We Followed the World’s Deadliest Illegal Mass Migration Route. Here Is What We Found.
Europe is being invaded and destroyed by Africa, in a crime orchestrated by global leaders. A new TCN documentary shows how it’s happening.
Watch 'Replacing Europe: Following the World's Deadliest Migration Route,' only at https://tuckercarlson.com/replacing-europe-film
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Chapters:
0:00 The Beginning of Rubin's Journey
2:08 Who's Facilitating Mass Immigration from Africa?
3:44 The Role of NGOs in the Immigration Crisis
7:21 Rubin and His Brother Being Attacked by Immigrants
13:56 Undercover Footage of UN Representative Saying the Quiet Part Out Loud
19:51 Europe's Gay Immigrant Operation
26:03 Is the Invasion Reversible?
29:26 How Has This Experience Changed Rubin?
So I just love the idea of this documentary so much where you actually go to the places along the trail of migration into the West.
Where did you start?
We started in Mauritania and then we went to the Canary Islands, which is a Spanish territory, but, you know, so to Spain, the Canary Islands, and we went to mainland Spain to France and the United Kingdom.
Unbelievable.
What's Mauritania for those who don't know?
Mauritania is a West African Islamic Republic, and that is the launch point where a lot of these so-called migrants leave on boat and head to the Canary Islands.
They leave from other countries as well, but Mauritania nowadays is the main launch point.
Why Mauritania?
It's just a convenient point.
They sort of come from all over the Sahel and Maghreb up north.
And then from south, they'll come from like Sierra Leone.
They'll come from Senegal and other countries and they sort of meet there.
And it's also geographically situated near the Canary Islands.
So it's convenient.
And that's where they leave from.
But they also leave from countries like Senegal or like, I think they leave from Jordan sometimes.
It's kind of crazy, though, that you as an American and your brother also, just two Americans, can know exactly how this works.
You're just two ambitious young guys.
Right.
You don't work for CIA.
Right.
That's right.
And somehow you know the migrant route and the means of transporting hundreds of thousands, millions of people illegally.
Right.
How do you know that?
Yeah.
Well, we've been studying this for a while.
We studied this very intensively here in the United States.
As I said to you earlier off camera, you know, we were the first Americans, as far as I'm aware, I mean, somebody could contact me if this is incorrect, but I'm not aware of anybody else that's done it.
We were the first Americans to go from South America, from Ecuador to the U.S. border.
And when you look at what's going on in Europe, a lot of the same organizations are running the show out there as well.
And so if you know, okay, you just read the news.
Okay, they're landing in the Canary Islands.
They're taking off from Mauritania.
From there, it's not really that difficult to start putting it together.
And, you know, as long as you know what NGOs to go check out, you know, what questions to ask, you'll figure it out.
I think in the minds of most Americans, certainly our view of immigration is from Latin America to the United States.
It's like starts with Mexican farm workers and then it's all of Latin America.
Okay, great.
And then when we think of Europe, we think of refugees from the Syrian wars, you know, Muslims from the Levant.
But African migration is like a lot of it from the most violent continent in the world.
And who's facilitating that?
Do you know?
Yes, it's not an easy answer.
So I can't just be like, well, it's just like this one group.
This guy, yeah.
Right.
You know, so it's many people.
You know, I would say, you know, at the highest level, like if we're looking at this from an airplane, it really is the populations, the native populations of Europe not realizing that this is an existential threat.
Because if they did, you know, they would be up in arms tomorrow.
And these politicians, these are feckless people for the most part.
These are not people that really give a damn.
They're just trying to win the next election.
They're less concerned about the present and more concerned about winning the next election, right?
And so, you know, if there was enough pressure from the native population, this would stop tomorrow.
So like at the highest level, that's really what it is, is that, you know, the natives don't realize what a threat this is.
It's existential and it's the end of Europe and it will be the end of the United States as well, the West in general.
It calls for revolution of some kind.
It really does.
100%.
So that's at the highest level.
Now, at the lower levels, if we're looking at who's actually doing this, you're talking criminal organizations.
You're talking opportunist countries who use this as a means to get financial aid, financial support, almost like blackmail.
And you're looking at non-governmental organizations, many of them.
And we could get into that.
I mean, they should be investigated, audited, prosecuted, a lot of them.
I know they haven't been.
Well, a lot of them haven't been.
No.
Right.
100%.
Can you name some of those NGOs?
Absolutely.
So, the king daddy above everything is the United Nations.
