tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18399778.post114131513977264496..comments2023-10-28T15:20:05.754+02:00Comments on Islam in Europe - Commentary by Snouck: Harsh and insensitiveSnouckhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04337065305817263551noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18399778.post-1141576706962927922006-03-05T17:38:00.000+01:002006-03-05T17:38:00.000+01:00@Winston: A prominent member of Leefbaar Rotterdam...@Winston: A prominent member of <A HREF="http://www.leefbaarrotterdam.nl/" REL="nofollow">Leefbaar Rotterdam</A>, Marco Pastors, said yesterday, when interviewed by the <A HREF="http://www.eo.nl/portals/homepage.jsp" REL="nofollow">EO (Dutch)</A> that in his view they could be send back, although that could lead to problems for these people. His reason was that it would lead to increased immigration from these countries, especially by these groups. He then added that you could also choose to give a general pardon for these people already here, as it is about approx. 10 of them, but added that he viewed the policy to deny such people entrance should stay in effect. He was then asked how Pim Fortuyn, a homosexual himself, would feel about this. Pastors said he thought Fortuyn would have said the same, although he wasn't sure.<BR/><BR/>These issues are much to difficult to make a simple judgement. I think politics should not be dealing with issues that's is just about a single or a few people. It does not matter which decision you make in governing, it will always lead to problems of some sort. The real world is too complex to be fair for everyone. <BR/><BR/>If you try to resolve problems created by another country, the real problems stay untouched. If every homosexual had the means to flea from Iran and you will get killed for being a homosexual as you say, they would all leave, but Iran would never get reformed on this level. New Iranian homosexuals will be born, even when the last one left. <BR/><BR/>Systems will only change when the forces within make it so. Is it nice or fair to them? Probably not. Are we obliged to help them? No. The government has to decide how we deal not with persons, but with groups and the system itself. A system that is nice for everybody will break down, and will stop being nice.MZhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14985023688792609928noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18399778.post-1141413138947352872006-03-03T20:12:00.000+01:002006-03-03T20:12:00.000+01:00One comment about this Taida girl that causes the ...One comment about this Taida girl that causes the bleeding hearts to be scooped up in outrage over the fact that she is denied a permit: I don’t think she is that innocent. I had the strong gut feeling from the first moment I saw her overdone sobs and phony trembling voice that she has a very manipulative and willful mind, something that the leftist bleeding hearts seem to close their eyes for. They’d rather yield to the manipulation because it suits their agenda and gives them a fake feeling of being such wonderful people, while in fact they’re simply useful idiots in the eyes of the manipulators. <BR/>That is why I feel that lifting this girl up into sainthood by the Left while at the same time condemning Verdonk as a she-demon is so very unfair.<BR/>All the more praise for Verdonk for keeping her back straight in spite of leftist demonization. <BR/><BR/>I sincerely hope that the Dutch won’t fall back to giving their vote for the old leftist school, which tries very hard to manipulate people into expressing their discontent over the current government by voting for the Left, because then all WILL be lost. A vote for the Left equals euthanasia on a national scale.JKhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10616851353904448593noreply@blogger.com