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Breeding Ground For Terror...
Mar 23, 2016 13:55:41   #
Don G. Dinsdale Loc: El Cajon, CA (San Diego County)
 
Already In America, Just Waiting For The Signal To Explode...


Europe's Breeding Ground for Terror

Europeans are looking around with renewed apprehension, having been reminded once more by the Brussels attacks of their vulnerability to terrorism that arises from within their midst.

By Mike Gonzalez - Mar 22, 2016 - The Daily Signal


Belgians and all Europeans are looking around themselves today with renewed apprehension, having been reminded once more by the attacks in Brussels about their vulnerability to terrorism that arises from within their midst. They’ve allowed parallel societies to emerge, and now they fear that the problem can only grow.

It was only fitting, for example, that when police arrested the suspected terrorist Salah Abdeslam in the gritty Molenbeek neighborhood of Brussels late last week, across town, European Union leaders were meeting at the plush EU Commission headquarters to discuss the immigration crisis that bedevils Europe.

Fitting because the Molenbeek neighborhood represents the division and separation that exist in European society, and why there is a fear that migrants arriving in Europe in their hundreds of thousands could find in such places networks ready to radicalize those migrants.

The police who finally arrested Abdeslam—wanted for his alleged participation in the Nov. 13, 2015, terrorist attack that left 130 dead in Paris, after a four-month manhunt and gunfight that left him wounded—seemed at times to be fighting Molenbeek, some of whose residents threw missiles at them. After the arrest, Belgium’s interior minister remarked that he was surprised by how much help Abdeslam had received.

Though it’s too early to tell about the attack at Brussels on Tuesday, March 22, the Molenbeek neighborhood incubated the Paris attack. Ringleader Abdelhamid Abaaoud came from there. Several of the other terrorists, including Salah Abdeslam, had ties to the neighborhood, where Muslims make up more than half of the population and youth unemployment is high.

Molenbeek is hardly alone. Ca’n Anglada in Barcelona has also been identified as the origin of several ISIS fighters. Amin Iharchain, a 31-year-old Moroccan resident, told the newspaper El País:

[R]adicalism has overwhelmed this quarter; neither the local Iman nor any of the 29 Muslim associations that registered will say anything. It’s not just here in Ca’n Anglada, but also in L’Hospitalet de Llobregat, Badalona[.] … It is unemployment, poverty, the feeling of inferiority, all tied to a radical message.”

In Germany there is Marxloh and Neukölln; in France, Seine-Saint-Denis and Clichy-sous-Bois. In Britain, the Islamic population is also clustered in some cities.

Many of the refugees now coming into Europe as a result of the chaos in Mesopotamia will settle in neighborhoods such as these, where they can be radicalized. Already they contain radical networks that can be used by ISIS or other sponsors of terrorism.

Earlier last week, before the arrest, Heritage Foundation Vice President James Jay Carafano wrote presciently, “ISIS organizers are simply plugging into standing extremist communities. These networks are popping up all over the world … by far the most concerning networks right now are in Western Europe.”

European politicians cannot escape blame for allowing divisions to fester, which found physical manifestations in these urban quarters and the networks that ensued.

Germany’s handling of Turkish “guest workers” is instructive.

As the German magazine Der Spiegel put it in 2010 about the effort to bring in workers in the 1960s:

At the time, no one in Germany cared much about the fact that many of the new arrivals could hardly read or write, making it difficult for them to participate in German society.

The guest workers were expected to live together in newly built dormitories near the factories where they worked, and return to their native countries after working for a few years.

Except that few of the gastarbeiters ever went back to Anatolia—nor did they stay in the dormitories. Eventually, these men began to bring in their wives and have families, and a subtle t***sition began between being a guest worker and being an immigrant.

Explained Der Spiegel:

Because they needed more space, the Turks began moving out of the dormitories and into cheap apartments in neighborhoods near the factories, which the Germans gradually vacated. This led to the rise of immigrant neighborhoods like Marxloh in the western city of Duisburg and Neukölln in Berlin, which are now seen as the strongholds of so-called parallel societies.

