Monday, March 21, 2016

Marine Le Pen calls Canuck immigration policies "erroneous"

Marine Le Pen, leader of France’s Front National, was in Canada this weekend, to find out whether Canadians feel the same way as the French about the Muslim invasion of the West. The answer, apparently, is NON, probably because Canadians have not yet woken up to the fact that North America is the next target after Europe.

The wave of Islamist extremism engulfing France, Belgium, Germany, Sweden, etc etc, won't stop on Europe's Atlantic coast. Once the "refugees" and asylum-seekers have overrun Europe, the next stop will be Canada and the USA. In fact 25,000 Syrians -- mainly Muslim -- have already been "welcomed" into Canada, and before he leaves office the Prez and his liberal Democrat buddies are determined to override the objections of state governors and admit 10,000 to the USA, all at taxpayers' expense of course.

Last November Mme Le Pen called putting out the welcome mat for the refugees "madness". In a presser in Québec City yesterday, she softened the tone a bit, calling the Trudeau Liberal government's decisions on immigration, particularly its welcoming of Syrian refugees, "erroneous".

Canada’s political leaders, she said, have shown little regard for the consequences of their decisions. Those consequences include the accelerating demands of religious minorities, such as providing space for prayer or the establishment of religious courts. The result can only be increased religious tensions. As Mme Le Pen puts it, "A multicultural society is a society in conflict."

At about the same time Mme Le Pen was speaking, Pope Francis, in his homily at Palm Sunday Mass, called on Christians to stop being "indifferent" to the plight of the refugees. Walt thinks the Pope got it wrong. There are many good Christians who are far from indifferent. They are opposed to the put-out-the-welcome-mat policies of their government. Why? Because they see their religion and their culture as under threat. Which is what Mme Le Pen was saying. I'd say her view of the situation is considerably more clear than that of the Holy Father.

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