How is this contributing to our cultural fabric? Women showing their sons how women should be clothed |
A follow up to Andy Ngo's article I posted recently. He's right about the islamisation of Britain. I've seen it with mine own eyes. It's a kind of multiple monoculturalism. Not multicultural, but like little Balkan states. The dream of the tapestry of tolerance and inclusivity is dead. And in some of the Muslim areas it's dangerous for a non Muslim to visit. Unlike the Chinatowns of yore.
What can be done? Very little, I fear. Even with a will, the entrenched interests are too strong. And there's not even the will. As the reactions to Ngo's earlier article show. Ignorance and wilful blindness rule the day.
Farewell, England. Sic Transit Gloria Brittania.
The country, the kingdom, your veterans fought and died for, immortalised yesterday, is disappearing.
The country, the kingdom, your veterans fought and died for, immortalised yesterday, is disappearing.
It's not that I have any racial issue. I live in a multicultural multi-racial society here in Hong Kong and it's fine. I have issue in the UK with how it's working out as "plural monocultures,". Or maybe "multi mono cultures". Separate and unequal. And that way because of the votaries of the intolerant ideology of Muhammad.
Andy NGO:
Andy NGO:
'I was segregated from non-Muslims from the beginning, not just physically, but also in terms of the core beliefs I had instilled in me,' Sohail Ahmed tells me. He's a soft-spoken 26-year-old student from East London who grew up in a fundamentalist Muslim community. In 2014, Sohail's parents sent him to an Islamic exorcist in Newham because they believed his homosexuality was caused by a jinn, or spirit. The exorcisms didn't work and his parents eventually kicked him out of the home. Sohail had previously contemplated a suicide attack in Canary Wharf to redeem himself.
I met Sohail while researching an article about Islam in Britain. This was eventually published in the Wall Street Journal on August 29. It was called 'A Visit to Islamic England.' The article briefly became a Twitter sensation, for the wrong reasons. I made a mistake, which was widely picked on. I described the existence of 'alcohol restricted' signs in Whitechapel, East London, and implied it was because of the heavy Muslim presence in the area. Such signs actually exist in various areas across the UK and have nothing to do with religious sensibilities.https://spectator.us/british-muslims-ngo/