Yes.
And their migration wing, which is the International Organization of Migration, the acronym is the IOM.
And really, everywhere you go and where you see this stuff, and by everywhere you go, I mean, when you're at key border crossing points, I'll give you an example.
In the Americas, for example, you know, when you're going to, when these people cross the Darien Gap, which I've crossed with my brother, we've trekked through that jungle.
There is a town called Nakokli, which is on the Colombian side.
And that's like the launching point where they, from there, they get on a boat, they go to the mouth of the jungle and they start trekking across.
You have IOM workers that were there.
Now the flow has, you know, stopped under Trump.
The infrastructure is still there.
So I do think if we get, you know, Gavin Newsom, for example, in 2028, this could start again, but, you know, we don't have to go there for now.
But you have IOM workers there.
And what they were doing is they were handing out, I don't know what else to call them.
It sounds crude, but rape kits where these women, they would hand to migrant women kits that had condoms, day after pills and whistles, like in case you're getting raped in the jungle.
And then they pop out on the other end if they make it, God willing.
And then they're put in UN camps and you have the IOM there as well and giving them aid, handing out maps, that sort of thing.
And then in Europe, it's the same thing.
You know, what we got on camera was honestly the most incredible thing maybe that I've ever gotten on hidden camera, where we were in the Canary Islands and we were, I was, you know, tailing a bus.
These, a boatload of these people had just got off on the island of El Hiro.
And, you know, they're taken off the boat, they're processed and they're put on a bus and they're driven to a camp.
And so I'm tailing this bus to a camp.
And the entire time I'm looking for the United Nations, I'm trying to find these people so I could talk to them, haven't seen anything.
And, you know, I'm feeling like, are we going to get anything out of this?
And I see this man in a blue vest and I know who that is.
Okay, that's the United Nations worker.
So I talk to him and we arrange a meeting and we take him out.
And this is when people watch the documentary, they'll see this.
And so this guy's job was to, or is to, I believe he's still working with them, is when these so-called migrants come in to pay them money and get information from them.
You know, who did you pay to smuggle you up here to Europe?
You know, how is this working to get information ostensibly so that they could prosecute, be prosecuted by European countries.
But what we could get into and what we caught on camera, this guy was so corrupt and admitted to such a corrupt system that he was part of, it blew my mind.
And we could get into that.
But that's the IOM.
There's the Red Cross.
There's the Norwegian Refugee Council.
There's many other organizations.
There's, you know, Catholic charities.
There's an organization called ASEM.
That's another Catholic charity that flies them from the Canary Islands to Europe.
Hebrew immigrant aid societies that Alejandro Mayorka sat on the board of.
So these are just a few.
So the net results of this, the end point of this long journey is Western Europe where the benefits are the highest.
They were the richest countries in the world.
Because of this, they no longer are.
And the effect has been a radical decline in quality of life for Europeans and in the state of their cities.
There's a clip in this documentary that I just want to put on the screen now.
This is Paris, France, center of the world for centuries.
And this is your exchange with a migrant in Paris.
It kind of tells the story in pictures.
Here it is.
unidentified
This is the situation out here in front of the Eiffel Tower.
We had all these guys, these vendors that sell out here in front of the Eiffel Tower.
Hello.
Hello, Claude.
We had all these vendors that sell right now.
Huh?
No, we want to talk to you.
Walk off.
Walk off.
Why?
See, they get very upset when you start talking to them.
And they got away with a lot of over $1,000 worth of stuff.
His phone, our GoPro.
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So they hit him in the face with a statue and then stole your stuff.
And then they let him get away too.
And then they didn't get arrested.
And they let him get away.
Like, he started chasing them.
I was getting up.
He starts running after him.
And the police were right nearby.
They could have gotten, they gave a very like BS attempt to try to get them.
They didn't even try, and um, that was it, and they got away, yeah.
And you know, the police out there told us that you know, if they make the wrong move with these so-called migrants, not migrants, I hate even using that word, these are invaders, it's an invading force.
But if you use, you know, if you the wrong type of force with these invaders, you might wind up in prison, and so they're afraid to, yeah.
Um, I mean, the racial dynamic here is just almost um it's um almost unbelievable.
Um, they're protected because they're not white, right?
And that's the truth, of course.
It's same in our country.
So, do you know what country they were from?
It's really hard to say.
I mean, I have no idea.
My guess would be Senegal.
Um, just, I mean, I don't really have any reason to say one way or the other.
