The question is not whether a people may maintain cultural pride. That is an empty proposition few would challenge. The real question, and the one most painfully avoided in elite consensus, is whether the creation of concentrated, self-sustaining, and ideologically distinct migrant enclaves serves either the migrant or the host nation. In the case of Somali migration to the Minneapolis-Saint Paul area, the answer is unequivocal. It does not.
It is easy, if fashionable, to dismiss concern over such communities as xenophobic or reactionary. But this sidesteps the empirical reality. As of 2025, an estimated 200,000 individuals of Somali descent reside in the Twin Cities, comprising the largest Somali community outside Somalia. They are not dispersed across Minnesota but rather densely concentrated in specific neighborhoods, where Somali is spoken at home, Islamic dietary codes dominate the market shelves, and madrasa attendance outpaces enrollment in secular schools. These communities have become parallel societies. Not America, but a satellite of Somalia.
Rep. Ilhan Omar refers to the President of Somalia as "our president"
— End Wokeness (@EndWokeness) January 30, 2024
"We have a special relationship. I call him uncle and he calls me his girl."
"Somalia is our home. It is our heart. We always think about Somalia." pic.twitter.com/yxHqyk35OQ
The origins of this failed integration policy are traceable. The US began resettling Somali migrants in the Twin Cities in the early 1990s, but it was under the Obama administration that this process accelerated dramatically. Obama, championing multicultural accommodation as virtue in itself, turbocharged the placement of Somali migrants into Minnesota. The logic was as paternal as it was destructive: better to resettle vulnerable Muslim populations together for support. In practice, this meant engineering ethnic density zones where assimilation was no longer necessary, nor even possible. The effect has been predictable.
The IZA World of Labor observes that ethnic enclaves, while sometimes providing short-term employment networks, devolve into “mobility traps” that delay language acquisition and cultural integration. The PMC’s research on the “ethnic density effect” notes that while high co-ethnic populations may foster initial support, they entrench cultural insularity. The Migration Observatory in the UK echoes this, warning that unchecked concentration of migrants leads to permanent parallel institutions: different schools, different languages, different allegiances.
These enclaves, by any reasonable metric, are failing. The FBI has identified Minnesota’s 5th Congressional District, represented by Somali-born Ilhan Omar, as the leading hub of terrorist recruitment in the US. This was not merely a bureaucratic assessment, but one grave enough to trigger the federal government’s implementation of the “Countering Violent Extremism” pilot in Minneapolis. Each year, dozens of Somali-American men leave the Twin Cities to train with al-Shabaab. The first American suicide bomber, Shirwa Ahmed, hailed from Minneapolis. His story is not an anomaly but a pattern. Even Omar herself has infamously equivocated on condemning al-Shabaab, arguing that it is “unreasonable” to expect ordinary Somalis to denounce terrorism. Reasonable people can judge for themselves the implications of such moral ambiguity.
Further, crime within these enclaves is a known unknown. Minnesota law enforcement agencies are not permitted to disaggregate crime statistics by ethnicity, a political convenience that obscures the extent of Somali criminality. What we do know is damning: 29 Somali-American gang members were prosecuted for trafficking underage girls across Minnesota, Ohio, and Tennessee. The Twin Cities host more than 1,000 Somali gang members, including groups such as the Somali Hot Boyz and Somali Mafia. These are not figments of an overactive imagination; they are active threats to community safety and the rule of law.
“Ilhan’s interest aren’t those of #Minnesota or the people of #America but the interests of #Somalia”
— 𝐃𝐫 𝐂𝐚𝐚𝐫𝐨 🇺🇸 (@DrCaaro) June 30, 2024
These were the words the former Prime Minister of #Somalia @HassanAKhaire revealed at a rally in support of @Ilhan Omar exposing the true intentions of @Ilhan serving as a… pic.twitter.com/793NsYikp4
Integration has not been achieved, but inversion. The community is now so entrenched that it not only resists assimilation but governs itself politically. The list of Somali-born or Somali-descended political leaders in Minnesota reads like the registry of a parallel state: Ilhan Omar, Mohamud Noor, Hodan Hassan, Omar Fateh, Zaynab Mohamed, Nadia Mohamed, Abdi Warsame. These officials are elected by, and serve, a population that overwhelmingly identifies with a religious, cultural, and linguistic identity alien to the American tradition. It is a form of soft secession, a civic identity rooted in Islamism and Somali nationalism rather than the Constitution.

