PDA

View Full Version : Oh dearie - "Islamophobia forces Danish Muslims to consider emigration"



Petr
06-14-08, 02:03
http://www.islamophobia-watch.com/islamophobia-watch/2008/5/30/islamophobia-forces-danish-muslims-to-consider-emigration.html


Islamophobia forces Danish Muslims to consider emigration


Pia Kjaersgaard's Danish People's Party has a genius for attracting attention. Over the past month its campaign to ban public employees from wearing Islamic headscarves has dominated the headlines and also triggered squabbles within most of the country's other political parties.

The campaign began with a poster of a burka-clad woman wielding a judge's gavel. The implicit message was that Danes risk having their courts invaded by Muslim hordes and sharia law. Birthe Ronn Hornbech, the immigration minister, denounced the DPP as “fanatically anti-Muslim” and said the judiciary was capable of policing its own impartiality and dress code. Stig Glent-Madsen, a high-court judge, confirmed that the judiciary had always managed this itself.

Yet the government, which relies on the DPP's support to stay in power, has decided that a new law is needed to ban the wearing of all religious symbols by judges – from Christian crosses to Jewish skullcaps and even Sikh turbans. The hapless Ms Ronn Hornbech will have to frame the law. And the DPP is now calling for even broader bans. Muslim headscarves, says Ms Kjaersgaard, are a “symbol of political Islam and the discrimination against women”. She wants them “out of schools, off the streets and outside the doors of parliament”.

Many Danes share Ms Kjaersgaard's sentiments. A poll by Megafon for TV2 found 48% in favour of a ban on public employees wearing “religious garb”, and only 39% against.

One response has come from Danish-born Muslims. A poll by Politiken, a daily, of 315 young Muslim students, found that two-thirds of them were considering emigrating after graduation. Most gave as their reason “the tone of the Danish debate about Muslims”.

Economist, 29 May 2008

Grapple
06-14-08, 07:27
I notice the Economist does not say where they will immigrate too. I am betting that it won’t be back to their home countries and the Economist will push that other Western countries take them in, in the name of globalism and multiculturalism

TrueGrit
06-14-08, 15:44
DPP has to be one of the most effective parties in Europe. I'd be curious to know how many of these young muslims actually moves to another country I can't imagine many want to go back to their home countries.

Southron Nationalist
06-14-08, 20:25
Like most of Europe's anti-Islamic parties, the DPP is Zionist and philo-Semitic. Its homepage, which currently features the flags of Denmark, America, and Israel, can be seen here (http://www.danskfolkeparti.dk/Forside.asp).

Angler
06-14-08, 22:03
Like most of Europe's anti-Islamic parties, the DPP is Zionist and philo-Semitic. Its homepage, which currently features the flags of Denmark, America, and Israel, can be seen here (http://www.danskfolkeparti.dk/Forside.asp).You got it.

True, Arab Muslims don't belong in the West in any significant numbers. But any political movement or individual that focuses primarily or exclusively on attacking Muslims is almost sure to be controlled by (or in bed with) Jewish supremacists.

It cannot be stressed enough that Jews -- not Muslims, Negroes, Hispanics, or anyone else -- are the primary enemy of Western nations. They are certainly the most subtle enemy, but they're also the most dangerous -- in part because of the subtlety of their influence. Sure, it's worthwhile to keep an eye on non-Westerners in general, but we mustn't confuse the symptoms with the disease itself.