|
Post by fretslider on Apr 11, 2016 15:50:02 GMT -5
This will be the death of the Western world... Teachers working in the predominantly Muslim districts of Molenbeek and Schaerbeek in Brussels have reported that “90 percent of their students, 17, 18 years old” called the Islamist terrorists who attacked Paris and Brussels “heroes”. The revelation came in an article in the New York Times, wherein Steven Erlanger spoke to a Belgian policymaker who relayed the information from Belgium. The piece, entitled “Blaming Policy, Not Islam, for Belgium’s Radicalised Youth”, interviewed Yves Goldstein, chief of staff for the minister-president of the Brussels Capital Region and a Schaerbeek councilman. Schaerbeek and Molenbeek are now infamous as the areas in which for months Islamists lived, hid, manufactured weapons and made preparations for the Paris and Belgium attacks. Reflecting that “our cities are facing a huge problem, maybe the largest since World War II,” Goldstein poses the question, “How is it that people who were born here in Brussels, in Paris, can call heroes the people who commit violence and terror?” Dismissing the idea of Islam having played any role in the Paris attack and the bombing of Brussels airport and a subway station claiming that “religion for them is a pretext” and that they “believe in nothing,” the politician the boldly claims that the problem is a lack of exposure to diversity and modern art: “We have neighborhoods where people only see the same people, go to school with the same people. What connection do they have with the whole society, what connection do they have with real diversity? It’s the establishment of the ghetto,” he says, “and it’s the thing in our urban development that we have to tackle.” “These young people will never go to museums until 18 or 20 — they never saw Chagall, they never saw Dalí, they never saw Warhol, they don’t know what it is to dream.” Erlinger reports that “Jews have left Schaerbeek, and the last two synagogues are being sold. Instead, there is a kind of suffocating, insular, ethnic uniformity” and describes Belgium’s system of integration as “somewhere between the French model, which put new immigrants in suburban ghettos, and the British and American one, which created communities like Chinatown or Little Italy.” The article neglects to ask basic questions like why – if Islamic extremism is the fault of Belgian urban planning – is it happening globally? Why Jewish communities might have left Schaerbeek? Or why Chinese diaspora, living in Chinatown-like communities and taking no interest in modern art, seem to be at no risk of committing terrorist attacks? www.breitbart.com/london/2016/04/11/majority-of-muslim-students-think-brussels-terrorists-are-heroes-say-teachers/So now they're victims of a lack of exposure to diversity and modern art? Yeah right.
|
|
|
Post by beth on Apr 11, 2016 16:08:21 GMT -5
This will be the death of the Western world... Teachers working in the predominantly Muslim districts of Molenbeek and Schaerbeek in Brussels have reported that “90 percent of their students, 17, 18 years old” called the Islamist terrorists who attacked Paris and Brussels “heroes”. The revelation came in an article in the New York Times, wherein Steven Erlanger spoke to a Belgian policymaker who relayed the information from Belgium. The piece, entitled “Blaming Policy, Not Islam, for Belgium’s Radicalised Youth”, interviewed Yves Goldstein, chief of staff for the minister-president of the Brussels Capital Region and a Schaerbeek councilman. Schaerbeek and Molenbeek are now infamous as the areas in which for months Islamists lived, hid, manufactured weapons and made preparations for the Paris and Belgium attacks. Reflecting that “our cities are facing a huge problem, maybe the largest since World War II,” Goldstein poses the question, “How is it that people who were born here in Brussels, in Paris, can call heroes the people who commit violence and terror?” Dismissing the idea of Islam having played any role in the Paris attack and the bombing of Brussels airport and a subway station claiming that “religion for them is a pretext” and that they “believe in nothing,” the politician the boldly claims that the problem is a lack of exposure to diversity and modern art: “We have neighborhoods where people only see the same people, go to school with the same people. What connection do they have with the whole society, what connection do they have with real diversity? It’s the establishment of the ghetto,” he says, “and it’s the thing in our urban development that we have to tackle.” “These young people will never go to museums until 18 or 20 — they never saw Chagall, they never saw Dalí, they never saw Warhol, they don’t know what it is to dream.” Erlinger reports that “Jews have left Schaerbeek, and the last two synagogues are being sold. Instead, there is a kind of suffocating, insular, ethnic uniformity” and describes Belgium’s system of integration as “somewhere between the French model, which put new immigrants in suburban ghettos, and the British and American one, which created communities like Chinatown or Little Italy.” The article neglects to ask basic questions like why – if Islamic extremism is the fault of Belgian urban planning – is it happening globally? Why Jewish communities might have left Schaerbeek? Or why Chinese diaspora, living in Chinatown-like communities and taking no interest in modern art, seem to be at no risk of committing terrorist attacks? www.breitbart.com/london/2016/04/11/majority-of-muslim-students-think-brussels-terrorists-are-heroes-say-teachers/So now they're victims of a lack of exposure to diversity and modern art? Yeah right. Sick and twisted. Often, eastern perspectives are the flip side of everything western culture stands for. Their choice. Iraq was moving into the 21 century and it's people were starting to prosper when we went in and .. er ... rearranged things. Now, it's hard to see any progress in the eastern countries. If they need art and diversity (literature, music, etc.), they have to make the efforts to acquire it. Somehow, I don't see that happening.