That's just my guess because I know a lot of them come from Western Africa, right?
But they could have been from anywhere.
Who knows?
Sub-Saharan, though.
Um, yeah, sorry, it's it kind of takes your breath away to watch that.
Well, in Paris, right?
But the thing is the center of civilization, supposedly, right?
Well, that's the thing, it's a it's one of the most beautiful cities, right?
But it's been overrun, and um, you know, the thing is, though, that is a uh pretty light occurrence compared to what's going on with roll into someone else's continent and when asked a question, just physically attack someone and steal his stuff and then get away with it is like a level of aggression.
Like, where's the gratitude?
Oh, right, right, 100%.
Well, that's the thing, and you know, certain fish don't mix in the same aquarium.
Like, these people, you know, I will tell you this: one of the takeaways that I got from this was, and I'm not downplaying what the U.S. is facing because the U.S. is you know facing its own sort of existential crisis when it comes to this.
But, you know, I will say, when you compare these people that are coming from Africa and the Middle East compared to the people that we got from like Venezuela, Colombia, and so the Central American states, it is much different.
I mean, those people, those people will assimilate much better.
You know, they're all, for example, you could film them and they're cool.
The Africans, if you try filming them, they would try to take your head off.
I mean, Latin America is very different from sub-Saharan Africa, completely different.
And that's not a value judgment.
It's much worse than Latin America by any measure.
100%.
Wow.
So I want to put this up.
This is a second clip from the doc.
And this explains this is a UN worker explaining to you how this happened in the first place, and that there are incentives the rest of us don't see.
Here it is.
unidentified
Everybody I arrive here, the mafia gets between 50 to 60,000 euros.
That's a game.
It's a game.
So no money is involved.
Everything's money movement to Madrid.
But what I'm saying is it doesn't seem like Spain wants to stop it.
No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
Spain doesn't want to stop it.
Why does the Spanish government want this to continue?
It seems like a big problem.
Because, you know, the Spanish government wouldn't want for it to stop because every year the Spanish government receives a huge amount of money from the European Union.
Every year, the European Union gives more than 3 billion to Spain.
So, what Speed does 3 billion?
Stink it's 2 billion.
Stink ticks, 1 billion in Catun in Catun.
Or in Sukes.
In Sukes.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Steam government will take 1 billion in Sukes.
Yeah.
Put on flight.
Go to Muritania.
Maybe the government spoke with like 10 people from Muritania.
The top.
From the top.
Those people that the government is going to meet with, the money is not by check.
I love how the random African guy tells you the truth about the economics behind it.
Yeah.
Well, it wasn't a random African guy.
That's the guy I'm telling.
That is a United Nations representative.
No, but I'm just saying there is, and you notice this when you go to Africa, there is a kind of lack of guardedness.
Like, it's not a place where people say what they think they have to say.
They just kind of say what's obvious, which is what I like about Africa.
But he knows he's part of the system.
Oh, 100%.
100%.
And he's been with the IOM for years.
Before that, he was with another NGO.
I believe he was with ASM.
That's the NGO that flies them to from the Canary Islands to the European mainland.
But that was the most incredible undercover footage that I've ever gotten.
You know, when it comes to this beat, like the illegal immigration beat, that's like the holy grail because everybody asks, you know, how is this allowed to take place?
What's going on here?
And here you have a United Nations representative admitting on camera that the, at least one of the reasons why it's allowed to continue is that, you know, Spain gets this money ostensibly to stop the flow.
But what they really do is they slow it down enough to a trickle, or it's not really a trickle.
There's still thousands coming, but they slow it down a little bit, act like they're doing something so that they could keep getting the money, skim the money off the top, and then use the rest ostensibly to stop the flow.
But if you're, you and your brother are taking off with 30 grand and some cameras and getting to the truth of the situation, like where are the rest of the news organizations in the West?
Look, what I will say is this.
I'm going to give the Europeans a break here because I'm an American.
And so, you know, when I got this footage and then we're, you know, we're trying to get it to debut on TCN and we're talking to lawyers about, you know, getting ENO insurance and all this stuff.
There was discussion like you can't really be doing this in the European Union.
It's, it's, it's different out there as far as their rights to film people and get certain things.
But, you know, I'm an American now and I have the First Amendment on my side.
And so if they try coming out, there's really the New York Times.
Where's the Washington Post?
Where's Reuters, CNN?
We have companies supposed to be covering the news.