Even the presence of Somali police officers, including Commander Abdirahman Ali of the MPD, cannot be taken as evidence of successful integration. Rather, it reflects a city now governed, policed, and adjudicated by a singular ethnic bloc. The result is not multicultural harmony, but monolithic patronage. Political representation is not blended; it is balkanized.
What is the cost to the host nation? In one respect, it is measurable: taxpayer-funded housing, schools, interpreters, and social programs catering to a community that refuses to integrate. But the deeper cost is moral and civic. A republic cannot survive the proliferation of foreign identities nested within its civic fabric. As Ottaviano and Peri’s work suggests, assimilation leads to measurable gains in productivity for both natives and migrants. Where assimilation is absent, stagnation follows. And in enclaves such as Minneapolis’s Cedar-Riverside, stagnation is the best-case scenario. The worst is the exportation of terrorism.
This is not an argument against immigration. It is an argument against ghettoized immigration. The United States has long welcomed the tired and poor, but the Ellis Island model presupposed something we have now abandoned: that the migrant must become American. He must adopt the language, the civic creed, the constitutional norms. That is no longer expected, and nowhere is that clearer than in the Somali enclaves of Minnesota.
Alternative models exist. The ICMPD recommends dispersal policies, distributing migrants across regions to prevent critical mass concentrations. Done wisely, this facilitates assimilation, reduces ethnic insularity, and alleviates strain on urban infrastructure. Such a model must be urgently re-implemented in the US.
Somali migrants were not done a favor by being cordoned into Minnesota’s urban reservations. They were abandoned there. The result is a generation of young men who speak Somali, attend Islamic schools, join Somali-only gangs, and when they go abroad, it is not to represent the United States, but to wage jihad against it. Meanwhile, their American neighbors live in fear, and their leaders wring their hands, terrified of being labeled insensitive.
It is not insensitive to speak plainly. A nation that fails to integrate its migrants will become a nation divided, not by lines on a map, but by language, law, and loyalty. If this experiment in Somali resettlement has taught us anything, it is this: a multicultural enclave is not a microcosm of America. It is its negation.
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This should not be allowed in the United States! People who are allowed into the country are supposed to assimilate into the culture of the country. There are too many who can’t even speak English. If they do not want to assimilate they should move to a country where the culture they like is the norm.
If Somalia is her home and her heart……why doesn’t she move there…..and stay there?
What was it that permitted so many from Somalia to be admitted here? While we used to be so careful and allow individuals to apply, all of a sudden, we allow a whole country to resettle here? This should never happen again…and those of this group that are not becoming citizens need to be sent home. For such a large group, there is very little reason to assimilate in any way.
Assimilate or go home. We have one set of laws here and you either abide by them or pay the price. you’re not going to turn our country into. the mess you left behind.
IF THEY DON’T BECOME NATURALIZED AMERICANS AND CONTINUT TO TEACH AND LEARN SOMALIAN AND SEND THEIR MEN HOME TO LEARN ANTI-AMERICAN THINGS, THE USA HAS TO DISCONTINUE SUPPORTING THEM AND THEIR SCHOOLS, ETC!
Is this why Walz is always bowing to the Somalis? Does he fear them? Or is he in cahoots with them?
These cities are destroyed and divided forever.People from the countries have zero interest in being Americans.
Assimilate – surely you jest. Gotta maintain the ‘culture’ that was the main reason many (most?) fled their native land. No one is saying that legal migrants (the illegals can just go home) cannot retain their own social mores but when they flatly refuse to become productive members of their new country, there is a problem and even worse is them trying to force their views on their ‘adopted’ land.
They want him to be their President, and they can go back if they want to. While they are here, our President is their President!
See EU as model for the US very scary