Somali Immigrant Reveals the Truth About Minnesota Fraud | Ayaan Hirsi Ali
The High Cost of Delusion: How Amoral Familism and Political Greed are Financing the West’s Demise
The modern Western mind is plagued by a dangerous naivety, a willful blindness that insists all cultures are interchangeable and that the nation-state is a universal concept easily grafted onto any society. This delusion is currently being dismantled, piece by piece, by the stark realities unfolding in places like Minnesota. In a recent and illuminating discussion, Ayaan Hirsi Ali dissected the cultural and political mechanisms that have turned the Somali diaspora in America into a flashpoint for fraud, failed assimilation, and cynical political exploitation. What emerges is not a story of an immigrant dream realized, but a nightmare of “amoral familism” fueled by a political class willing to sell out the taxpayer for a reliable voting block.
To understand the magnitude of the failure, one must first strip away the romanticized Western view of history. Somalia’s independence in 1960 was greeted with the typical post-colonial optimism—high hopes of a constitution, founding fathers, and a unified state that would mirror the American experiment. Yet, as Hirsi Ali points out, these hopes were strangled in the crib. The chaos that followed, exacerbated by Soviet intervention and coups, was not merely a result of bad governance but a symptom of a much deeper, more permanent structure: the clan. The nation-state is a modern invention, but the clan is primal. It is the bloodline. For the Somali, the clan is the passport, the welfare state, the identity, and the army. It is the entity for which you fight and die.
This bloodline allegiance is not a quaint cultural artifact; it is an alternative moral system that is fundamentally incompatible with the Western concept of the rule of law and the impartial state. When this pre-modern, and arguably anti-modern, system is transplanted into a high-trust Western democracy, the results are catastrophic. We are witnessing a collision between the universalist ethics of the West and the insular ethics of the clan. In the clan system, morality is strictly internal. “Good” is defined by what benefits the bloodline; “bad” is what harms it.
This brings us to the rampant fraud and corruption scandals plaguing the Somali community in Minnesota. Western observers are baffled by the scale of the theft, often framing it as the actions of a few bad apples. However, this interpretation misses the cultural logic at play. As Hirsi Ali notes, within the clan dynamic, defrauding the American government is not seen as stealing. It is viewed as a virtuous act of resource extraction for the benefit of the family. The American government is perceived as an “alien weak system” that foolishly dishes out money. In this worldview, if you do not take the money, you are not honest; you are stupid. The assumption is that all smart people loot the state for their kin. It is a textbook example of what Edward Banfield called “amoral familism”—an orientation where the ingroup is served at the cost of everything and everyone else.
The tragedy is compounded by the introduction of Islamism into this already volatile mix. Since the 1980s, the Muslim Brotherhood and similar entities have infiltrated Somali society, enforcing a religious rigidity that supplements the clan’s exclusivity. Where the clan demands loyalty of blood, political Islam demands a rejection of Western secularism. The result is a community doubly insulated against assimilation: bound by blood to the clan and by theology to a radicalized interpretation of the faith. This is why we see the regression of social norms, such as five-year-old girls wearing hijabs—a sight unseen in the Somalia of Hirsi Ali’s youth—signaling a deepening retrenchment rather than integration.
One would expect the leaders of a liberal democracy to recognize this friction and demand adherence to the social contract. Instead, we see the grotesque spectacle of politicians like Jacob Frey in Minneapolis attempting to “assimilate into the clan.” It is a pathetic display of pandering, where Western officials humiliate themselves and compromise their constituents’ interests in a desperate bid for approval from a system that views them with contempt. Frey and his ilk believe they are building bridges; in reality, they are merely dancing with a devil that intends to consume them. They fail to realize that the clan dynamic respects strength and lineage, not the weak benevolence of a guilt-ridden bureaucrat.
However, the most insidious layer of this debacle is not the clan or the Islamists, but the Democratic Party itself. The current situation in Minnesota is not an accident; it is the result of a calculated political business model. The Democratic strategy has shifted away from persuading individual voters on the merits of policy and toward the importation and maintenance of ethnic voting blocks. This is a cynical collusion between three distinct groups: the Somali ethnic block seeking tribal resources, the Muslim Brotherhood seeking to Islamize the West from within, and the Democratic Party seeking a permanent electoral majority.
This unholy trinity operates on a transactional basis that is deeply corrosive to the republic. The Democratic establishment pumps these ethnic enclaves with taxpayer-funded benefits—welfare, grants, and lax oversight on fraud—in exchange for bloc votes delivered by community gatekeepers. It is a revival of the corrupt Tammany Hall politics of the past, but with a far more dangerous demographic and ideological twist. The Democrats are essentially outsourcing their constituency building to the Muslim Brotherhood and clan elders, content to let these groups run their own parallel societies as long as the ballots are cast for the correct ticket on Election Day.
The victims of this arrangement are the American taxpayers, who are quite literally financing their own demise. We are forced to subsidize a system that views us as gullible prey. Every dollar siphoned off in fraud, every grant given to a front organization, and every concession made to amoral familism weakens the structural integrity of the nation. We are feeding a parasite that does not share our values, does not respect our laws, and ultimately seeks to replace our system with one based on blood and religious decree.
It is time to abandon the polite fictions of multiculturalism that have allowed this rot to fester. A nation-state cannot survive if it harbors enclaves that operate on an anti-modern, anti-national operating system. The belief that we can simply absorb millions of people from clan-based societies without demanding a fundamental renunciation of those tribal allegiances is a suicide pact. The collusion between the Democratic Party machine and these insular blocks is a betrayal of the very concept of citizenship. Until we find the courage to cut off the flow of “alien weak money” and demand total assimilation to Western legal and moral standards, we will continue to watch our cities crumble under the weight of imported chaos and homegrown political greed.