Friday, March 3, 2017
KATIE HOPKINS: The Swedish town where migrant gangs have killed multiculturalism stone dead and laugh at laws they despise and defy
There's been a complaint about my first report from Sweden.
A reader is very angry because I suggested the child raped by a 45-year-old migrant (posing as an unaccompanied minor) was 14.
In fact, he was 12.
This
is the state of liberalism today. So determined to prove I am wrong, my
observations erroneous, the stories I have on tape inaccurate, that it
has lost all sight of the raped migrant child crumpled in the corner.
Similarly,
the 'we know better brigade' are so puffed up with smug self-importance
as they point out Trump got his dates confused over the troubles in
Sweden, they can’t see past their own chest to the riots in Rinkeby.
Katie Hopkins meets with Mattias Karlsson, the group leader in parliament for the Swedish Democrats
Where cars were set alight, shops looted and shopkeepers beaten while youths went on the rampage.
I
asked Mattias Karlsson, leader of the Swedish Democrats - currently
leading in the polls - why other politicians refuse to acknowledge the
problems right in front of their eyes.
He
explained that to accept there is a problem would mean accepting nearly
80 years of liberal thinking was wrong. That multiculturalism doesn't
work, that mass immigration does not lead to integration, that Sweden
has made a big mistake.
A stranger came
up to me in a coffee shop to say much the same thing. She had read my
first report. She implored me to shout louder.
She
said Sweden cannot go on pretending it is some kind of utopia. That it
is on a path to fail, that her friends fear Sweden is being overwhelmed.
The
fears are real. The areas migrants inhabit have become sink suburbs,
riddled with no-go zones, even for the police, where hand-grenade
attacks are the accepted norm, women stay indoors, and the ambulances
and fire engines need police escorts. God help any good people forced to
live here.
Katie meets with Group Commander
Fredrik Liljegren, who heads up Kista Fire Station. His is the toughest
fire station in Sweden, dealing with the highest incident rate in the
country
I met with Group
Commander Fredrik Liljegren who heads up Kista Fire Station. His is the
toughest fire station in Sweden, dealing with the highest incident rate
in the country.
Four members of his
team work full time to help migrant children understand why it is
important to let these crews do their work. Not to throw rocks at the
vehicles. Or slash their tyres. Or cut the hoses.
These feel like lessons in humanity, sadly lacking in this place.
I
asked Mattias whether he thought these suburbs would end up being
walled off, like mini-Mexicos, in an effort to contain the problem.
He
told me it was more likely that gated communities would spring up —
walls of another sort, to keep the bad out and protect those within, but
no less depressing and divisive.
Here
at the fire station he is not wrong. A reinforced fence is being built
all the way around the premises to try to prevent break-ins. Five
cutting tools have been stolen from this station alone — whilst the
vehicles were in the station.
This is what multiculturalism looks like in 21st-century Sweden. I am stunned the moral bar has never fallen so low.
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