Basically, German politicians didn’t realize that the Turkish immigrants should be assimilated into German culture. In so doing, they contributed to the creation of these parallel societies in their midst.

Just as in America, some European thinkers and opinion makers are beginning to raise their voices about the connection between the lack of assimilation and radicalization. One particularly brave politician has been Prime Minister David Cameron.

A year after becoming prime minister, he went to the Munich Security Conference and said terrorism was not really caused by Western foreign policy, poverty in the Middle East, or the Palestinian-Israeli conflict. “Even if we sorted out all these problems,” he said, “there would still be terrorism.”

The reason many young Muslims in the West are drawn to Islamist extremism, he said, “comes down to a question of identity. These young men find it hard to identify with Britain because we have allowed the weakening of our collective identity.”

Writing in the Times of London earlier this year, Cameron added this:

All too often, because of what I would call “passive tolerance”, people subscribe to the flawed idea of separate development[.] … It is time to change our approach. We will never truly build one nation unless we are more assertive about our liberal values, more clear about the expectations we place on those who come to live here and build our country together, and more creative and generous in the work we do to break down barriers.

It is too late for men like Abdeslam. But for millions of immigrants and their children in Europe now, it isn’t too late—if only the folks meeting at the EU Commission headquarters wake up to the need for assimilation.

~~~

In Aftermath of Brussels Attacks, Conservatives Call for Border Security

~~~

Real American Leadership Is Needed in Aftermath of Brussels Terror Attacks

Reply
Mar 23, 2016 14:30:48   #
robmull Loc: florida
 
Don G. Dinsdale wrote:
Already In America, Just Waiting For The Signal To Explode...


Europe's Breeding Ground for Terror

Europeans are looking around with renewed apprehension, having been reminded once more by the Brussels attacks of their vulnerability to terrorism that arises from within their midst.

By Mike Gonzalez - Mar 22, 2016 - The Daily Signal


Belgians and all Europeans are looking around themselves today with renewed apprehension, having been reminded once more by the attacks in Brussels about their vulnerability to terrorism that arises from within their midst. They’ve allowed parallel societies to emerge, and now they fear that the problem can only grow.

It was only fitting, for example, that when police arrested the suspected terrorist Salah Abdeslam in the gritty Molenbeek neighborhood of Brussels late last week, across town, European Union leaders were meeting at the plush EU Commission headquarters to discuss the immigration crisis that bedevils Europe.

Fitting because the Molenbeek neighborhood represents the division and separation that exist in European society, and why there is a fear that migrants arriving in Europe in their hundreds of thousands could find in such places networks ready to radicalize those migrants.

The police who finally arrested Abdeslam—wanted for his alleged participation in the Nov. 13, 2015, terrorist attack that left 130 dead in Paris, after a four-month manhunt and gunfight that left him wounded—seemed at times to be fighting Molenbeek, some of whose residents threw missiles at them. After the arrest, Belgium’s interior minister remarked that he was surprised by how much help Abdeslam had received.

Though it’s too early to tell about the attack at Brussels on Tuesday, March 22, the Molenbeek neighborhood incubated the Paris attack. Ringleader Abdelhamid Abaaoud came from there. Several of the other terrorists, including Salah Abdeslam, had ties to the neighborhood, where Muslims make up more than half of the population and youth unemployment is high.

Molenbeek is hardly alone. Ca’n Anglada in Barcelona has also been identified as the origin of several ISIS fighters. Amin Iharchain, a 31-year-old Moroccan resident, told the newspaper El País:

[R]adicalism has overwhelmed this quarter; neither the local Iman nor any of the 29 Muslim associations that registered will say anything. It’s not just here in Ca’n Anglada, but also in L’Hospitalet de Llobregat, Badalona[.] … It is unemployment, poverty, the feeling of inferiority, all tied to a radical message.”

In Germany there is Marxloh and Neukölln; in France, Seine-Saint-Denis and Clichy-sous-Bois. In Britain, the Islamic population is also clustered in some cities.

Many of the refugees now coming into Europe as a result of the chaos in Mesopotamia will settle in neighborhoods such as these, where they can be radicalized. Already they contain radical networks that can be used by ISIS or other sponsors of terrorism.

