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News from around the globe that the newspapers seldom print Disclaimer and fair comment While I agree with most of the material passed on I may not be in agreement with all. However there is much we can learn from some that we disagree with. Remember it was once thought that the earth was flat. It is
left to your judgment to determine what you agree with and what to act
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| What will it take for Australia to follow the Dutch example? | ||
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16th
March 2005
The subject of ethnic violence is rarely brought up in the news these days unless the institutionally biased media is forced by sheer public concern of racially motivated rapes and other heinous crimes to tackle the issue. Those journalists forced to write about this important issue do so in a coy manner, carefully guarded lest they get savaged by their colleagues for breaching officialdom and their own union diktats about "racism". The failure of the corrupt multi-cultural experiment is "the" subject that the electorate is very concerned with; whether this recognition of failure manifests itself as worry about a major terrorist attack carried out by religious fundamentalists such as Al-Qaeda supporters who are already in Australia as admitted by the establishment, whether it is witnessing the rising numbers of illegal migrants turning up across the country, undermining local rates of pay, ousting Australian workers or bludging on the taxpayer. Whether it is the genuine concern of the rise of Islamic influence in the community in general, the multi-cultural dream of a generation of corrupt politicians is in ruins in many parts of the country and spreading fast. Flawed
dream No better illustration of the demise of the failed multi-cultural conspiracy is found that in the Netherlands, once the home of stereotypical weed-smoking hippies and policemen who would do the shopping for criminals rather than lock them up. Will the British follow the Dutch example? In a major article in the British "Sunday Times", (27th February) columnist Brian Moynahan detailed what has been happening in Holland that once leading liberal nation as it awakens to the fact that it has a veritable demographic time bomb on its hands. In the three big cities of Amsterdam, Rotterdam and the Hague, the ethnic newcomers, principally from Morocco and Turkey already outnumber the native Dutch among under-20-year-olds. Moynahan is no scare-monger, no rabid racist or little-Englander, he is a Cambridge graduate with a dozen book titles to his credit. He might have just a little more backbone than his fellow journalists at the "Times". Just a decade ago, he writes, the Dutch Government supplied funding for mosques, religious schools, language courses and housing. They passed special legislation so Moroccans could have dual nationality, as Moroccan nationality is inalienable under Moroccan law but the last few years have seen the murder of several outstanding critics of the spread of Islamic influences which has precipitated a reaction by the Dutch at all levels, voters and politicians, police forces and the media. Violent
murders and death threats In November last year another murder shocked not just Holland but of all western Europe. The throat-slitting of Theo van Gogh, a film director in an Amsterdam street sent shock waves through Christian and secular Europe. He had made a short film, "Submission", about the rape and humiliation of women in Islam in conjunction with a Muslim Somali refugee Ayann Hirsi Ali who had become a Liberal Party MP in the Dutch parliament. His murderer was a well educated 26 year-old of Moroccan origin; another combatant in the ethnic and cultural war to engulf this flat low lying nation of 16 million. Lesson
learned The British have not yet witnessed the high profile murders and death threats dished out to the high and mighty. They have no politicians like Pym Fortuyn, no high profile media figures like Theo van Gogh as yet gunned down in broad day light but Britain is no stranger to ethnic and religious conflict as the death tally rises year on year, some stories, to the eternal shame of the media barons and editors who do their bidding, barely make more than the local or the regional newspapers let alone the dailies. Victims
aplenty in Australia
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