In this mailing:
- Bruce Bawer: More UN Chicanery
- Judith Bergman: Democratic
Countries Should Back out of the UN Global Compact
by Bruce Bawer • December 9, 2018
at 5:00 am
- The Global Compact for
Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration -- which seeks to
criminalize criticism of migration -- is nothing more or less
than a dangerous effort to weaken national borders, to normalize
mass migration, to blur the line between legal and illegal
immigration, and to bolster the idea that people claiming to be
refugees enjoy a panoply of rights in countries where they have
never before set foot.
- One thing about the
agreement, in any event, is irrefutable: almost nobody in the
Western world has been clamoring for this. It is, quite simply,
a project of the globalist elites. It is a UN power-grab.
- It is something else,
too: it is an effort to enhance the clout of the UN's largest
and most influential power bloc -- namely, the Arab and Muslim
states. Briefly put, whatever this deal is or is not, it is
definitely not good news for the West, for freedom, or for
national identity and security.
The Global
Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration -- which seeks to
criminalize criticism of migration -- is nothing more or less than a
dangerous effort to weaken national borders, normalize mass
migration, blur the line between legal and illegal immigration, and
bolster the idea that people claiming to be refugees enjoy a panoply
of rights in countries where they have never before set foot.
Pictured: Migrants walk towards a holding camp in Dobova, Slovenia on
October 26, 2015. (Photo by Jeff J Mitchell/Getty Images)
In Britain, the rage over Muslim rape gangs and
Theresa May's Brexit foul-up is spreading. In Germany, anger about
Merkel's recklessly transformative refugee policies is mounting. In
France, the growing cost of immigrant freeloaders to taxpayers has
sparked the most sensational public demonstrations since 1968. In
Italy and Austria, opponents of the Islamization of Europe now hold
the reins of power. Elsewhere in Western Europe, more and more
citizens are standing up to their masters' open-borders dhimmitude.
by Judith Bergman • December 9,
2018 at 4:00 am
- The EU has been paying
particularly North African governments for years to keep
migrants away from the European continent. The effort seems to
have yielded few results in terms of stopping migration to
Europe.
- The UN Global Compact
stipulates that, "media outlets that systematically promote
intolerance, xenophobia, racism and other forms of
discrimination towards migrants" should not receive
"public funding or material support."
- Already, it is clear
what this stipulation means in practice. The UN recently banned
the Canadian outlet Rebel Media from attending the Conference
for the Adoption of the UN Global Migration Compact. When Rebel
Media asked for an explanation, they were told that the UN,
"reserves the right to deny or withdraw accreditation of
journalists from media organizations whose activities run
counter to the principles of the Charter of the United Nations, or
who abuse the privileges so extended or put the accreditation to
improper use or act in a way not consistent with the principles
of the Organization. The decisions are final".
- This form of
totalitarian behavior on the part of the UN should encourage more
states that still value democracy, immediately to back out of
the Compact.
Götz
Schmidt-Bremme, head of the UN's Global Forum on Migration and
Development, has admitted that the UN's Global Compact for Safe,
Orderly and Regular Migration is a "controversial text,"
adding: "Maybe the benefits of legal migration were
over-emphasised and we forgot about the challenges... we
underestimated the need of communities that above all want to see
migrants integrate." (Image source: United Nations)
The ongoing and bitter dispute between the EU and its
Eastern European member states -- countries such as Hungary, Poland
and the Czech Republic -- that have refused to take in migrants as
part of the EU's quota system, might be approaching some sort of
compromise. In an internal document circulated to EU interior
ministers in Brussels in early December, Reuters reported, EU member
states that refuse to host migrants in their countries could
be exempted from doing so, if instead they show "alternative
measures of solidarity." According to diplomats, these
"alternative measures" are apparently EU code for
"paying into the EU budget or paying toward development projects
in Africa".
"The document," Reuters noted, "said
the European Union would need a proper mechanism to avoid a situation
in which all EU governments opted to pay their way out of any hosting
responsibilities and would set an eight-year period for any
arrangements".
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