10 tips
how to counter Islam
By:
Nicolai Sennels, psychologist
1)
Fight, stop and roll back all types of Sharia
Islamic
law, Sharia, is opposed to secular, democratic laws and humanistic
values. It is not only discriminatory towards Muslim women, it demands
Muslims to actively oppose democracy, and to fight, enslave and kill
non-Muslims. By allowing Sharia into our societies, no matter in how
small quantities, we are giving breathing air to a system that
ultimately aims at our destruction. It also sends a welcoming signal to
Islamic fundamentalists, that they can come and live without having to
assimilate to our societies and values. It sends a signal to both Muslims
and non-Muslims that democratic, humanistic values are worth less than
the foreign and medieval, religious laws of a brutal religion.
Examples
of Sharia:
·
Halal, Muslims-only
prayer rooms, Islamic holidays and traditions in public institutions.
·
Islamic face-coverings
(burqas and niqab) in public areas.
·
Islamic veils as part of
public uniforms.
·
Dominating Islamic
architecture in our cities.
2)
Stop the mosques
Mosques spread a literal interpretation of the Islamic scriptures. They
refuse to distance themselves to the criminal aspects of the Quran and
Muhammed. Instead, they preach these as divine truths. Thus, mosques
functions as rally points for Islamic fundamentalists and exercises
social pressure on more moderate Muslims to adhere more strongly to the
Sharia.
We must
demand that mosques actively and consequently condemn the passages of
the Islamic scriptures that call for – or even order – criminal
behaviour. In most countries this can be done with reference to
constitutional laws banning religions or organisations spreading a
message of violence or public disorder.
We also
must spread knowledge about the books that Mosques, Imams and Islamic
organisations preach as divine truths every Friday in the middle of our
vulnerable, democratic societies.
Related:
3)
Support Free Speech: use it!
The
only thing that Islam fear as much as a conscientious, diligent and
sufficient police force (soon to be enforced by the military), is
truth. That is why most Muslims are against Free Speech: because it
allows us to expose the criminal intentions of Islam and reject
Muslims’ demands for special treatment as cultural imperialism.
Therefore
we must stand by Free speech, and there is no other real way to do this
than by using it actively to criticise Islam. If possible, publicly and
without hiding our face and name.
4) Stop
Muslim immigration
Islam
is spreading via emigration. The Quran even promises abundance and a
divine reward for emigrating for the cause of Islam: “And whoever
emigrates for the cause of Allah will find on the earth many locations
and abundance,” says the Qur’an. “And whoever leaves his home as an emigrant
to Allah and His Messenger and then death overtakes him, his reward has
already become incumbent upon Allah. And Allah is ever Forgiving and
Merciful.” (4:100)
Without
Muslim immigration and refugees, Europe would not have had the massive
problems with economy, safety and cultural destruction that we have to
day, and which is now spreading to East Europe and USA, partly as a
result of Islamic terrorists’ successful efforts to create large
refugee streams.
We have
to insist on full border control, complete national control with
immigration and refugee laws (opposing EU and UN) and a full stop of
Islamic immigration (including family reunifications). Bitter
experience show, that it is impossible to integrate Islamic culture
sufficiently. The result is devastating economical problems and the
creation of parallel societies with extreme crime rates, functioning as
hotbeds for terrorists and the spread of Sharia at the expense of
secular law.
5)
Giving people something to rally behind
A
majority of Westeners is worried about Islam and Muslim immigration.
But out of fear, most people do not speak out about it. To remove this
fear it is important to make people aware that many other support their
opinion and that there are strong, sympathetic communities and
movements, that they can easily rally behind. One very successful such
movement is the German Pegida demonstrations.
So find
a way to make people aware that they are not alone with their aversion
against Islam, and that there are normal, sympathetic citizens out
there that they can join, and share and work together with.
And
give people something they can rally behind and around: Slogans,
symbols, newsletters, petitions, parties, organisations and movements,
brave spokes women and men, demonstrations, blogs and social media
groups.
Be an
inspiring example by showing courage, being knowledgeable and acting
without anger.
Related:
6)
Activate religious and political institutions
This is
basically about lobbying.
Get in
contact with religious societies, churches, and political and
economical think tanks and organisations. Make them see that
criticising Islam can benefit their own cause (Islamic persecution of
Christians, Muslims vote Left and cost billions, Muslim women are
suppressed, mosques makes the price on apartments nearby decrease –
etc.). There are plenty of reasons why political groups and
institutions should worry about – and speak out against – Islam and
Muslim immigration.
Send
them letters and books, ask for a meeting with them, join their
Facebook group and start – slow and carefully – to post Islam critical
stuff on their page. See if they would be interested in sending your
material to their members – or help them produce their own Islam
critical material.
If you
are lucky, you might get really good contacts inside media or the
established parties or acknowledged organisations.
7)
Start blogging – every day!
There
is a catastrophic lack of blogs in many countries. Important with
blogs: Post stuff every day (to build up traffic and interest), make a
newsletter and make it easy for people to sign up for it (you can just
build your newsletter out of e.g. your 10 latest posts), link to
original sources, stick to the facts, no emotional outbursts, keep a
sober language and ban racists and Nazis from commenting.
Whatever
you post, makes sure to also spread it on Facebook (in several groups
if possible) and Twitter. Get your tech-friend to do some SEO and if
you like, build up a blogger community where you share the work load of
finding, translating, posting and spreading news.