Earlier last week, before the arrest, Heritage Foundation Vice President James Jay Carafano wrote presciently, “ISIS organizers are simply plugging into standing extremist communities. These networks are popping up all over the world … by far the most concerning networks right now are in Western Europe.”

European politicians cannot escape blame for allowing divisions to fester, which found physical manifestations in these urban quarters and the networks that ensued.

Germany’s handling of Turkish “guest workers” is instructive.

As the German magazine Der Spiegel put it in 2010 about the effort to bring in workers in the 1960s:

At the time, no one in Germany cared much about the fact that many of the new arrivals could hardly read or write, making it difficult for them to participate in German society.

The guest workers were expected to live together in newly built dormitories near the factories where they worked, and return to their native countries after working for a few years.

Except that few of the gastarbeiters ever went back to Anatolia—nor did they stay in the dormitories. Eventually, these men began to bring in their wives and have families, and a subtle t***sition began between being a guest worker and being an immigrant.

Explained Der Spiegel:

Because they needed more space, the Turks began moving out of the dormitories and into cheap apartments in neighborhoods near the factories, which the Germans gradually vacated. This led to the rise of immigrant neighborhoods like Marxloh in the western city of Duisburg and Neukölln in Berlin, which are now seen as the strongholds of so-called parallel societies.

Basically, German politicians didn’t realize that the Turkish immigrants should be assimilated into German culture. In so doing, they contributed to the creation of these parallel societies in their midst.

Just as in America, some European thinkers and opinion makers are beginning to raise their voices about the connection between the lack of assimilation and radicalization. One particularly brave politician has been Prime Minister David Cameron.

A year after becoming prime minister, he went to the Munich Security Conference and said terrorism was not really caused by Western foreign policy, poverty in the Middle East, or the Palestinian-Israeli conflict. “Even if we sorted out all these problems,” he said, “there would still be terrorism.”

The reason many young Muslims in the West are drawn to Islamist extremism, he said, “comes down to a question of identity. These young men find it hard to identify with Britain because we have allowed the weakening of our collective identity.”

Writing in the Times of London earlier this year, Cameron added this:

All too often, because of what I would call “passive tolerance”, people subscribe to the flawed idea of separate development[.] … It is time to change our approach. We will never truly build one nation unless we are more assertive about our liberal values, more clear about the expectations we place on those who come to live here and build our country together, and more creative and generous in the work we do to break down barriers.

It is too late for men like Abdeslam. But for millions of immigrants and their children in Europe now, it isn’t too late—if only the folks meeting at the EU Commission headquarters wake up to the need for assimilation.

~~~

In Aftermath of Brussels Attacks, Conservatives Call for Border Security

~~~

Real American Leadership Is Needed in Aftermath of Brussels Terror Attacks
Already In America, Just Waiting For The Signal To... (show quote)









Assimilating to a home culture for radical Islam has NEVER been the 5th century "jihad" formula for "world domination," Don, and NEVER will be. What's the point in learning a different "infidel" language when non-Muslims are just rotten pigs anyway, that MUST be either raped, captured, ens***ed, converted, taxed, tortured or k**led. I mean, be serious. Learn a "dead" language??? Not on your life!!!

Reply
Mar 23, 2016 17:14:52   #
lpnmajor Loc: Arkansas
 
Don G. Dinsdale wrote:
Already In America, Just Waiting For The Signal To Explode...


Europe's Breeding Ground for Terror

Europeans are looking around with renewed apprehension, having been reminded once more by the Brussels attacks of their vulnerability to terrorism that arises from within their midst.

By Mike Gonzalez - Mar 22, 2016 - The Daily Signal


Belgians and all Europeans are looking around themselves today with renewed apprehension, having been reminded once more by the attacks in Brussels about their vulnerability to terrorism that arises from within their midst. They’ve allowed parallel societies to emerge, and now they fear that the problem can only grow.

