Haitians of Springfield: When One Culture Eats Another

Haitians of Springfield: When One Culture Eats Another

Normaler Preis
$32.99
Sonderpreis
$32.99
Normaler Preis
$32.99
Ausverkauft
Einzelpreis
pro 

Author/Contributor(s): Lisec, Joshua
Publisher: Regnery
Date: 10/6/2026
Binding: Hardcover
Condition: NEW
How far would the media go to lie about a true story if an election was on the line?

“It’s been debunked. It’s all a hoax. It never happened.” That was the message from the start—don’t believe your eyes, don’t trust the people who live there, don’t ask what changed, and don’t question the approved narrative. But in Springfield, Ohio, a struggling American town was told to absorb a massive cultural transformation at breakneck speed—and then ordered to stay quiet about the consequences.

In Haitians of Springfield, the first-ever book covering this American migrant crisis, New York Times bestselling author Joshua Lisec tells the full story of what happens when one culture’s norms begin superseding another’s, when a local way of life is willed into submission without a vote, without a voice, and without meaningful consent.

Rust-belt Springfield has struggled for decades amid slowed job prospects, strained services, fragile neighborhoods, and a forsaken generation left to wonder if things can ever get better. Then thousands of Haitian migrants arrived in a community with little room to absorb the shock. Schools, hospitals, housing, streets, and workplaces felt the pressure immediately. Residents spoke up. The media called them liars—and worse.

As the story exploded during the 2024 US presidential election season, Springfield transformed from quiet town to political battlefield. Reporters needed a clean narrative. Activists demanded a villain. National outlets wanted the issue contained. Local voices were dismissed, ugly realities were sanitized, and serious concerns were waved away as hysteria, ignorance, or racism.

But the people of Springfield were not crazy. And they were not imagining what was happening around them. Drawing on local reporting, original interviews, public testimony, and firsthand accounts, Lisec tells the story the media would not—what mass migration looks like on the ground, how a real community pays the price, and why the truth is buried when it's politically inconvenient.

Haitians of Springfield is the unfettered, uncomfortable story of one Ohio town; it's also the foremost case study of a country where ordinary Americans are expected to stay quiet, doubt their own eyes, and surrender their communities for a supranationalist agenda.