Monday, December 01, 2025

Unveiling Tomorrow's Cameroon Through Today's News

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"Why do we want people from all these shithole countries here?" the president asked, referencing Haiti and countries in Africa, according to a report from NBC News. "We should have more people from places like Norway."

The president thinks an immigration system based on "skills" will keep black and brown immigrants out and let more white ones in. He thinks, if we implemented his immigration policies, we'd get more immigrants from places like Norway. Places where people are tall and blond and look like they could have been in the Hitler youth. 

In practice, a more skills-based immigration system would be unlikely to attract many immigrants from Norway. Norway's GDP is $71,000 per capita. If you're a highly-skilled person in Norway, you probably want to stay there.

As the demographer Lyman Stone notes, immigrants from Africa tend to be far more educated and affluent than typical residents of Africa. A skills-based system would look to the characteristics of individual immigrants, not to the countries they come from.

A key metric in any skills-based immigration system is English proficiency. And there are hundreds of millions of nonwhite English speakers around the world, many of them in Africa.

A policy shift toward more skills-based immigration would probably result in a larger fraction of immigrants coming from Asia and a smaller fraction from Latin America, not a large shift toward Europe, and certainly not toward Norway.

But this immigration policy talk is all kind of beside the point. It was never about the skills.

Wonks and most politicians talk about immigration policy like it's a labor-market policy. But for most voters on both sides of the issue, it's mostly about culture — what kind of people do we want to live around?

Those are the terms in which Trump discusses immigration. He wants a whiter country. And that's why he said what he said.

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