Posted on 12/06/2007 2:20:11 PM PST by westcoastwillieg
Last week, saw another battle in the near-civil war that is going on between French police and so-called immigrant "youths" who burned everything in sight, including schools, libraries and, of course, automobiles. These rioters must be aiming for a new record in 2007 after having set fire to 45,588 cars in 2005 and 44,157 in 2006.
Low-intensity conflict in the streets, with rioters shooting at policemen and members of the fire brigade as in France, is probably one definition of multicultural utopia. Ever since the Berlin Wall came down, most of those on the left have forsaken communism in favor of another social dream: the multicultural society. Communism was "the god that failed," as Koestler called it, but Multiculti will bring us heaven on earth.
Of all the countries in Europe, France has invested the most in this ideal. One of the most shocking aspects of French policy, at least to Christians, is that it is forbidden for the French state to support Christianity or churches financially. But at the same time various municipalities in the Paris region have been heavily subsidizing the construction of mosques. In fact, I have had it on good authority that France has paid for making Dakar, Senegal, the center of the Islamic Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization's activities for 2007 after the Senegalese government had spent the original budget provided by Arab countries on more necessary consumables!
(Excerpt) Read more at worldnetdaily.com ...
A lesson for the USA, if we will listen.
“Civilizations aren’t murdered.
They commit suicide.”
New York has been a "majority minority" city since the mid-80s. Effective law enforcement and high real estate prices seem to be the factor in "keeping the peace" there, to say nothing of the fact that immigrants to NYC typically learn enough ghetto English to function in a multiethnic society.
45K cars?....at $5K each, very low average of new/used, that’s just shy of 1/4 billion USDs. Talking about some real money there.
History has also shown that allowing people to do what they want to do is not productive to your society.
Despite Sarkozy, it may be too late for France.
That’s a big “if”.
If things keep going the way they are in France, they will eventually and, ironically, surrender to themselves.
Guesse there aren’t laws in france allowing ya to shoot some s.o.b. trying to steel or destroy you or your property.
You try to torch my car and I’ll shoot your ass if i see ya.
I’m still waiting for the French backlash. I do believe it will come and it may not be nice. I could be wrong.
As Thomas Sowell stated, multiracial countries don’t work unless one group is dominant.
“multi-culture” equals a fragmented society. Doesn’t this lead to a breakdown of insitutions in that society?
Better late than never. Start the mass deportations now.
At some point (When the streets are burning in the US) people here will realize that this does not work. Never has, never will. You can not take competing and nonconforming world views that are mutually exclusive all wanting to dominate, throw them together, and think that will end pretty. Once certain population groups achieve critical mass, they will redefine society as in Sudan today or Lebanon a some years back. We have “nations” for a reason, and these boarders are not coincidentally drawn around areas where people with a common language and culture live.
France is nominally a Christian country. Although separation of Church and State is enshrined both in French law and in daily practice, some national holidays as well as school vacations - are based on the traditional Roman Catholic Church calendar. When the holiday/vacation was established, there was no significant Muslim presence in France, as there is nowadays
Since the passage of the 1905 law, religion in France has been considered private - and has no place in public life. That is why, for example, a young Muslim girl cannot wear her hijab to a state school and why a Sikh cannot wear his turban and why a Jew cannot wear his yarmulke (aka kippah) and why a Catholic cannot wear a conspicuous cross. Civil servants on the job are bound by the same restraints. The French feel that allowing the symbols of belief to be displayed in public, state buildings or by a civil servant is proselytization or the intent to proselytize - for that religion. Eliminating the symbol simply eliminates any and all questions of indoctrination or influence or aggression on other individuals. In this way freedom to believe and, importantly, not to believe - in any God or higher power whatsoever is guaranteed to all. Of course, one can wear what one wishes on the street, in the supermarket or at the opera. That is not the issue. Those are public places but are not dependent on the Republic's finances, which is the issue. It couldn't be more clear.
Thousands, evem three years ago,(12,000 say the organizers; 5,000 say the police) marched in the streets of Paris, including FreeMasons, to preserve the Law of 1905. The marches aka riots depending on who is writing the news story still ocurr to this day as do marches on various agendas on city streets in the USA.
Should government money be used to finance the construction of mosques and Sikh temples, so that Muslims and Sikhs can also benefit from certain dispositions of the 1905 Law pertaining to the upkeep of "cultural" venues --under the same law the answer is no.
France, far from those "Cheese-eating surrender monkeys" depicted in "The Simpsons," has distinguished itself (since the Paris terror bombings of 1986, especially) as a nation uniquely disposed to trample toes of intolerant faith. For better or for worse, the practice of religion since the Revolution and the Law of Separation (1905), especially has become, for the State, no less than a matter of public order and public safety. For this reason, the policing of even "non-violent radicals" and radical clerics has become something of a national pastime.
Consider the case of Salafist cleric Abdelkader Bouziane, deported back to Algeria in April 2004 for an interview, published in the local Lyon Mag, in which the imam defends polygamy and promotes, "in certain cases," the stoning of adulterous wives. The Ministry of the Interior slapped Bouziane with an order of expulsion within days of his remarks, on the strength of a prior order (signed by Nicolas Sarkozy) that identified Bouziane as a danger to State and to public safety. This, in turn, allowed the government to ignore established protections for the safeguard of resident aliens, and to deport the cleric back to Oran. Riots which hit a Paris suburb this week were the work of a "thugocracy" of criminals and not the result of social deprivation, French President Nicolas Sarkozy said on Thursday.
Sarkozy's remarks came three days after dozens of police were injured in clashes with rioters following the death of two boys in a collision with a police car in the suburb of Villiers-le-Bel, to the north of Paris.
"I reject any form of other-worldly naivety that wants to see a victim of society in anyone who breaks the law, a social problem in any riot," he said in a speech to police officers.
"What happened in Villiers-le-Bel has nothing to do with a social crisis. It has everything to do with a 'thugocracy'."
This week's unrest reawakened memories of the violence that struck many poor French suburbs in 2005 when rioting youths torched thousands of cars during weeks of clashes with police.
A massive police presence over the past two nights has so far restored a tense calm to Villiers-le-Bel but the traces of the violence, in the form of a burned-out library and car showroom and smashed shop windows and bus shelters, remain.
The 2005 riots,(mentioned above) the worst urban violence in France in 40 years, provoked months of agonized debate over the state of the grim housing estates that ring many French cities and the integration of millions of black and North African immigrants.
But Sarkozy, who struck a similarly uncompromising tone when he was interior minister in 2005, said the answer to the riots did not lie in spending more on improving facilities.
"The response to the riots isn't yet more money on the backs of the tax payers. The response to the riots is to arrest the rioters," he said.
In 2005 Sarkozy triggered outrage, including among many people unconnected with the unrest, when he branded the rioters as "racaille" ("scum" or "rabble").
The "quartiers" or "cites," as the estates are known, are a world away from the prosperous centers of cities like Paris, blighted by high crime and unemployment, poor transport links and run-down housing..."
Visit France. You might be surprised of the popular support of Americans and their similar ideals on related current issues.
Revolting
Press 1 for English
Press 2 to be deported
World Net Daily ^ has their agenda in reporting too. ;)
Always more to the story than what you read.
How can a story be made to read two entirely diff ways—creativity with just a touch of ignorance.
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