This is the biggest news story in a thousand years and they're not covering it at all.
Sure.
I guess I'm giving the Europeans a break because if there was a European that tried doing this that was living in Spain or Germany, they'd have.
Well, they live behind the Iron Curtain.
Exactly.
So I get it.
They're not free peoples, but we are.
And our news organizations have a lot more money and experience than you do.
And they're not doing this.
And so you just went and did it yourself.
Correct.
It's quite an indictment of them, I would say.
100%.
Well, it's institutional capture.
You know, these they're supposed to be purveyors of truth, which some are to some extent.
But, you know, real journalism.
And, you know, I'm friends with James O'Keeffe and James O'Keefe talks about this a lot, which is that it's just so costly to do real journalism.
That's why, you know, organizations like Fox, they just have the independent people come on now because they have the independent people break the story, take all the risk, and then Fox could just report on it.
And I don't, I mean, you, you were with Fox.
Maybe you know better than I, but I feel like that wasn't the case 20 years ago.
Maybe they would do their own stories, but now it's just mostly independent people because it's just so costly to do these things and so dangerous for the big organizations.
Not really.
I mean, I saw Fox, I was there 15 years.
I saw them spend millions and millions and millions on fake interviews.
They'd fly out, you know, 30 people a week early to do some interview, the head of state where they never asked a single real question.
So they have the money, of course.
It's the most profitable news organization in the world.
And that's what do they have like a sodomy test for it or is there some way to test for gayness at these facilities?
Not that I've heard of.
I highly doubt it.
But to be clear, the reason that people are saying they're gay is not because they want to be more fashionable, but because the French government or European governments give them preferential treatment if they're gay.
They're given plane tickets and they're flown to Madrid or Barcelona.
And they're put in camps where they will be there for many years.
Like over two years, some of them were telling us.
And they're just waiting for their papers and they don't do anything all day.
They don't worry.
I mean, it's in the documentary.
People can watch it.
They're saying, you know, no working, no eating, no working, no, I forget what else he says, but he's like, only eat and sleep.
That's only eat and sleep here.
But the point where you fly them to your continent, like what does it occur to nobody that the population doesn't want them?
There's no evidence they've added anything, only detracted.
I'm sure individuals have, but overall, they have not added anything.
They've only made it worse.
So why would you accept the why'd you let the planes land?
And why would you pay for the planes?
I'm so confused.
Yeah.
And maybe it's that clip you showed a minute ago that they're getting paid to do it.
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Yeah, well, again, there's many different interest groups you could say that are allowing this to continue.
You know, again, at its core is that this is national suicide and people don't, the general population doesn't realize it.
And then beyond that, it's just opportunists, clearly.
And people don't, you could say they hate the country, you could say they simply don't give a damn, but whatever it is, that's ultimately why this is allowed to continue.
I mean, at the highest level, 100%.
And, you know, it's this adherence to like international norms in quotes.
And so you have a lot of countries now that have basically enshrined this in law.
I don't know what it is in Spain.
In the United States, it's the Refugee Act of 1980.
And if we didn't have that, for example, you know, a lot of the people that come over here that are just economic migrants claiming that they're refugees and they really have no standing, but they claim that they're facing some sort of violence.
The only reason why this whole system exists, where they come here, we catch them, we give them a court date and release them is because of the 1980 Refugee Act, which is built on this 1967 protocol.
And so my point is, it's this idea of these international post-World War II norms that, you know, national leaders are just too cowardly to do it.
And the whole point, obviously, was to eliminate, you know, you don't want white majority countries in Europe because they're dangerous.
That's the whole behind them.
But they're actually not dangerous and they're the source of our civilization.
So to destroy them is a big step.
I wonder if it's not stoppable, is it?
Well, it's stoppable, but you know, how reversible is it?
That's that's exactly.
Thank you.
You could stop this tomorrow.
We're talking about the most powerful countries on earth here.
So, you know, Spain, maybe less so, but regardless.
I mean, the European Union as a whole, look, they're trying to go to war with Russia, right?
So I think what's interesting is that Mertz has admitted in private, at least, that they can't raise an army in Germany because it will be majority Muslim because the Germans aren't having kids and the Muslims are, and they actually don't want to give hundreds of thousands of young Muslim men weapons.
Like they're worried about what would happen if they did that.
And so I wonder, I guess if it's gotten to that point, we just have to readjust to a new understanding of Europe, right?
You know, it's sad to say.
And I don't really want to, you know, I don't want to speak for the Europeans.
