War and global-trade disruptions will accelerate migration from Africa and the Middle East to Europe and from Latin America to the United States, potentially by a hundred times.
Topic brief
A Jiang Lens evidence brief for this topic, built from source tags, transcript matches, and linked source refs.
Migration
Han China’s pressure on the Xiongnu/Huns is described as creating a westward cascade that pushes steppe groups into conflict and migration toward the Roman world.
Showing 28 evidence items
No matching evidence on this topic page.
Key Notes
Aging northern economies will need cheap desperate workers from the South, but the resulting immigration will produce cultural conflict as native populations feel replaced.
The major trends Jiang expects include deindustrialization, return from cities to countryside, nationalism, remilitarization, mercantile blocs, resource wars, famines, genocides, slavery, mass migration, and political instability in America and Europe.
Jiang says Khazars migrated into Eastern Europe after Mongol conquest and became European Jews, with similar cultural practices pointing to a common origin.
Sidonia's migration from Spain to England is interpreted as capital moving toward the future center of finance and then later toward the United States.
The Bronze Age world collapses around 1200 BCE through a perfect storm of climate change, drought, famine, migration, Sea Peoples attacks, and regional vulnerability.
Jiang frames the Sea Peoples as economic migrants or refugees from famine who teamed up with pirates and overwhelmed existing civilizations.
Yamnaya migration was not only European; Jiang says it also moved into Iran and India, where mixing with local customs and religion helped create Zoroastrianism and Hinduism.
Timestamped Evidence
"...would see famines which leads to what which leads to massive migration okay and so these are trends these are migration trends that we're..."
"and north america have a huge problem and the problem of course is aging okay so in 2020 the countries in purple are countries..."
"They want people to deliver food to them. And unfortunately, young people don't have to do that because their parents have money. So the..."
"You're living in a fantasy world. You have to wake up and recognize that this is the end of the unipolar moment. We're moving..."
"...you have to mentally prepare yourself for this possibility, okay? Mass migration, where people in the South are most likely to suffer from resource..."
"Okay, sorry, sorry. So Khazaria is around for a long time, a few centuries but then eventually they become conquered by the Mongols and..."
"The first impression one gains is a striking similarity between certain privileged positions held by Jews like our Jews in Hungary and in Poland..."
"Okay, alright, thank you Thank you Alright, so does this make sense, okay? There's a lot of evidence to suggest like the Khazars were..."
"Okay, so these crypto -Jews, they had a lot of money, but not only that, but they have an information network, okay, because they..."
"as the future, and of course, from England, they will also migrate to the United States of America. Okay? Alan, can you read, please?..."
"...leads to drought which leads to famine which leads to a migration crisis what's going to happen is that the Sea Peoples are going..."
"they are going to wipe out existing civilizations including Mycenaean Greece and the Hittite Empire okay the Hittite Empire which is in Anatolia which..."
Relevant Lectures And Readings
Fukuyama's end of history becomes, in this lecture, a temporary American spell: Pax Americana, science-priesthood, and dollar worship.
A source-grounded reading of Jiang’s lecture on transnational capital, British sea empire, Frankist revolutionary theology, Disraeli’s Coningsby, Bolshevism, Marx, Bakunin, and Freud: modernity appears as a machine that hides capital, displays a scapegoat, turns...
Bronze begins as a weapon, becomes status, hardens into currency, and then teaches the world the dangerous rhythm of capital: rapid growth, total interconnection, elite consolidation, and sudden collapse.
A source-grounded reading of Jiang’s lecture on why the so-called barbarians repeatedly defeat civilization: empires turn innovation into bureaucracy, while the steppe turns geography, animals, inheritance, oath, myth, and violence into mobile social power.
A source-grounded reading of Jiang's dawn-of-humanity lecture: Darwinism becomes a rival theology, cave art becomes a portal, speech begins as song, and modern society is accused of socializing people out of empathy.
Britain becomes empire not because it begins powerful, but because it begins divided, poor, exposed, and forced to change.
The Holy Roman Empire was not holy, not Roman, and not much of an empire.
Related Topics
How To Use And Cite This Page
This topic page is a discovery surface. For generated synthesis, cite the human-readable source reading or lens page. For Jiang-spoken claims, cite the transcript segment, source ref, and YouTube timestamp. Raw text and Markdown mirrors are fallback surfaces for tools that cannot read this HTML page.