Denmark and Poland just showed Britain exactly what needs to be done to tackle the migrant problem – Adam Brooks

Britain stands alone in Europe as the last remaining soft touch on migration while our neighbours wake up to the harsh realities uncontrolled immigration brings. Where Denmark slashed asylum approvals to just 860 and Poland moves to suspend claims entirely, Britain rubber-stamped 68,000 last year – each one another brick in the wall separating us from the country we once knew.
The contrast couldn’t be starker. In Copenhagen, a centre-left government takes tough action to preserve Danish society, revoking Syrian residencies and maintaining strict citizenship rules. Meanwhile in London, we watch helplessly as our towns transform beyond recognition – high streets where English voices grow rare, communities fracturing under cultural pressures never put to a democratic vote.
Sweden’s collapse into no-go zones and surging migrant crime should have been our wake-up call. Instead we doubled down on dangerous naivety. While Warsaw builds border fences and Paris pockets our cash for half-hearted Channel patrols, Britain’s borders remain as porous as a sieve. Migrants know the game – destroy your documents, spin a sob story, and you’re set for life at British taxpayers’ expense.
The costs mount daily – not just in billions spent housing and supporting new arrivals, but in the slow erosion of everything that made Britain British. Our leaders call concerns racist while ignoring the sex gangs, the knife crime epidemics, the neighbourhoods where integration has failed completely. Other nations protect their people first; we sacrifice ours at the altar of political correctness.
Time is running out. With every unchecked arrival, the Britain we grew up in slips further away. The question isn’t whether we can stem the tide – we must – but whether we still have the collective will to save our country before it’s lost forever. The rest of Europe is fighting back. Why aren’t we?