It was only fitting, for example, that when police arrested the suspected terrorist Salah Abdeslam in the gritty Molenbeek neighborhood of Brussels late last week, across town, European Union leaders were meeting at the plush EU Commission headquarters to discuss the immigration crisis that bedevils Europe.

Fitting because the Molenbeek neighborhood represents the division and separation that exist in European society, and why there is a fear that migrants arriving in Europe in their hundreds of thousands could find in such places networks ready to radicalize those migrants.

The police who finally arrested Abdeslam—wanted for his alleged participation in the Nov. 13, 2015, terrorist attack that left 130 dead in Paris, after a four-month manhunt and gunfight that left him wounded—seemed at times to be fighting Molenbeek, some of whose residents threw missiles at them. After the arrest, Belgium’s interior minister remarked that he was surprised by how much help Abdeslam had received.

Though it’s too early to tell about the attack at Brussels on Tuesday, March 22, the Molenbeek neighborhood incubated the Paris attack. Ringleader Abdelhamid Abaaoud came from there. Several of the other terrorists, including Salah Abdeslam, had ties to the neighborhood, where Muslims make up more than half of the population and youth unemployment is high.

Molenbeek is hardly alone. Ca’n Anglada in Barcelona has also been identified as the origin of several ISIS fighters. Amin Iharchain, a 31-year-old Moroccan resident, told the newspaper El País:

[R]adicalism has overwhelmed this quarter; neither the local Iman nor any of the 29 Muslim associations that registered will say anything. It’s not just here in Ca’n Anglada, but also in L’Hospitalet de Llobregat, Badalona[.] … It is unemployment, poverty, the feeling of inferiority, all tied to a radical message.”

In Germany there is Marxloh and Neukölln; in France, Seine-Saint-Denis and Clichy-sous-Bois. In Britain, the Islamic population is also clustered in some cities.

Many of the refugees now coming into Europe as a result of the chaos in Mesopotamia will settle in neighborhoods such as these, where they can be radicalized. Already they contain radical networks that can be used by ISIS or other sponsors of terrorism.

Earlier last week, before the arrest, Heritage Foundation Vice President James Jay Carafano wrote presciently, “ISIS organizers are simply plugging into standing extremist communities. These networks are popping up all over the world … by far the most concerning networks right now are in Western Europe.”

European politicians cannot escape blame for allowing divisions to fester, which found physical manifestations in these urban quarters and the networks that ensued.

Germany’s handling of Turkish “guest workers” is instructive.

As the German magazine Der Spiegel put it in 2010 about the effort to bring in workers in the 1960s:

At the time, no one in Germany cared much about the fact that many of the new arrivals could hardly read or write, making it difficult for them to participate in German society.

The guest workers were expected to live together in newly built dormitories near the factories where they worked, and return to their native countries after working for a few years.

Except that few of the gastarbeiters ever went back to Anatolia—nor did they stay in the dormitories. Eventually, these men began to bring in their wives and have families, and a subtle t***sition began between being a guest worker and being an immigrant.

Explained Der Spiegel:

Because they needed more space, the Turks began moving out of the dormitories and into cheap apartments in neighborhoods near the factories, which the Germans gradually vacated. This led to the rise of immigrant neighborhoods like Marxloh in the western city of Duisburg and Neukölln in Berlin, which are now seen as the strongholds of so-called parallel societies.

Basically, German politicians didn’t realize that the Turkish immigrants should be assimilated into German culture. In so doing, they contributed to the creation of these parallel societies in their midst.

Just as in America, some European thinkers and opinion makers are beginning to raise their voices about the connection between the lack of assimilation and radicalization. One particularly brave politician has been Prime Minister David Cameron.

A year after becoming prime minister, he went to the Munich Security Conference and said terrorism was not really caused by Western foreign policy, poverty in the Middle East, or the Palestinian-Israeli conflict. “Even if we sorted out all these problems,” he said, “there would still be terrorism.”

The reason many young Muslims in the West are drawn to Islamist extremism, he said, “comes down to a question of identity. These young men find it hard to identify with Britain because we have allowed the weakening of our collective identity.”

