The numbers do matter, but there is a more important question.
That question is what happens after they arrive.
If immigration leaves a country safer, more prosperous and more cohesive, then it has been a success.
If it leaves a country more divided, less safe and politically unstable, then it has been a failure.
It really is that simple.
Judge the Policy, Not the Intention
Every government has one fundamental responsibility. To protect the safety, freedom and well-being of its own citizens. Everything else comes second.
Immigration is therefore not a humanitarian exercise. It is a public policy. Like every public policy it should be judged by its results.
Has crime increased? Has terrorism increased? Has social cohesion improved or deteriorated? Do citizens feel safer or less safe?
These are measurable outcomes. They matter far more than the number of visas issued.
Europe Has Become the World's Largest Experiment
For years many European governments insisted that questioning migration policy was driven by prejudice.
Now reality has caught up.
Across Europe, anti-immigration parties are growing because millions of ordinary voters have concluded that their governments ignored obvious warning signs.
The recent unrest in Belfast is another example. Following the alleged stabbing of a local man by a Sudanese asylum seeker, widespread disorder erupted across parts of the city. The riots themselves were criminal and deserved condemnation, but they were also evidence of something deeper—a public that has lost confidence in its government's ability to manage immigration.
The same pattern can be seen elsewhere.
Violent crime involving some recent migrant communities. Terrorist attacks. Growing pressure on police. Parallel societies.
Then comes the inevitable reaction from a minority of the existing population—protests, riots, and sometimes retaliatory violence.
Governments end up importing two problems instead of one.
First, they import people who, in some cases, contribute disproportionately to crime, extremism or social conflict.
Second, they create the conditions in which a small but dangerous minority of their own citizens becomes radicalised in response.
Neither outcome benefits the peaceful majority on either side.
Denmark Chose a Different Path
One country looked at these outcomes and changed course.
The above graph shows the crime rate in Denmark by Nation of Origin for the period 2010-2021. The crime rate is significantly higher for migrants from Middle East and North Africa.
It is a clear warning. Not all migrants carry the same risk.
If a government's objective is to preserve a safe, stable and cohesive society, they must impose much tighter control over migration and much stronger expectations of integration.
That is exactly what governments are elected to do.
Australia Should Learn the Lesson
Australia is fortunate.
We still have the opportunity to learn from the experience of others before our problems become as entrenched.
The Bondi terrorist attack was a reminder that Australia is not somehow immune from the ideological and cultural conflicts affecting other Western nations.
Ignoring overseas evidence because it is politically uncomfortable is not compassion.
It is negligence.
Put Citizens First
None of this means every migrant is a criminal. That would be absurd.
However policy is never made for individuals. It is made for populations and probabilities. Insurance companies understand this. Public health authorities understand this. Governments should understand it too.
If repeated experience shows that migration from particular regions is consistently associated with higher risks of crime, terrorism or social conflict, responsible governments should take that evidence seriously when deciding future immigration policy.
Their first duty is not to maximise immigration. It is not to satisfy international opinion. It is not to avoid difficult conversations.
Their first duty is to protect the people who already live within their borders.
Migration should never be judged by good intentions.
It should always be judged by outcomes.
And when the outcomes are poor, good governments change the policy.






