More than 141,501 Bangladeshi Muslim (photo right) nationals — larger than the population of Dayton, Ohio — have entered the United States just since 2005 (with the majority coming in under the Obama regime) for no other reason than to reunite with extended family members, newly released data reveals. (we’ve handed out over 178,000 green cards to Bangladeshi nationals since 9/11)

Breitbart Previously unreleased Department of Homeland Security (DHS) information shows the large-scale mass immigration that has occurred where foreign relatives can enter the U.S. simply because their family member is an immigrant. This process is known as “chain migration.”

Since 2005, the U.S. has admitted and resettled 141,501 Bangladeshi nationals who entered because their foreign relatives were already living in the country.

A chart released to Breitbart News reveals the increasing flow of foreign nationals under the process of chain migration, where on average every two new immigrants bring seven foreign relatives with them to the U.S.

BANGLADESHI MUSLIM NATIONALS WHO ENTERED THE U.S. VIA CHAIN MIGRATION:

8,508 entered in 2005

9,936 entered in 2006

7,765 entered in 2007

7,795 entered in 2008

12,974 entered in 2009 (Under Obama)

11,407 entered in 2010

13,136 entered in 2011

13,379 entered in 2012

11,346 entered in 2013

14,170 entered in 2014

13,034 entered in 2015

18,051 entered in 2016

The Visa Lottery, which Trump is trying to end, doles out 50,000 visas annually to foreign nationals from a multitude of countries, a majority of which have Muslim terrorist problems, including Afghanistan, Algeria, Egypt, Iraq, Lebanon, Libya, Nigeria, Saudi Arabia, Somalia, Syria, Trinidad and Tobago, Venezuela, Yemen, and Uzbekistan.

From 2001 to 2015, roughly 1.8 million individuals from 47 majority-Muslim countries, mainly in the Middle East and North Africa, have been granted green cards, according to the DHS Yearbook on immigration statistics.

The rate has even grown in recent years . The sending countries with the largest percentage increase in the number of immigrants living in the United States since 2010 are predominantly Muslim countries, including Saudi Arabia (up 122 percent), Afghanistan (up 74 percent), Syria (up 62 percent), Bangladesh (up 53 percent), Nigeria (up 40 percent), Iraq (up 39 percent), Egypt (up 32 percent), and Pakistan (up 28 percent).

Walk along Church Avenue and turn east onto McDonald Avenue and you will see where the old standards of working class Brooklyn, aging homes with faded American flags and loose siding, surly bars tucked into the shadows of street corners and the last video stores hanging on to a dying industry give way to mosques and grocery stores selling goat meat.

Mosques grow like mushrooms in basements, cell phone stores offer easy ways to wire money back to Bangladesh and old men glare at interlopers, especially if they are infidel women. This is where Mohammed Siddiquee settled a dispute the old-fashioned way by beheading his landlord.

“I feel like I’m living in my own country,” the editor of one of the Bangladeshi newspapers in New York, said. “You don’t have to learn English to live here. That’s a great thing!”

This makes chain migration the largest driver of immigration to the U.S. — making up more than 70 percent — with every two new arrivals bringing seven foreign relatives with them. Since 2005, the U.S. admitted 80,252 chain migrants from Iran, despite the nation being listed by the U.S. State Department as a sponsor of terrorism.