Writing in the Times of London earlier this year, Cameron added this:

All too often, because of what I would call “passive tolerance”, people subscribe to the flawed idea of separate development[.] … It is time to change our approach. We will never truly build one nation unless we are more assertive about our liberal values, more clear about the expectations we place on those who come to live here and build our country together, and more creative and generous in the work we do to break down barriers.

It is too late for men like Abdeslam. But for millions of immigrants and their children in Europe now, it isn’t too late—if only the folks meeting at the EU Commission headquarters wake up to the need for assimilation.

~~~

In Aftermath of Brussels Attacks, Conservatives Call for Border Security

~~~

Real American Leadership Is Needed in Aftermath of Brussels Terror Attacks
Already In America, Just Waiting For The Signal To... (show quote)




Whenever you force or allow migrants to take over neighborhoods, making them into "little, wherever they came from's", you can expect them to sit around and whine about how mistreated they are, etc. Nothing good will ever come of that.

We Americans have given the EU plenty of examples of what NOT to do and they ignored them all. Harlem, all the China towns, little Korea, little Havana, LA streets segregated by South American origins, and so on. Some were segregated by us, some allowed to segregate themselves, but the result is the same.

A Nation has a right to pick and choose it's immigrants, if it choses to apply that right - it also has a right to demand and expect it's "new" citizens to assimilate into their new homes. Assimilation does not occur when you allow new immigrants to recreate their old homelands on your turf.

As I said, the US is an example of what not to do, but as usual - the rest of the world has gotten used to ignoring what we say, just as we've taught them. I suppose this makes some feel better, seeing the EU make the same mistakes we do, since we can't seem to overcome our own stupidity.

Reply
 
 
Mar 23, 2016 17:27:41   #
JW
 
Gosh, you mean m**************m doesn't work... who'd'a guessed.

Reply
Mar 23, 2016 17:31:38   #
lpnmajor Loc: Arkansas
 
JW wrote:
Gosh, you mean m**************m doesn't work... who'd'a guessed.


It DOES work, but only if those of other cultures are forced to assimilate with those already here. If we were to go back 5 generations, most of the current US population would be immigrants.

Reply
Mar 23, 2016 17:51:09   #
JW
 
No, it doesn't work. It never has and never will and assimilation is the exact opposite of m**************m. I cannot contain my contempt for the intellectual r****ds who promote the lunacy of ghetto-izing society in the name of political correctness.

Reply
Mar 23, 2016 19:54:43   #
lpnmajor Loc: Arkansas
 
JW wrote:
No, it doesn't work. It never has and never will and assimilation is the exact opposite of m**************m. I cannot contain my contempt for the intellectual r****ds who promote the lunacy of ghetto-izing society in the name of political correctness.


You just made MY argument. Playing semantics doesn't help anything. One may assimilate and keep one's cultural heritage at the same time. The former is public behavior, the latter is kept in the home.

Allowing or forcing ethnic or cultural groups together in one neighborhood, promotes non assimilation. THAT is where we err and where the EU has erred.

Reply
 
 
Mar 23, 2016 22:16:49   #
missinglink Loc: Tralfamadore
 
JW wrote:
Gosh, you mean m**************m doesn't work... who'd'a guessed.

I like it.
I like it....

Reply
Mar 23, 2016 22:35:13   #
missinglink Loc: Tralfamadore
 
God Lp, are you saying that Government should separate people who flock together for the comfort of familiarity. That's human nature . Most of these people would cram themselves into small districts without government just for that and what it brings. Our ancestors did exactly the same thing . Nesting in burrows and eventually spreading out.
You want governments forcing them out of their comfort zones ? Come on man. :shock:





lpnmajor wrote:
You just made MY argument. Playing semantics doesn't help anything. One may assimilate and keep one's cultural heritage at the same time. The former is public behavior, the latter is kept in the home.

Allowing or forcing ethnic or cultural groups together in one neighborhood, promotes non assimilation. THAT is where we err and where the EU has erred.

Reply
Mar 24, 2016 00:40:43   #
JW
 
lpnmajor wrote:
You just made MY argument. Playing semantics doesn't help anything. One may assimilate and keep one's cultural heritage at the same time. The former is public behavior, the latter is kept in the home.

