
The Culture War Podcast with Tim Pool Trump Admin Declares Mass Migration An EXISTENTIAL THREAT | Across The Pond
Nov 22, 2025
Tate and Connor dive into the State Department's alarming declaration of mass migration as an existential threat. They discuss its implications for American foreign policy and human rights. The hosts examine European migration issues, including grooming scandals in the UK, and how these incidents shape political narratives. In a twist, they reveal efforts to label critics of immigration as extremists to consolidate right-wing power. The conversation also touches on Trump's influence on U.S.-UK relations and the role of social media in policy shifts.
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State Dept. Reframes Mass Migration As Threat
- The U.S. State Department labeled mass migration an "existential threat" and tied displacement to human rights violations.
- Tate Brown and Connor Tomlinson say this reorients Western human-rights doctrine toward protecting native communities.
Displacement Treated Like Violent Crime
- The hosts highlight the inclusion of "displacement of communities" as equivalent to violent crimes in diplomats' guidance.
- They argue this validates preserving historical communities and counters prior international human-rights framing.
How UK Reporting Reached U.S. Diplomats
- Connor describes how UK grooming-gang scandals were covered up and later forced onto the State Department's radar.
- He credits grassroots posting and reporting for pressuring diplomats to act and monitor UK policy.