|
|
|
Post by fretslider on Apr 12, 2016 15:34:49 GMT -5
This will be the death of the Western world... Teachers working in the predominantly Muslim districts of Molenbeek and Schaerbeek in Brussels have reported that “90 percent of their students, 17, 18 years old” called the Islamist terrorists who attacked Paris and Brussels “heroes”. The revelation came in an article in the New York Times, wherein Steven Erlanger spoke to a Belgian policymaker who relayed the information from Belgium. The piece, entitled “Blaming Policy, Not Islam, for Belgium’s Radicalised Youth”, interviewed Yves Goldstein, chief of staff for the minister-president of the Brussels Capital Region and a Schaerbeek councilman. Schaerbeek and Molenbeek are now infamous as the areas in which for months Islamists lived, hid, manufactured weapons and made preparations for the Paris and Belgium attacks. Reflecting that “our cities are facing a huge problem, maybe the largest since World War II,” Goldstein poses the question, “How is it that people who were born here in Brussels, in Paris, can call heroes the people who commit violence and terror?” Dismissing the idea of Islam having played any role in the Paris attack and the bombing of Brussels airport and a subway station claiming that “religion for them is a pretext” and that they “believe in nothing,” the politician the boldly claims that the problem is a lack of exposure to diversity and modern art: “We have neighborhoods where people only see the same people, go to school with the same people. What connection do they have with the whole society, what connection do they have with real diversity? It’s the establishment of the ghetto,” he says, “and it’s the thing in our urban development that we have to tackle.” “These young people will never go to museums until 18 or 20 — they never saw Chagall, they never saw Dalí, they never saw Warhol, they don’t know what it is to dream.” Erlinger reports that “Jews have left Schaerbeek, and the last two synagogues are being sold. Instead, there is a kind of suffocating, insular, ethnic uniformity” and describes Belgium’s system of integration as “somewhere between the French model, which put new immigrants in suburban ghettos, and the British and American one, which created communities like Chinatown or Little Italy.” The article neglects to ask basic questions like why – if Islamic extremism is the fault of Belgian urban planning – is it happening globally? Why Jewish communities might have left Schaerbeek? Or why Chinese diaspora, living in Chinatown-like communities and taking no interest in modern art, seem to be at no risk of committing terrorist attacks? www.breitbart.com/london/2016/04/11/majority-of-muslim-students-think-brussels-terrorists-are-heroes-say-teachers/So now they're victims of a lack of exposure to diversity and modern art? Yeah right. Sick and twisted. Often, eastern perspectives are the flip side of everything western culture stands for. Their choice. Iraq was moving into the 21 century and it's people were starting to prosper when we went in and .. er ... rearranged things. Now, it's hard to see any progress in the eastern countries. If they need art and diversity (literature, music, etc.), they have to make the efforts to acquire it. Somehow, I don't see that happening. Art is a bit of a no-no in Islam - images, idols and all that mumbo-jumbo. So it's just patterns. What a joyless faith.
|
|
|
Post by beth on Apr 12, 2016 15:45:25 GMT -5
Sick and twisted. Often, eastern perspectives are the flip side of everything western culture stands for. Their choice. Iraq was moving into the 21 century and it's people were starting to prosper when we went in and .. er ... rearranged things. Now, it's hard to see any progress in the eastern countries. If they need art and diversity (literature, music, etc.), they have to make the efforts to acquire it. Somehow, I don't see that happening. Art is a bit of a no-no in Islam - images, idols and all that mumbo-jumbo. So it's just patterns. What a joyless faith. Indeed, but often very intricate patterns and beautiful colours. I don't dis the art but wish the people were not so rigid and wrapped up in control issues.
|
|
|
Post by mouse on Apr 13, 2016 2:51:26 GMT -5
islam is ALL about control Beth...without control it would fall to pieces...this control is non variable...our way or death and destruction..backward in every way they appear to see no beauty in any thing other than those things allowed by islam but at the same time they are the greatest hyporcrites on the face of the earth... they despise every thing that isn't of islam..paintings..music..literature and yet willingly dive into car ownership and every other device technology and free thinging can provide...they hate us and our lives but happily accept our medical progresses...and as for our largess..take a look around Europe and it is clear how much our largesse improves their lives they have no concept of the common good but eagerly hold out hands for more and more they seem to be incapable of realising that what has kept them poor and backwards over the millennia is the very thing they love and fear ..islam......it will all end in tears and many of those tears will be ours they hate and despise us....but lurve what we non muslims provide and they are taught that those not muslim are there to be there as lesser beings and to be servants and slaves to muslims and allah if the control was taken away..i wonder just how many muslims would remain muslims? ?? one thing is clear though..things cannot carryon as they are at the moment for them or for us
|
|