Allowing or forcing ethnic or cultural groups together in one neighborhood, promotes non assimilation. THAT is where we err and where the EU has erred.


That is not m**************m, Sweet Pea. That is assimilation. M**************m is wearing burkas in public, speaking any language you choose and expecting to be accommodated, etc. The melting pot is assimilation.

No one need force ghettos to form, they are the natural result of strangers finding comfort in the familiar.

Reply
Mar 24, 2016 06:05:54   #
Radiance3
 
Don G. Dinsdale wrote:
Already In America, Just Waiting For The Signal To Explode...


Europe's Breeding Ground for Terror

Europeans are looking around with renewed apprehension, having been reminded once more by the Brussels attacks of their vulnerability to terrorism that arises from within their midst.

By Mike Gonzalez - Mar 22, 2016 - The Daily Signal


Belgians and all Europeans are looking around themselves today with renewed apprehension, having been reminded once more by the attacks in Brussels about their vulnerability to terrorism that arises from within their midst. They’ve allowed parallel societies to emerge, and now they fear that the problem can only grow.

It was only fitting, for example, that when police arrested the suspected terrorist Salah Abdeslam in the gritty Molenbeek neighborhood of Brussels late last week, across town, European Union leaders were meeting at the plush EU Commission headquarters to discuss the immigration crisis that bedevils Europe.

Fitting because the Molenbeek neighborhood represents the division and separation that exist in European society, and why there is a fear that migrants arriving in Europe in their hundreds of thousands could find in such places networks ready to radicalize those migrants.

The police who finally arrested Abdeslam—wanted for his alleged participation in the Nov. 13, 2015, terrorist attack that left 130 dead in Paris, after a four-month manhunt and gunfight that left him wounded—seemed at times to be fighting Molenbeek, some of whose residents threw missiles at them. After the arrest, Belgium’s interior minister remarked that he was surprised by how much help Abdeslam had received.

Though it’s too early to tell about the attack at Brussels on Tuesday, March 22, the Molenbeek neighborhood incubated the Paris attack. Ringleader Abdelhamid Abaaoud came from there. Several of the other terrorists, including Salah Abdeslam, had ties to the neighborhood, where Muslims make up more than half of the population and youth unemployment is high.

Molenbeek is hardly alone. Ca’n Anglada in Barcelona has also been identified as the origin of several ISIS fighters. Amin Iharchain, a 31-year-old Moroccan resident, told the newspaper El País:

[R]adicalism has overwhelmed this quarter; neither the local Iman nor any of the 29 Muslim associations that registered will say anything. It’s not just here in Ca’n Anglada, but also in L’Hospitalet de Llobregat, Badalona[.] … It is unemployment, poverty, the feeling of inferiority, all tied to a radical message.”

In Germany there is Marxloh and Neukölln; in France, Seine-Saint-Denis and Clichy-sous-Bois. In Britain, the Islamic population is also clustered in some cities.

Many of the refugees now coming into Europe as a result of the chaos in Mesopotamia will settle in neighborhoods such as these, where they can be radicalized. Already they contain radical networks that can be used by ISIS or other sponsors of terrorism.

Earlier last week, before the arrest, Heritage Foundation Vice President James Jay Carafano wrote presciently, “ISIS organizers are simply plugging into standing extremist communities. These networks are popping up all over the world … by far the most concerning networks right now are in Western Europe.”

European politicians cannot escape blame for allowing divisions to fester, which found physical manifestations in these urban quarters and the networks that ensued.

Germany’s handling of Turkish “guest workers” is instructive.

As the German magazine Der Spiegel put it in 2010 about the effort to bring in workers in the 1960s:

At the time, no one in Germany cared much about the fact that many of the new arrivals could hardly read or write, making it difficult for them to participate in German society.

The guest workers were expected to live together in newly built dormitories near the factories where they worked, and return to their native countries after working for a few years.

Except that few of the gastarbeiters ever went back to Anatolia—nor did they stay in the dormitories. Eventually, these men began to bring in their wives and have families, and a subtle t***sition began between being a guest worker and being an immigrant.

