What [leftists fail] to grasp is that when openness and tolerance encounter
militant Islam in a dark alley, openness and tolerance get their butts
kicked
writes
Benny Huang on Freedom Daily in a post entitled
Europe Suffers The Predictable Effects Of Its Insane Immigration Policy (that was reposted by Fox News'
Megan Kelly).
Angela Merkel owes her countrymen an apology—and her resignation. In
the wake of four terrorist attacks in the space of a week, all of which
were perpetrated by Muslims and three of which were committed by
refugees, she should have the courage to admit that she was wrong and
that her error has gotten people killed. But that won’t happen.
For those who missed Germany’s week of unspeakable carnage, let’s
take a moment to recap. On July 18th, a 17-year old Afghan refugee went
on a hacking spree using an ax and a knife onboard a train near Wurzburg. Three people were seriously injured. He was reported to have screamed “Allahu Akbar” as he slashed through human flesh. On July 22nd, a man possessing Iranian and German citizenships went on a shooting spree
in Munich, killing nine and wounding 35. When a memorial was held a few
days later to honor the victims, Islamists crashed the scene to shout “Allahu Akbar.” On July 24th, a Syrian asylum seeker hacked a pregnant woman to death
with a machete and wounded two others in Reutlingen. That same day, a
Syrian man killed himself in a suicide bombing in Ansbach, wounding 15
people. In a video recorded before the bombing he pledged his allegiance
to ISIS and called it “an act of revenge against Germans, because they obstruct Islam.”
It wasn’t supposed to be this way. Last December 30th, Chancellor
Merkel delivered a New Year’s address in which she discussed the arrival
of over a million refugees to Germany in 2015. She spouted the
Pollyannaish nonsense that refugees represent an “opportunity for tomorrow”—whatever
that means. Exactly which opportunities Germans will miss out on if
they don’t accept millions of third world savages who hate them is
unclear. The chance to be hacked to death, perhaps?
The very next day, a misogynist mob struck Cologne
and other cities, taking advantage of the New Year’s Eve revelry to
prey upon vulnerable women. Creepy men speaking foreign tongues tore at
their clothes, stole their valuables, and in a few cases, forcibly raped
them. That same night, two train stations in Munich were evacuated when intelligence reports warned of an imminent suicide attack.
Hate to say I told you so, Frau Merkel, but I told you so. A
lot of other people told you so too, including Horst Seehofer, Minister
President of Bavaria, the federal state most impacted by the refugee
crisis. “All our predictions have been proven right,” said Seehofer. “Islamist terrorism has arrived in Germany.”
Indeed, it turns out that in the EU's effort to combat racism, Islamist crimes are regularly covered up,
from Germany itself, of course, to Scandinavia and
Great Britain (not least
in Rotherham)…
The tragedy of all this violence is its predictability. Everyone
knows that the third world is a dangerous and violent place but some
people are unwilling to admit that it’s the people who make it
that way. It is literally impossible to import masses of people from a
place like Syria and not import their problematic culture along with
them.
Supporters of the asylum policy have long labored under the flawed
assumption that people fleeing ISIS must necessarily loathe the
organization and everything it stands for. Not necessarily. A November
2015 study
from the Arab Center for Research & Policy Studies found that ISIS
has at least a few admirers among the Syrian refugee population. Four
percent of Syrian refugee expressed a positive view of ISIS and an
additional 9% said that their view was “positive to some extent.” Six
percent were undecided or refused to answer.
‘That’s just a few bad apples,’ they would argue. ‘The vast majority
are peaceful.’ It should be noted here that respondents weren’t asked
what they think of Sharia law, or whether they believe unbelievers
should be forced to lives as dhimmis—second class citizens. They weren’t
asked whether women who wear “revealing” clothing—by Middle Eastern
standards, that is—should be taught some modesty with a little sexual
assault. They weren’t [asked] if they can tolerate other people’s enjoyment
of pork or alcohol. In other words, an ISIS sympathy test isn’t an
effective filter to remove the bad elements.
But even if we assume for a moment that the 87% of respondents who
did not express admiration for ISIS are all good westernized liberals,
the remaining “bad apples” are still an enormous bloc in real numbers.
Approximately 1.1 million refugees arrived in Germany in 2015, and
220,000 thus far in 2016.
If “only” 13% of those refugees support ISIS, that’s still about
170,000 people. Those are on top of the radical Muslims who already
lived in Germany before 2015 of which there many.
Yet Angela Merkel is prepared to plow ahead with this insane refugee
policy, dooming future generations of Germans to minority group status
in their own country. She doesn’t care, she’s childless.
To understand the mindset of the pro-asylum crowd you have to see
this issue through their eyes. They understand that Europe, particularly
Germany, was infected in the relatively recent past with virulent
racism and violence. Since the end of World War II, Europeans have
managed to behave themselves reasonably well—the Balkan wars
notwithstanding. They’ve put down their rifles and their flags and
decided to be really, really nice. Asylum supporters fear that
slamming the door shut to immigration would signal the collapse of
Europe’s post-war ethos of tolerance and openness. That threatening
possibility is, in their estimation, a far greater danger than a flood
of refugees.
In the wake of these attacks, Chancellor Angela Merkel argued
that the assailants “wanted to undermine our sense of community, our
openness and our willingness to help people in need. We firmly reject
this.” Let me translate that for you: If we don’t let more of these
people in, the terrorists win! Yeah, barf. There’s no
indication that the attackers intended to goad Europeans into stemming
the immigrant flow. There’s plenty of evidence that at least two of them
considered themselves to be soldiers of Allah; why wouldn’t they want
reinforcements?
Yet the attitude persists that any attempt to change course is a
capitulation to our worst instincts. … Outrageous! As if Muslims will be forced to clean the streets with
toothbrushes if Austria decides not to be a dumping ground for the
world’s most dysfunctional populations. She paints a picture of
Austria—and presumably the rest of Europe—at a crossroads. Will
Europeans choose openness and tolerance, or will they be seduced by the
dark forces of hate? She fears it will be the latter.
[The New York Times’ central Europe correspondent Alison Smale, author of an abominable
piece entitled “Rise of Austrian Right Lengthens Shadow of Nazi Era”,] is quite right that Europe is standing at a crossroads. If
it doesn’t do something about immigration it will undergo profound and
irreversible societal changes. Indeed, this process is already underway,
with many European nations jettisoning hallowed values such as free
speech in an attempt to assuage angry Muslims. What Smale fails to grasp
is that when openness and tolerance encounter militant Islam in a dark
alley, openness and tolerance get their butts kicked.
Europe must choose its path, for sure, because it cannot be
Islamified and still be nice. Though it’s difficult to imagine modern
Austrians forcing Jews to clean the streets of Vienna with toothbrushes,
I can certainly imagine Muslim immigrants doing exactly that.
The pro-asylum faction’s stubborn attitude that they are the
defenders of decency has proven difficult to counter. In their own minds
they’re Mother Theresa and we’re Hitler. They build bridges, we build
walls. They leave the welcome mat on the front step for their neighbors,
we’re the cranky old guys shouting “Get off my lawn!”
What remains to be seen is if they are capable of learning their
lesson. When a once peaceful country like Germany suffers a mass
shooting, a suicide bombing, and two hacking attacks in the space of a
week, it stands to reason that European ideals are deteriorating.
Yes,
we’re seeing the reemergence of an ugly Europe, embroiled in hate in
violence—but the blame can’t be laid at the feet of those of us who
oppose Islamification. We were the ones screaming from the rooftops,
warning others to do something to avoid this very outcome.