Posted on 01/13/2015 11:18:29 AM PST by Starman417
There has been much commentary about the events in France over the last week. One of the major causes for the motivation behind the home grown terrorists who struck the offices of Charlie Hebdo is the fact that in many places in France, France is something of a foreign country. There are hundreds of no-go zones in the country where French police wont go and French law has been supplanted by Sharia law. It is from these areas of largely disaffected, often unemployed youth on the government dole where much of this homegrown hatred emanates. These young people feel disconnected from the larger society, have little or no vested interest in the success of the larger society and often times are vocally disdainful of it.
In a very similar way, the United States is covered with neighborhoods where youth unemployment is sky high, where families spend generations on the government dole, and where there is little allegiance to the nation as a whole or the larger society. In France many of the young Muslims call themselves Muslims or Algerians and they rarely call themselves French. In the United States the hyphenated American such as African-American or Hispanic-American has replaced the designation of American for many.
While in the United States there may not be a religious component of that separation, there certainly is one similarly powerful: the cry of racism. The rallying cry of racism as the cause of the problems in various black and Hispanic neighborhoods around the country function in exactly the same way that radical Islam ideology does in France and other European nations. It drives separation. It drives anger. It drives a devaluation of the lives of others.
The separation is no accident. From Oaklands effort some years ago to allow Ebonics in schools to Cinco de Mayo celebrations where the American flag is prohibited to college admission standards that vary by race to schools that teach American history is nothing but a chronicle of hate, prejudice and thievery against minorities and the poor; its little surprise that many young minorities feel like disconnected from the American Dream and larger society as a whole.
The anger is palpable. From race riots of the 1960s to the Rodney King riots in 1992 to the recent riots in Ferguson, MO that inspired demonstrations across the country, many minority communities seem to be built on a tinderbox just waiting for spark. Extraordinary unemployment rates act as the tinder filling those boxes. In each case the spark was provided by the killing or striking of a black person by white cops. The resulting anger and destruction not only destroyed the neighborhoods of the rioters, but exacerbated the feeling of separation from the larger community as a whole. In the most recent case that anger resulted in demonstrations around the country and in New York with protesters chanting What do we want? Dead cops! When do we want them? Now! Soon thereafter they got their wish.
(Excerpt) Read more at floppingaces.net...
Diversity is the big lie. A country with pools of people who refuse to integrate is a country asking for trouble.
Ever watch the rise and fall of Rome on Youtube? The Fall of Rome was attributed to foreigners and immigrants inducted into the army who were not loyal to the empire, who had and brought their own language and culture. There are already 320 million of us, why do we need more of these uneducated clowns?
To replace the 50 million aborted citizens who would have voted Rat.
Muslim Leaders to Hold Stand with the Prophet Rally in Texas
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/3246230/posts
Is it just me, or does his headdress resemble a...er...never mind.
Pretty close.
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