I mean, I'm an American.
Yeah, I will say that something, it almost feels like impotent to sit here and be like, well, something's got to be done.
I mean, it really is a matter of life and death, national survival.
And, you know, literally every day that goes by, it gets worse.
Every day counts at this point.
And the only way that I could see them reversing it is with, is not without some sort of serious like civil conflict because these people will fight back.
I mean, these are high testosterone men.
The IOM worker, just to give you some kind of.
They will fight back exactly right.
Oh, 100%.
I mean, look, what do you see here in the United States?
Ask your brother.
Oh, yeah.
That's one example.
That was just from pointing a camera at the guy.
Oh, yeah.
Now try to get him out.
I mean, look, when we were in France, there was a Frenchman who not far from where we were.
We were in Calais and not far from there.
While we were there, somebody got beheaded in a parking lot by these people.
Okay.
So these are very serious high testosterone men.
That IOM worker, the one that we played the clip of earlier, this guy was so corrupt.
And he, when we were there, I paid him 500 euros and he sold me an Excel sheet that showed all of the arrivals from the beginning of the year till the date that I met him, which was like four months.
It was like from January till April 15th or something like that.
And, you know, it showed how many women, how many men, how many children?
And it's like, it's like all men.
It might be like less than 5% women and a smaller percent children.
When, so as I told you before, myself and my brother, we were the first Americans to go from South America to the U.S. border to follow the whole route.
And when we were doing that, you know, the fear there was criminal organizations.
Yes.
Right.
And rightly so.
I mean, we got kidnapped by the golf cartel at the very end of it, encountered other cartel organizations.
Here, when we were doing it, now there was still the criminal element there.
Like when we're in Mauritania, I believe I was, you know, we were trying to meet up with smugglers.
They were trying to set us up.
There's a whole other story.
But really what I was afraid of, not just in Mauritania, obviously, but of course, like in Spain and France and the UK was not criminal organizations, even though we're going and trying to, you know, embed with migrants that are getting smuggled.
It was the government.
The entire time, I was worried that they were going to realize that there are two Americans walking around with hidden cameras and they're going to bust down our hotel room door and pick us up and, you know, haul us off in a paddy wagon.
That was honestly what I was more afraid about.
That's how intent they are in committing suicide.
100%.
And now, Kier Starmer is pushing government killing of its own citizens, government-assisted, assisted suicide, government-committed suicide, as if like native-born Britons need more excuses to die or something.
I mean, what is going on?
National suicide, man.
National suicide.
That's what it is.
Did your views change?
Did my views change?
Well, look, it is very sad.
I will say probably not because it was more or less what I expected.
But, you know, it's just, it's just another thing to see it in person.
Did it change?
No, but, you know, it was a learning experience.
Did you feel more threat from the migrants coming into Europe or the migrants coming into the U.S.?
Oh, definitely the ones coming into Europe.
100%.
These are very serious guys.
Again, like, you know, we've been embedded.
My brother and I have been embedded with caravans in Mexico.
We're walking up with them through Mexico and we're like in front of the caravan.
There's videos that we have of this.
And, you know, we're literally taking selfies.
We're flying a drone that's on front.
And they're cool.
They don't mind.
Oh, totally.
You go shake hands with these people and they almost think it's like their moment to be on TV or something.
Like, hey, I'm going to America.
And out there, man, in Europe, it's like if you point a camera at them, look, if there's no police around, they will slit your throat.
And I don't say this flippantly because, look, I love all people.
You know, there's great people from Africa too.
But, you know, I've employed people that are in Zimbabwe and South Africa, very smart people that I've worked with.
But, you know, on the whole, certain fish don't mix in the same aquarium.
Yeah, there's a real difference between someone from El Salvador and someone from Sierra Leone.
There just is.
100%.
On many levels.
Yeah, absolutely.
Anthony, I can't tell you how much I appreciate you doing this, Doc, and Langus Eric.
And you're a brave man.
Your brother's brave too.
I'm looking at him sitting over there, scar on his face.
Thank you.
Oh, what's your next doc?
The next documentary.
Well, we could talk about this.
Maybe we'll collab with this one as well.
Yeah, we'll talk off camera.
It involves, look, it involves people that have had their, we've already got footage, people that have had their faces sawed off, and it's really bad.
What's going on?
And let's just say south of the border.
I don't want to say much more than that because we're trying to arrange certain things.
So we'll leave it at that, but we'll talk off camera.