Explained Der Spiegel:

Because they needed more space, the Turks began moving out of the dormitories and into cheap apartments in neighborhoods near the factories, which the Germans gradually vacated. This led to the rise of immigrant neighborhoods like Marxloh in the western city of Duisburg and Neukölln in Berlin, which are now seen as the strongholds of so-called parallel societies.

Basically, German politicians didn’t realize that the Turkish immigrants should be assimilated into German culture. In so doing, they contributed to the creation of these parallel societies in their midst.

Just as in America, some European thinkers and opinion makers are beginning to raise their voices about the connection between the lack of assimilation and radicalization. One particularly brave politician has been Prime Minister David Cameron.

A year after becoming prime minister, he went to the Munich Security Conference and said terrorism was not really caused by Western foreign policy, poverty in the Middle East, or the Palestinian-Israeli conflict. “Even if we sorted out all these problems,” he said, “there would still be terrorism.”

The reason many young Muslims in the West are drawn to Islamist extremism, he said, “comes down to a question of identity. These young men find it hard to identify with Britain because we have allowed the weakening of our collective identity.”

Writing in the Times of London earlier this year, Cameron added this:

All too often, because of what I would call “passive tolerance”, people subscribe to the flawed idea of separate development[.] … It is time to change our approach. We will never truly build one nation unless we are more assertive about our liberal values, more clear about the expectations we place on those who come to live here and build our country together, and more creative and generous in the work we do to break down barriers.

It is too late for men like Abdeslam. But for millions of immigrants and their children in Europe now, it isn’t too late—if only the folks meeting at the EU Commission headquarters wake up to the need for assimilation.

~~~

In Aftermath of Brussels Attacks, Conservatives Call for Border Security

~~~

Real American Leadership Is Needed in Aftermath of Brussels Terror Attacks
Already In America, Just Waiting For The Signal To... (show quote)

================
In the guise of refugees, president Obama along with the HSD, and the Muslim UN, t***sported hundreds of thousands Syrians, Middle Eastern, and African Muslims to the US in the guise of refugees. Embedded among them are thousands of ISIS terrorists. Now they are here freely feed, with medical care, and taken cared of better than our veterans.

I saw in many States around the country, these Syrian Muslims are distributed to several US States, without the knowledge of the residents or the citizens of those states. You can Google what States these Muslims were spread around your backyards, and communities.

Public schools have been asking additional funding to accommodate all kids of refugees and i*****l a***ns. US public schools are now overly populated by Mexican and Latino kids, more than the population of white and black kids combined. Every kid in school spends tax money average about $14,000 annually. NYC, and other cities like Baltimore, budgeted about $16,500 to $17,000 per year for each child.

Property taxes of 65% goes to fund schools, in addition to Federal money provided.

My property tax went up 30% in 2016. Again the city is planning to issue bonds for additional building to accommodate refugees and i*****l a***ns. Bond to be paid by taxpayers.

Reply
 
 
Mar 24, 2016 10:52:02   #
snowbear37 Loc: MA.
 
lpnmajor wrote:
Whenever you force or allow migrants to take over neighborhoods, making them into "little, wherever they came from's", you can expect them to sit around and whine about how mistreated they are, etc. Nothing good will ever come of that.

We Americans have given the EU plenty of examples of what NOT to do and they ignored them all. Harlem, all the China towns, little Korea, little Havana, LA streets segregated by South American origins, and so on. Some were segregated by us, some allowed to segregate themselves, but the result is the same.

A Nation has a right to pick and choose it's immigrants, if it choses to apply that right - it also has a right to demand and expect it's "new" citizens to assimilate into their new homes. Assimilation does not occur when you allow new immigrants to recreate their old homelands on your turf.

As I said, the US is an example of what not to do, but as usual - the rest of the world has gotten used to ignoring what we say, just as we've taught them. I suppose this makes some feel better, seeing the EU make the same mistakes we do, since we can't seem to overcome our own stupidity.
Whenever you force or allow migrants to take over ... (show quote)


Immigrants come to this country and NEVER even intended to "assimilate". If they want to keep their own mores and cultures, they should just stay the fu*k in the country they came from. They come into this country with the idea that they will "re-make" our culture into the one they fled. It's all bullsh*t to even let them in.

