Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Malmö, Sweden's Gangster Cirty

Dan Eriksson is a Swedish nationalist politician, speaker and writer who speaks out about the dangerous problem Sweden has with its immigrants. Just last month, a Stockholm suburb (Husby) experienced a week of rioting by immigrants. The below message is in Swedish with English sub-titles. It is focused on Malmö, Sweden's third-largest city, which is now 40% immigrant-basically Muslim. The city regularly experiences riots, and the situation for Jews has become intolerable. They are leaving in droves.




Note how Eriksson speaks out against the idea of "multi-culturalism". That requires some explaining because in the European context, it refers to a failed European attempt to accommodate immigrants at the expense of the native traditions, values and culture-not to mention their safety and freedom of speech..

This is hardly about respecting the cultures of Latin Americans, Asians or other Europeans who have come to Sweden because there aren't that many of those. Those who are there are not the problem (with the exception of criminal elements from the former Yugoslavia). Europe's immigrants are overwhelming Arab, African, South Asians, and Muslim. It is that multi-culturalism that so many Europeans are upset about because many of these people (with the limited exception of Turks) are not assimilating and contribute little but criminality and their own hatreds toward the West and Jews. This is what Eriksson is talking about.

In the American context, "multi-culturalism" can mean something positive since we have immigrants from all over the world, and most of them have made a positive contribution to America. Most of us enjoy attending a Ballet Folklorico from Mexico or a Korean dance festival and the list goes on and on.

Unfortunately, once you enter a university, "multi-culturalism" takes on a different meaning. It refers to "post-colonial" ideas being taught in our classrooms that trash everything connected to the West while promoting or ignoring even the worst of  other cultures.

As I have said many times, multi-cultural is my middle name, and I can back it up. It should not be some sort of religion or political ideology, however. We and the Europeans can respect any culture that respects ours in return.

Respect should be a two-way street.

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