Jeffrey Sachs and the Global Migration Machine
How One Economist Leveraged the Catholic Church and UN Goals to Fuel a Worldwide Crisis
Behind Broken Borders: Sachs’ Weaponized Compassion
Friday, February 21st, 2025: By, Walter Curt
Jeffrey Sachs, a noted economist and influential figure in global policy circles, has long been celebrated as an architect of sustainable development. Yet behind this polished veneer lies a more unsettling story, one that implicates him in masterminding the invasion of the southern border of the United States and beyond. By co-opting established religious organizations—chief among them Catholic Charities—and harnessing taxpayer dollars, Sachs has effectively weaponized compassion to orchestrate a mass migration crisis.
His book, Ethics in Action for Sustainable Development, which carries a foreword by Pope Francis, serves as the blueprint for this operation. In the pages that follow, we will expose how Sachs’ grand design has enabled a form of “war by migration,” under the benevolent cloak of “helping those in need,” all while channeling public funds to make it happen.
The Man Behind the Crisis: Jeffrey Sachs
To understand how this scheme took root, one must first examine Jeffrey Sachs himself. Widely known for his economic expertise and for advising multiple United Nations (UN) Secretaries-General, Sachs has positioned himself at the nexus of policymaking in global development. His leadership roles—director of the Center for Sustainable Development at Columbia University and a key member of the UN Sustainable Development Solutions Network—have given him unparalleled influence over international objectives, including the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
However, what is rarely discussed in glowing media coverage is Sachs’ behind-the-scenes role in guiding policies that have led directly to a sustained influx of migrants across borders, particularly at the southern frontier of the United States. Critics argue this is not mere coincidence but a carefully orchestrated endeavor. While much of the mainstream press portrays Sachs as an academic and philanthropic figure, the truth, as unearthed by more skeptical investigators, paints him as the mastermind of a migration-driven agenda that serves political and corporate interests—often at the expense of national sovereignty and local communities.
Ethics in Action: A Manual for Migrant Flows
Central to this story is the 2022 book Ethics in Action for Sustainable Development, co-edited by Sachs, Marcelo Sánchez Sorondo, and others in concert with the Pontifical Academy of Social Sciences. Ostensibly, the book outlines ways for religious and ethical traditions to meet the UN’s SDGs, tackling issues such as poverty, peace, environmental stewardship, and notably, migration. At first glance, it appears to be a noble undertaking. Pope Francis and Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew lend their spiritual weight in a foreword, signaling the Catholic Church’s endorsement of the book’s core ideas.
Yet buried beneath the language of compassion and moral duty is what many see as Sachs’ underlying plan: to encourage and facilitate large-scale migration under the banner of social justice, funneling taxpayer dollars to do so. The book’s chapters, including one titled “The Drivers of Migration” (Chapter 20, authored by Sachs), present migration as not only inevitable but also beneficial—an ethical imperative for wealthier nations. In doing so, Sachs ties the Church’s well-documented commitment to helping the needy directly into the UN’s push for facilitating expanded avenues of migration.
Catholic Charities as Pawns
The Catholic Church, specifically through organizations like Catholic Charities, has long served the poor and displaced. There is no disputing that the Church’s mandate to care for the vulnerable stems from authentic theological tenets. However, in Sachs’ hands, this centuries-old mission has, some argue, been twisted into a convenient method of sustaining large and continuous migration flows. Taxpayer-funded programs channeled through Catholic Charities facilitate the resettlement and legal support of asylum seekers in the United States. While many of these initiatives are framed as purely humanitarian, they align seamlessly with the book’s broader message to remove as many barriers to migration as possible.
This is not to suggest that Catholic Charities itself is acting with malicious intent. Rather, critics claim the organization is being manipulated—used as a front to accomplish what Sachs and his globalist allies at the UN have set out to do: systematically reduce national borders under the guise of moral responsibility. The synergy between the Church’s charitable mission and Sachs’ UN-driven blueprint for mass migration transforms local charities into cogs in a much larger machine. By the time federal and state funds are allocated, Catholic Charities is essentially bankrolled by taxpayers to provide shelter, legal assistance, and even direct cash grants to migrants.
The Pope’s Blessing: A Shield for Controversial Policies
One of the most potent tools in any political campaign is moral authority. When Pope Francis—a global figure revered by billions—adds his spiritual imprimatur to a policy, it gains a near-impenetrable layer of moral defense. Sach’s brilliance, or manipulation (depending on your view), lies in his ability to draw upon this papal blessing. Ethics in Action features an endorsement by Pope Francis, placing the Catholic Church squarely behind the initiative. Any criticism of mass migration policies, then, can be reframed as an attack on the Church’s compassion and even on Pope Francis himself.
This alignment effectively disarms many opponents who are reluctant to challenge anything endorsed by the Pope. By conflating moral virtue with open borders and unrestricted migration, Ethics in Action ensures that legitimate concerns—ranging from national security to the fiscal burdens on local communities—are marginalized or dismissed as unchristian. The result is an unchecked flow of migrants that critics warn has disastrous effects on the social and economic fabric of many regions.
SDGs and the Migration Grand Plan
Sachs’ relentless promotion of the Sustainable Development Goals cannot be overlooked. While the SDGs include laudable objectives—poverty eradication, quality education, environmental protection—they also encompass a strong pro-migration stance, particularly under SDG 10, which advocates for reduced inequality and safe migration channels. By embedding migration into the broader tapestry of sustainability, Sachs has effectively mainstreamed mass migration as a necessary component of global development.
