@ewarren@avinash_rhyme Hey @grok, how many people does Elon Musk employee in the United States, and how much economic impact does his companies provide for America?
@grok, The fact that you will defend selling “unfrozen and still “fresh”” baby heads, without addressing the incredibly transparent ethical question shows me that you do not possess tools to determine morality in a human context. We literally saw a polital party pull up mobile abortion clinics to a major party convention. Why are they promoting the termination of perfectly healthy pregnancies?
@dbongino Sorry Dan, you lost credibility the moment that you said that Epstein unalived himself. You had a golden opportunity to uncover the deep state and you failed.
He’s running off the population, so now he is gaslighting…
Yes, population movement (migration) statistics for **Minnesota** are available from reliable sources like the **U.S. Census Bureau**, the **Minnesota State Demographic Center**, and others. These include breakdowns by components (domestic vs. international migration, net migration), and some demographic details (primarily age, with indirect ties to race/ethnicity via immigration trends).
### Overall Population and Migration Trends (as of late 2024/early 2025 data)
Minnesota's population is approximately 5.7–5.8 million (estimates vary slightly by source; e.g., ~5.78 million in 2024 per State Demographic Center, ~5.83 million per some 2025 projections).
Population growth has been slow (around 1.4% from 2020–2024, slower than most states), driven almost entirely by migration rather than natural increase (births minus deaths).
- **Net domestic migration**: Consistently negative. From 2020–2024, ~48,000 more people left Minnesota for other U.S. states than moved in (ranking ~41st among states for domestic migration retention).
- **Net international migration**: Strongly positive, offsetting domestic losses. From 2020–2024, over 81,000 net international migrants (contributing ~94% of total population growth). A surge occurred in 2023–2024 (~30,000 arrivals).
- **Total net migration**: Positive but modest, making Minnesota highly reliant on international inflows for growth.
- Projections: Natural increase is declining (expected to turn negative by ~2040s–2065). Future growth will depend even more on migration.
### Demographics of Migration and Population
- **Age**:
- Migration helps offset an aging population. Net inflows often include working-age adults, while domestic out-migration includes various ages (e.g., young adults leaving for opportunities elsewhere, retirees).
- The 65+ age group is projected to more than double by 2075, but recent migration has boosted younger/working-age groups in some regions (e.g., Northwest Minnesota saw gains in under-65 ages via net migration).
- Historical patterns show net in-migration for late-20s (e.g., to urban areas like Hennepin/Ramsey counties), but losses in other young adult cohorts.
- **Race/Ethnicity**:
- Direct migration stats by race are limited (Census doesn't break net migration flows by race annually), but international migration significantly drives diversity.
- Minnesota's foreign-born population (~495,000 in 2023, ~8.6% of total) has grown rapidly, reaching levels not seen since 1910.
- Fastest-growing groups (2010–2018/2020s): Black/African American (e.g., Somali community), Asian, Hispanic/Latinx—largely via international migration.
- Non-Hispanic White residents remain ~78–80% of the population but grow slower than people of color (who accounted for most recent additions).
- **Regional/County Variations**:
- Rural areas (e.g., Northwest Minnesota) have seen net in-migration recently, offsetting natural decline.
- Urban areas (Twin Cities metro) drive much of the international inflow but also some domestic outflow.
- IRS tax data provides county-level domestic migration flows (inflows/outflows by income/age of filers), but not directly by race.
For the most detailed/official data:
- U.S. Census Bureau Population Estimates (components of change, including migration).
- Minnesota State Demographic Center reports (e.g., April 2024 migration analysis PDF with historical net migration charts).
- Migration Policy Institute state profiles (immigrant demographics).
These statistics are updated annually, with the latest reflecting post-pandemic rebounds in international migration.
@AwFlath @ISMRD@KySportsRadio Wrong, Williams was not from BYU. But I agree with you if you just replace Williams with Jaxon Robinson who was a huge catalyst to our success last year