In this mailing:
- Giulio Meotti: The Thought Police
Strike Again
- Bruce Bawer: Norway's Bewildering
Election
by
Giulio Meotti • September 15, 2017 at 5:00 am
- This politically correct
nonsense highlights even further the infantilization of our
culture -- such as the demand for "safe spaces" and
"trigger warnings". It may look like a comedy, but its
effect is deadly serious.
- Groupthink is a
debilitating force. in any civilization It undermines one's
ability to resist the real enemies of democracy and freedom: it
makes us blind to radical Islam and jihadi terrorism, and it gives
the impression that our society is a joke.
- Instead of being
intellectually diverse, universities are trying their utmost to
impose homogeneity of thoughts and ideas. So-called "right
wing newspapers" are banned from certain universities.
Recently, at the City University of London, the student union,
devoid of irony, fascistically voted to ban some conservative
tabloids in order to "oppose fascism".
Headlines every day proclaim the new religion: political
correctness, cultural vandalism and censorship -- not from Islamic
emirates such as Saudi Arabia, but in Western cities right here.
The Writers Union of Canada, for instance, recently
apologized for a magazine editorial that defended the right of
novelists to create characters from a backgrounds other than their own.
Just think of that: a writer defending the right to use
one's imagination?! What an insult! At least, to "the new
Stalinists" it is.
"In my opinion anyone, anywhere, should be
encouraged to imagine other peoples, other cultures, other
identities," Hal Niedzviecki, who was the editor of the union's
magazine, Write, defended freedom in an editorial. The Union
then announced that Niedzviecki had resigned.
by
Bruce Bawer • September 15, 2017 at 4:00 am
- Norway is the happy
beneficiary of North Sea oil; yet for decades, oil profits have
piled up a government fund while Norwegians have paid the highest
gasoline prices in the world.
- For years, Statistics
Norway, the government agency charged with producing reliable data
on every imaginable social and economic metric, has refused to
make public certain "sensitive" information relating to
Norway's Muslim population, such as the actual numbers of
immigrants entering the country through "family
reunification."
- Is there any hope that a
second Solberg government including FrP will accomplish any more
in the way of curbing immigration than the first Solberg
government did? At the moment, there seems little reason for hope.
Norwegian Prime Minister Erna Solberg.
(Image source: European People's Party/Flickr)
Those of us who are concerned about Norway's rapid
Islamization took great hope from the 2013 parliamentary election. What
mattered was not that it resulted in the formation of a right-wing
coalition government. What mattered was that the coalition government,
for the first time ever, included the Progress Party (FrP).
From its founding in 1973, FrP was an outlier among
Norway's major parties, of which there many. A quick survey: The Labor
Party (Ap), the most powerful party during the postwar era, is the home
of the cultural establishment; LO, Norway's equivalent of America's
federation of trade unions, the AFL-CIO, is essentially a branch of Ap,
and NRK, the government-owned broadcast corporation, is often described
by critics as the voice of the Labor Party.
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