- Europe’s Rising Political Islam Parties
- ( Muslims do not assimilate, they infiltrate )
- (I want to let you know they have started a Islam party in our country DO YOU SEE THE PLAIN FOR ISLAM TAKE OVER OF OUR COUNTRY, Just look at what is happening in Europe all the evidence bares witness to this fact )
- The watchman on the wall sounding the ALARM
Sharia supersedes all manmade laws. This is the Islamic precept of hakimiyyah – the principle of Allah’s exclusive power and right to govern, legislate, and pass judgement. The power to legislate and judge is a unique right of Allah, making anyone who legislates on his own guilty of usurping divine power and substituting himself for Allah.
And this is what makes Muslims as an immigrant group different than any other immigrant group. Muslims are the only immigrant group that comes to Western countries with a ready-made model of society and government (sharia) that they believe to be superior to what we have here, and they work to institute it. So this is going to keep on happening, until someone, somewhere, says, “No more accommodation. We’re going to stand up for our own principles.” American businesses should start saying that now.
So for these new political Islamic parties — it is only a manner of time. A demographic time bomb, that is. Soon their numbers will overwhelm the ballot boxes. Give it a generation.
Even Trevor Phillips, the former chief of Britain’s Equalities and Human Rights Commission (EHRC), admitted that the path the West has been on for years is a catastrophic failure. Muslims won’t assimilate and become loyal Britons.
Phillips wrote: “For a long time, I too thought that Europe’s Muslims would become like previous waves of migrants, gradually abandoning their ancestral ways, wearing their religious and cultural baggage lightly, and gradually blending into Britain’s diverse identity landscape. I should have known better.” Instead, he wrote, Muslims are creating “nations within nations” in the West.
There are some interesting pull quotes in this article about political Islam parties rising in Europe but the author shows her ignorance when speaking of far right and “neo-Nazi groups in Germany and the United States” – Nazis were far left, not far right, and let’s be frank, pose little threat today save for the outer fringe. And what is far-right anyway? Opposing jihad terror and sharia is now considered far-right. Sorry, I will not accede that ground. It is patently false. “Far right” is the new dyphemism for patriotism or national right parties.
Europe’s Rising Islam-Based Political Parties
by Abigail R. Esman, April 24, 2017:
For the past several months, eyes across the world have been trained on the growing far-right movements sweeping Europe and America — from the neo-Nazi groups in Germany and the United States, to the increasing popularity of France’s National Front.
Ms. Esman is adopting into left-wing smear narratives with this smear of patriotic and freedom movements.
But another, far less noticed — but sometimes equally-radical movement — is also emerging across Europe: the rise of pro-Islam political parties, some with foreign support from the Muslim world. And the trend shows no sign of stopping.
Holland’s Denk (“Think”) party, established and led by two Turkish immigrants, is among the most significant. Denk won three seats in the Dutch parliament last month, becoming the country’s “fastest-growing” new party, according to the Dutch daily NRC Handelsblad.
Its
platform is to replace ideas of integration with “mutual acceptance” — a charming but antiquated idea in a culture where one group accepts gay marriage and the other is
taught that homosexuals should be shoved off of tall buildings. It also proposes the establishment of a dedicated “anti-racism” police force.
While not the first of such Islamic parties in European politics, Denk’s March 15 election victory has made it an inspiration to others. Islamist parties now see a new chance for success, while political aspirants across Europe are making plans to start similar parties of their own.
Hence, while the focus of this week’s French elections will be on Marine Le Pen’s National Front, many European Muslims will also be
watching the Equality and Justice Party (PEJ), led by French-Turk Sacir Çolak.
Like Denk, this French party claims to be a voice for the downtrodden, fighting “inequalities and injustices,” according to a report by the Turkish
Anadolu news agency. But also like Denk, PEJ has been accused of representing Turkey’s president — a man who has
spoken out against assimilation and integration, and called on European Turks to reject Western values.
And the PEJ is not alone in France:
The French
Union of Muslim Democrats (UDMF), founded in 2012, made headlines when it
entered the 2015 electoral race. Its platform seemed more moderate than many of its fellow Muslim parties across Europe; UDMF founder Nagib Azergui has insisted in interviews that he respects the secular foundation of the French republic, and advocates philosophy and civic education classes that would help mitigate against the recruitment efforts of Muslim extremists.
The party does, however, seek to establish sharia-compliant banks, and calls for Turkey to become a member of the European Union. Further, UDMF seeks to re-install the right of Muslim girls to wear headscarves in public schools, a move that could be seen as a gesture towards re-introducing religion into the secular sphere.
Austria, too, has seen a rise in Islamic political parties, such as the New Movement for the Future (NBZ), which, like Denk and the PEJ, was founded by Turkish immigrants.
Unlike the others parties, however, NBZ has made little effort to hide its loyalty to Turkey. Following the failed 2016 Turkish coup, for instance, its leader, Adnan Dinçer,
called on Austria to respect Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s clampdown and the mass arrests that followed. It is worth noting, however, that Austria’s far right has been particularly virulent in its anti-Islam activity, calling for Islam itself
to be banned from the country. Such motions inevitably bring forth counter-movements from the targeted groups, and it was those actions that inspired Dinçer to form the NBZ.
But it was Denk’s success, above all, that inspired Lebanese-Belgian activist Dyab Abou Jahjah to establish his newest political effort: a party (to date, unnamed) aimed at “Making Brussels Great Again, a la Bernie Sanders,” according to
an interview in the Belgian newspaper
de Morgen.
This would be a third attempt at political relevance for Jahjah, who first came into the public eye in 2002 as the founder of the Brussels-based Arab-European League, a pan-European political group that aimed to create what he called a Europe-wide “sharocracy” — a sharia-based democracy.
In 2003, the AEL organized a political party, RESIST, to run in the Brussels elections; it received a mere 10,000 votes. Now, Jahjah, who also runs an activist group called Movement X, hopes to run in Brussels’ 2018 elections. While his party has yet to declare a platform, his anti-American, anti-Israel, pro-Palestinian and anti-European
rants on Facebook and elsewhere give an indication of his plans. So, too, did a recent blog post in which
he wrote: “we must defeat the forces of supremacy, the forces of sustained privileges, and the forces of the status-quo. We must defeat them in every possible arena.”
And he is not alone. Days after Denk’s win, fellow Belgian Ahmet Koç
announced his own initiative, the details of which are also yet to be determined. But some things are easy enough to predict on the basis of his past: the Turkish-Belgian politician was thrown out of Belgium’s socialist party in 2016 for supporting Erdogan’s efforts to censor Europeans who insulted him publicly. He also called for Belgian Turks to rise up against the “traitors” of the 2016 coup.
Both Koç and Jahjah will have to reckon with the ISLAM party, which has already established itself in the Brussels area. Founded in 2012, ISLAM– which is as an acronym for “
Integrité, Solidarité, Liberté, Authenticité, Moralité” — is unapologetically religious. Its leaders
pride themselves on following the koran, not party politics. With branches already in place in the Brussels districts of Anderlecht, Molenbeek (the center of Belgian radicalism) and Luik, the party now plans to expand throughout the Brussels region.
The watchman on the wall sounding the ALARM