminal record. That’s it. That’s the bar.

And here’s where it gets stupid.

An absolute majority of the Spanish parliament opposes this amnesty. Nearly 70 percent of Spanish citizens are against it. So what does Sánchez do? He’s ramming it through via Royal Decree — a neat little trick that lets him skip parliamentary approval entirely. Democracy? Never heard of her.

Even the EU is raising eyebrows. European Commissioner for Asylum and Migration Magnus Brunner reportedly warned through internal EU parliament documentation that Sánchez’s amnesty plans may have wider “consequences” for the European Union. When Brussels tells you’ve gone too far on immigration, you’ve really gone too far on immigration.

The Illegal Population Explosion

The Spanish think-tank Funcas estimates roughly 840,000 illegal migrants are currently living in Spain — a number that has skyrocketed “eightfold” since 2017. Read that again. Eightfold in under a decade. That’s not a policy failure. That’s a policy surrender.

Funcas expects the biggest beneficiaries of Sánchez’s amnesty bonanza will come from Colombia, Peru, and Honduras — countries with the widest gap between legal residents and those living in Spain illegally. So the reward for breaking the rules is a golden ticket to stay. The message couldn’t be clearer if Sánchez hired a skywriter.

The Warning for America

Strip away the flamenco and the tapas, and Spain’s story is America’s story on fast-forward. A porous border. A political class more interested in importing voters than protecting citizens. An executive willing to bulldoze democratic opposition to ram through amnesty. Working-age demographics being reshaped at warp speed while regular people foot the bill and get called bigots for noticing.

Trump saw this movie coming years ago. He didn’t tiptoe around it — he brought a bulldozer and a megaphone. Build the wall. Enforce the laws. Deport the criminals. Love him or hate him, the man understood that a country without borders isn’t a country at all. Spain is living proof.

Pedro Sánchez is doing exactly what the American left dreams of doing here — governing against the will of his own people, using executive power to rewrite the social contract, and daring anyone to stop him. The only difference is the language on the protest signs.

Spain isn’t just a cautionary tale. It’s a preview of coming attractions — unless Americans keep fighting like hell to make sure the sequel never gets made.


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