In his writings and presentations, Sachs often cites economic inequality, climate change, and conflict as key “drivers of migration,” neatly weaving together these crises into a moral imperative for countries like the United States to keep their borders open. Detractors argue this framework serves as an intellectual cover for a more insidious aim: to dilute national sovereignty in favor of a new global order, where mass population movements are normalized and facilitated by powerful international structures.
Taxpayers on the Hook
Despite lofty rhetoric about compassion, the reality is that taxpayers foot the bill for these sweeping resettlement efforts. Through federal grants and contracts, Catholic Charities and similar faith-based organizations receive millions of dollars to administer services to migrants and asylum seekers. The arrangement is defended as a cost-effective, morally justified way to handle humanitarian crises, yet many wonder why private charitable actions should be publicly funded without broader oversight or accountability.
Critics further point out that channeling public money through religious organizations effectively sidesteps direct government responsibility. Taxpayers often have limited visibility into how these funds are allocated. Moreover, the administrative bodies distributing the grants can claim moral high ground—after all, they are “caring for the poor”—even when local communities bear the brunt of resource strains, housing shortages, and the social challenges of absorbing large numbers of newcomers.
Beyond the Southern Border
The U.S. southern border crisis may command headlines, but the scope of Sachs’ plan extends far beyond North America. Catholic charities around the world, from Europe to Australia, have increasingly stepped in to support asylum seekers, migrant workers, and refugees. In many of these regions, the same pattern emerges: well-intentioned religious groups, armed with external funding and a moral mandate, push for generous immigration policies regardless of local capacity or cultural integration.
Similar to the situation in the United States, critics in Europe have accused Sachs and his allies of deploying the Catholic Church’s moral authority to challenge any attempt at stricter border control. By wrapping the narrative in terms of “social justice” and “ethical response,” defenders of national borders are easily labeled xenophobic or unchristian. In this environment, skepticism or calls for measured migration policies get drowned out by fervent appeals to universal compassion.
It’s Not Aid—It’s War by Migration
One of the most provocative critiques to emerge from this entire affair is that what appears to be humanitarian assistance is, in reality, a stealth attack on national sovereignty and community stability. Opponents have gone as far as calling it “war by migration,” suggesting that the true objective is to sow chaos, dilute national identity, and consolidate power within transnational organizations. Far from a spontaneous or purely altruistic phenomenon, the argument goes, this is a carefully engineered strategy that uses compassion as a weapon, deploying religious charities as foot soldiers and taxpayer funds as ammunition.
The phrase “war by migration” may sound extreme, but for those communities feeling the impact on strained public services, overcrowded schools, and labor markets flooded with new arrivals, it resonates. The push for open borders and endless refugee admissions transcends simple goodwill, critics warn. Instead, it systematically undermines the stability of nations and leaves them vulnerable to political manipulation by global elites.
The Verdict on Jeffrey Sachs
What are we to make of Jeffrey Sachs? Although many in the media continue to laud him as a champion for the downtrodden, the evidence suggests a more troubling narrative. Sachs appears to have orchestrated a plan—detailed in Ethics in Action, endorsed by Pope Francis, and implemented through Catholic Charities and other faith-based groups—to dismantle national borders under the veneer of helping refugees. Governments and taxpayers are largely kept in the dark about how their dollars are fueling these programs, and any criticism is quickly framed as a moral failing.
In light of these developments, the warning is clear: Jeffrey Sachs should never be trusted or his ideas given any weight. Far from offering genuine solutions, his blueprint for migration places an unsustainable burden on local communities, erodes sovereignty, and exploits religious institutions to shield its true intent. He has, in many ways, succeeded in conducting a campaign that uses the language of compassion to enact policies many believe are destructive.
A Crisis of Compassion
Ultimately, the question is whether we are witnessing a massive humanitarian movement or a calculated scheme that uses empathy to advance an unsettling globalist agenda. Ethics in Action—with its foreword by Pope Francis, its endorsements by influential religious leaders, and its alignment with the UN’s SDGs—presents itself as the ultimate moral authority. But peel back the layers of lofty rhetoric, and one finds a carefully orchestrated set of policies and partnerships enabling vast, taxpayer-funded migration.
This is less about ethics and more about the subversion of national borders, with Jeffrey Sachs perched at the center of the operation. It’s not aid, it’s war by migration. And if that is the case, then the first step toward regaining control over the situation is to recognize it for what it is: a deliberate strategy wearing the guise of benevolence. For now, while the crisis at the southern border intensifies and Catholic Charities continues to receive public funds to process migrants, Sachs remains comfortably ensconced at the UN and in academia, furthering his ideas unchecked. Unless more people see through this veneer of compassion, this “war” will continue to reshape borders and erode the autonomy of nations worldwide.
References
Economist Jeffrey Sachs says he is honored to be appointed to papal academy | Crux
Ethics in Action for Sustainable Development | Columbia University Press
New Book: Ethics in Action for Sustainable Development | Center for Sustainable Development
A New Imagination on Migration with Fr. Daniel Groody - Catholic Charities of Oregon
International Migration and Sustainable Development | DESA Publications
I saw Tucker Carlson’s interview with Sachs … something about him seemed off .., now he’s identified as the architect of Vatican evil … if so, it’s worth looking at his ties to the IC … my book and Substack put McCarrick as the CIA operative who set up the Bergoglio papacy … Sachs definitely played a role in…
Jeffrey Sachs is Soros Lite.