Reply
Mar 24, 2016 11:43:48   #
Radiance3
 
snowbear37 wrote:
Immigrants come to this country and NEVER even intended to "assimilate". If they want to keep their own mores and cultures, they should just stay the fu*k in the country they came from. They come into this country with the idea that they will "re-make" our culture into the one they fled. It's all bullsh*t to even let them in.


=============
They march down the streets and demand what they want. Calling Americans r****ts, bigots, and all kinds of dirty language. While we feed them, educate them, provide medical care, and all kinds of goodies.
Muslims demand we remove all Christian symbols because they are offended. Muslims demand that the free food feed to them must have no pork meat. They demand that they be allowed to wear burka to cover their entire body including their faces, and only their eyes come out to see. They demand free time to pray every few hours while working in either government offices of private companies. They demand that they be allowed to raise up their butts to pray at the middle of the streets during 6:PM every day; they demand that they can spread their matts, moan and shout praying at 6:PM daily, anywhere. If they are NOT provided on these demands, they call Americans Islamophobic, and r****ts. Then they strike to k**l all infidels for the glory of their god.

Reply
Mar 24, 2016 17:50:15   #
Ricktloml
 
Radiance3 wrote:
=============
They march down the streets and demand what they want. Calling Americans r****ts, bigots, and all kinds of dirty language. While we feed them, educate them, provide medical care, and all kinds of goodies.
Muslims demand we remove all Christian symbols because they are offended. Muslims demand that the free food feed to them must have no pork meat. They demand that they be allowed to wear burka to cover their entire body including their faces, and only their eyes come out to see. They demand free time to pray every few hours while working in either government offices of private companies. They demand that they be allowed to raise up their butts to pray at the middle of the streets during 6:PM every day; they demand that they can spread their matts, moan and shout praying at 6:PM daily, anywhere. If they are NOT provided on these demands, they call Americans Islamophobic, and r****ts. Then they strike to k**l all infidels for the glory of their god.
============= br They march down the streets and d... (show quote)


It is not immigration, it's an invasion. It is all part of Islamic jihad. Everyone can recognize violent jihad, (well most everyone, l*****ts seem willfully blind even to this), but the stealth, civilization jihad is just as dangerous.

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Mar 24, 2016 18:44:23   #
Radiance3
 
Ricktloml wrote:
It is not immigration, it's an invasion. It is all part of Islamic jihad. Everyone can recognize violent jihad, (well most everyone, l*****ts seem willfully blind even to this), but the stealth, civilization jihad is just as dangerous.

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Indeed Islamic invasion has been going on since Islam was created during the 7th century. Invasion in all kinds of brutalities just to achieve their goal. it's ordered in the Quran. To take over the whole world for their god.

The Middle East used to belong to Jews, Christians and Pagans. Islam took over the Middle East, leaving very little space for the Jews, as a result of the wars in 1948, and 1967 when the Jews won against the Muslims. Fact is in the Middle East Muslims have erased Israel from their map. The Muslims kids believe that all the lands belong to Muslims and therefore Israel must be removed from the face of the earth.

Africa used to be populated by Christians. Islam took it over. Europe was almost taken by Muslims since the 7th century but the Crusades fought very hard to remove them our from Europe. It was very brutal fight they had engaged in. Series of wars and defeats were encountered by the Crusades for hundreds of years.

Beheadings, raping and enslaving of Christians were the most common means of Muslim atrocities towards Christians. Until now Muslims are carrying these savage attacks in America, in Europe, and Africa.

So, these millions of so called Muslim refugees are not really refugees at all. Most of them are terrorists. See what has been happening now in Europe after they were so generous allowing Muslim to stay.

The ultimate goal of Muslims is to k**l and erase all the Christians, Jews, and unbelievers from the earth. Their god as written in their Quran orders it.

Whereas Jesus is love, compassion, forgiveness, and healing. Praise God and thank Him today!

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