What happens when a country decides to publish data that Europe is usually afraid to touch?

Denmark is one of the few countries in Europe that keeps detailed crime statistics based on country of origin and immigration background.
And when you read those numbers, you begin to understand why some politicians across Europe prefer not to open this discussion at all.

According to the official data, there are immigrant groups that are significantly overrepresented in violent crime and sex offenses compared to the native population.
In the case of Palestinians in Denmark, the rape offense rate is reportedly 12 times higher than that of native-born Danes.

Why is Europe so afraid to talk about this?

Because the moment the issue is raised, the discussion immediately slides into two extremes:
On one side are those who try to hide any data out of fear of being labeled “racist.”
On the other side are those who use the statistics to paint entire populations with one brush.

Unlike much of Europe, Denmark has adopted stricter immigration policies, less romantic multiculturalism, and greater demands for integration.

The question is not whether people are allowed to discuss these difficult statistics.
The question is what happens to a society that is too afraid to discuss them at all…

(Idit Bar)


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Wir setzen uns so für unsere Mandanten ein und bringen Ihnen die Wertschätzung entgegen, wie wir es für uns in der Lage des Mandanten wünschen und erwarten würden. Jesus, Gottes Sohn, hat schon in der Bergpredigt die „Goldene Regel“ verkündigt, nachzulesen in der Bibel im Neuen Testament, Matthäus 7 Vers 12, wo er sagte: „Alles nun, was ihr wollt, dass euch die Leute tun sollen, das tut ihnen auch! Das ist das Gesetz und die Propheten.“ Diese „Goldene Regel“ finden Sie in keiner Religion, auch nicht im Islam, Buddhismus oder Hinduismus.