In this mailing:
- Douglas Murray: Mass-Migration: The
Tiniest Dose of Reality Hits
- Bruce Bawer: Scandinavia: Shift
in Immigration Debate
by Douglas Murray • September 19,
2017 at 5:00 am
- If
you do not have control of your borders, with a meaningful set
of immigration laws and the right to keep people out of your
country, then you do not really have a country.
- While
the public wants their representatives to control their borders,
politicians seem to see only political capital in running the
other way. In part this is because there appears to be some kind
of "bonus" to be achieved by looking welcoming and
kindly, in contrast to the unwelcoming and mean things that
borders now appear to represent.
- By
the end of August, it was estimated that almost 12,000 people
had arrived in Canada through this route so far this year. It is
a number that constitutes little more than an averagely busy
week in Italy at any time over recent years. But even this
comparatively tiny movement across an entire year has proven too
much for Canada. At the end of last month, Prime Minister
Trudeau told reporters: "For someone to successfully seek
asylum it's not about economic migration. It's about
vulnerability, exposure to torture or death, or being stateless
people. If they are seeking asylum we'll evaluate them on the
basis of what it is to be a refugee or asylum seeker."
Pictured:
Two people, who claimed to be from Turkey, illegally cross the
U.S.-Canada border into Canada, on February 23, 2017, near
Hemmingford, Quebec. (Photo by Drew Angerer/Getty Images)
Bombings and other terrorist attacks are now a common
feature of life in modern Europe. On just one day (September 15,
2017), an improvised explosive device was placed on a London
Underground train, a man wielding a knife and shouting
"Allah" attacked a soldier in Paris, and a man with a
hammer shouting "Allahu Akbar" badly wounded two women in
Lyon. As the former Prime Minister of France and the present Mayor of
London have put it, perhaps this is all just a price we have to pay
for living in big cities in Europe in the 21st century: we have
traffic congestion, great restaurants and terrorist attacks.
by Bruce Bawer • September 19, 2017
at 4:00 am
- Until
recently, the very notion that some European neighborhoods were
"no-go" zones was vehemently dismissed by politicians
and commentators on both sides of the Atlantic as a myth, a lie,
a vicious right-wing calumny. But even as Swedish officials were
denying the existence of such zones in their own country, they
were secretly mapping them out and overseeing a police effort to
liberate them.
- The
Sweden Democrats are on the rise because voters finally grasp
the extent and significance of the damage their elites have been
doing to their country -- and the elites, both in the media and
in government, are scrambling to snap into line in order to keep
hold on power.
- In
some ways, the winds in Scandinavia may be turning, but it does
not seem as if Stanghelle and his ilk are about to speak the
whole truth about Islam, or to apologize for their inexcusable
abuse of those who have.
Until
recently, Denmark, with its far freer atmosphere of debate and more sensible
border controls, was almost universally depicted in Norway as a
deplorable hotbed of Islamophobia. Pictured: A Danish checkpoint on
the border with Germany, near Padborg, on January 6, 2016. (Photo by
Sean Gallup/Getty Images)
Not long ago, Norwegian journalists were virtually
united in representing Sweden, with its exceedingly liberal
immigration policy and its strict limits on public discussion of the
subject, as a model of enlightened thinking that deserved to be
emulated. Meanwhile Denmark, with its far freer atmosphere of debate
(remember the Danish cartoons) and more sensible border controls, was
almost universally depicted in Norway as a deplorable hotbed of
Islamophobia. That appears to be changing. As Hans Rustad of the
alternative Norwegian news website Document.no noted recently,
the term "Swedish conditions," which some of us have been
using for years to refer to the colossal scale of Sweden's
Muslim-related problems, is actually turning up these days in the
mainstream Norwegian media -- although the relationship of those
conditions to Islam is still routinely underplayed, if not entirely
avoided.
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