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Elite-directed mass migration has spiked stock values but has also helped cause citizens’ happiness to plummet—especially younger citizens’—in English-speaking countries, according to data from a new survey.
“Canada, Australia, the UK, and the USA all practiced defacto open borders, flooding their countries with foreigners,” noted political consultant Ryan Girdusky. Those “nations experienced a massive decline in happiness while that occurred,” heNearly twice as many countries have grown happier over the past two decades as have become less so. The English-speaking world is a clear exception: for the second year running, no country in the Anglosphere made the top ten.Amid former President Joe Biden’s vast migration wave, the United States fell from 16th place in 2021 to 23rd in 2025.report is titled “The Anglosphere is increasingly miserable: The World Happiness Report shows it diverging from the rest of the world.”stayed steady in Latin America and East Asia, and actually rose in Poland and other Eastern European countries with little migration.The divergence is starkest among the young. In most other parts of the world young people are at least as satisfied with their lives as they were a decade ago, if not more so. But among under-25s in America, Australia, Britain, Canada, Ireland and New Zealand, scores have fallen—placing all six among the biggest declines for this age group. The split between old and young is to be expected because young people lose out from the arrival of migrants, while older people gain from the inflow of low-wage migrant workers in coffee houses, lawn services, and other amenities sought by the urban elderly. Older people also gain because stock markets swell with profits from lower wages, higher rents, and extra consumption.is especially clear in Canada, which is ranked overall at 25th place in happiness. Older Canadians ranked in 8th place, but younger Canadians’ happiness fell to 58th place.of consumers, renters, homebuyers, and workers. The country’s population is about one-eighth the size of the United States’, but its immigration inflow was roughly five times larger per person from 2021 to 2024. The benefits have gone to older investors, employers, migrants, and elderly Canadian homeowners whose paper wealth has increased even as their grown children are havingYoung Canadians were once the happiest age demographic, now they’re the least. 1 in 7 young Canadians are unemployed. 42% of Canadians say money is their #1 source of stress – more than health, relationships, and work combined … If this all sounds grim, it’s because it is. These findings aren’t just measuring bad vibes, they’re measuring real economic pain.Marlow: Glaring Holes in Joe Kent's Narrative About Iran, IsraelOver 20 Nations Announce Readiness to Help Open Strait of HormuzMarlow: Anti-Trump Forces on Left and Right Openly Rooting Against AmericaRobert Mueller, Former FBI Director, Special Counsel For Russiagate Hoax, Dies at 81Ted Cruz Suggests Splitting ICE, CBP Funding from DHS Funding
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