8)
Demonstrations
If you
have the capacity, making demonstrations can be very effective. It
often attracts media, it mobilises people and it can send a strong
signal to politicians (especially if you manage to get journalists
interested). Use Facebook to announce it, remember to get the right
permits from the police and from the local municipality, make signs and
a big front-banner. Find good/famous speakers and consider to not just
do one demonstrations, but a string of them on e.g. every Monday or 1st
Monday in every month.
You can
also chose to do such demonstrations in front of mosques, the
parliament or other places where it will attract more attention from
relevant people.
9)
Write letters to the editor – and keep doing it
If the
media had not been so reluctant to report about the nature of Islam and
the consequences of Muslim immigration, the current threat against
freedom and safety would not be at the level it is today. The earlier
our fellow voters are convinced that filling their parliaments with
brave women and men who are willing to counter the influence of Islam,
UN’s conventions on immigration and EU’s laws on open borders, the
greater the chance of a successful outcome for everybody. Journalists
and editors are not happy to report about things that they willfully
have kept as a secret in order not to stir up any “wrong” thoughts in
the population. In We can help to fill the information gap by sending
letters to the editors. The opinion pages are the most read sections in
newspapers, and even if the letter is not printed, we still sent a
signal to the editor that their readers are interested in this
particular topic (and if they want to sell newspapers they better write
about things that interest their readers). A third benefit is that by
formulating such letters, one sharpens one’s mind and ability to argue
for freedom and against its enemies. Here is how you get started:
a) Find
the email address for letters to the editor.
b)
Always write about current matters. It can be EU’s refugee quotas, a
recent statement from politicians, fresh statistics on immigrant crime,
etc.
c)
Write concise – short and precise. 2-5 sentences should be enough.
Longer pieces can be excellent but it is harder to get the editor to
print them on paper. Example: “The only win-win solution to the refugee
problem is to send all back and build proper camps in their own
regions. In this way hopefuls are dissuaded from leaving their families
alone in dangerous conditions and taking long and often deadly travels.
We can provide food and safety for dozens of people for the same money
that it costs to accommodate a single asylum seeker here in our own
country. I vote for closed borders, sending back refugees and helping
them in their own regions where they can feel more home in their culture
and language.”
d)
Include links for documentation.
e) Use
a fake email, name and address if needed.
f) Bcc
relevant friends so they can be inspired.
g)
Copy-paste your letters into comment sections on online news sites and
blogs – to maximize the benefit of your efforts. You can also send them
to relevant politicians or post them on Facebook etc.
h) Find
out how to check if the newspaper printed your letter – and remember to
celebrate when you get a letter printed on paper (I get around one out
of three letters printed on paper – I have more than 700 on paper until
now).
10)
Protecting the inner level
Many
people in Europe and also some in the rest of the West are preparing
themselves for living in more violent societies. In Sweden there is an
increase on weapon sales, in Germany pepper spray is sold out, and
still more women and men learn self defence. Hopefully many will join
their country’s national guard.
One can
not go wrong with any of this, as long as it all happens within the
frame of democratic law.
But
while doing all these outer activities, we should also remember our
inner values and development. What we are and what we become inside,
will be the future of coming generations.
Countless
things can be communicated through books and computers. But
transmission of values and outlook on our inner and deepest levels is
only possible through a human-to-human connection: From person to
person, from parents to children, from one generation to the next.
Therefore
we not only have to protect our outer society and culture, our
democratic rights and humanistic norms. We also have to protect our
inner life, and here anger and fear are great obstacles. A professional
policeman and an angry or fearful policeman are two completely
different things.
One
major problem is that irresponsible politicians and our own laziness
and attachment to a comfortable lifestyle is letting things get so much
out of hand, that we might feel the need to brutalise ourselves in
order to rectify our leader’s historical mistake.
If we
come out of this clash of civilisations with more anger in our minds
and less respect for human dignity, we will have lost the very basis
for what we are fighting for.
Therefor
we should not only see ourselves as outer protectors of society. We
must also remember that we are carriers of an important human
transmission of inner values and outlook on very deep, psychological
levels, that has taken centuries to realize and solidify.
It is a
psychological fact that our emotions are the strongest driving factor
for our actions. In other words: people behave the way they feel. When
people behave bad it is a sign of painful inner states or very wrong
ideas that will lead them into filling their own lives and mind with
suffering. This does not mean that we should take pity on misbehaved
Muslims and remain passive while they try to compensate for low self-esteem,
rid themselves of the pain of anger or sexual frustration, or strive
for divine reward, by harming others. One should stop their behaviour
and hopefully with the maximum amount of pedagogical effect. But always
with the minimum amount of damage, and with as little anger as
possible. We can do that by holding on to the wish that they will be
happy in the future – possibly far away – and thus one day find surplus
and an outlook that will be the basis for more positive actions, that
will fill their lives and surroundings others with more love and
happiness.
In
short: There is an omelet to be made, but it must be made with the
least amount of broken eggs and with the continuous wish for long term
win-win situations. This leaves no space for unnecessary
brutality or feelings of revenge or hate.
Keeping
the style in difficult times takes a calm mind, mature and wise
compassion, and a very broad view, but while doing what is necessary on
the outside, we must never forget to protect our own human development
and our ultimate wish for the happiness of all beings. If one should
find oneself in a situation where aggression is needed, the best inner
support is probably to think that one does it for the benefit of others
and to stop one’s opponent from inflicting further harm on others and
himself.
There
is no other way of protecting our inner, cultural transmission than by
cultivating it, being it and showing others by example that it is
really possible to remain so, even in troubled times.
So
claim and live up to you and your generation’s responsibility. And be
that courage, joy and love that you wish future generations to
experience and build their life and societies on.
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