Gary Fouse
fousesquawk
Hat tip Det Goda Samhället. Translation by Fousesquawk.
Mohamed Omar is a Swedish poet and part of the staff of the conservative Swedish outlet, Det Goda Samhället. He was born in Sweden and is an apostate from Islam. He also goes by the name of Eddie.
In this op-ed, Omar sharply criticizes Prime Minister Stefan Löfven for his lax immigration policies and his recent statement that the terror attack in Vetlanda this week by an Afghan refugee had nothing to do with immigration. His op-ed is translated by Fousesquawk.
March 7, 2021
Mohamed Omar: Of course, the terror in Vetlanda has something to do with immigration
When a fanatical Muslim screams, "Allahu Akhbar" and blows himself up in Stockholm, that has nothing to do with Islam. And when an immigrant stabs people with a knife in Vetlanda, that has nothing to do with immigration.
Prime Minister Stefan Löfven has previously explained that he has the greatest respect for Islam, that he has never criticized the religion, and he will never do so.
Not because there is nothing to criticize in Islam, rather Löfven doesn't criticize Islam.
The "unaccompanied child refugee" from Afghanistan who stabbed people on the street in Vetlanda was perhaps no fanatical Muslim. Perhaps, he was not motivated by his Islamic belief.
The prime minister says that the terror in Vetlanda has nothing to do with immigration.
But the terror in Vetlanda obviously has something to do with immigration. Islamic terror has something to do with Islam, and immigrant-terror has something to do with immigration. In Sweden, one needs to point out these self-evident (facts).
For there are people with power and influence who seem to think that 1) Criticism of Islam is a bigger problem than Islamic terror, and 2) criticism of immigration is a bigger problem than immigrant terror.
For us common people, who are not schooled in the sophisticated thinking of politically-correct-isms, this is difficult to understand.
When we let in masses of criminal immigrants, criminality increases in Sweden. If we had not let (them) in, criminality would have been less.
Those who have run the immigration policy seem to think that it is more important to let in foreigners to our country than that we who live here should be safe.
For us common people, that is a strange priority.
We common people do not understand why foreigners who commit crimes are allowed to stay. The "unaccompanied child refugee" who went on attack in Vetlanda had, for example, committed crimes previously. Why was he not sent home?
Stefan Löfven, and those who think like him, think it is more worrisome that Swedes become more critical of immigration than immigrant crime.
We common people cannot understand how a critical view of immigration can be a problem, and it is also more difficult to understand that this should be a bigger problem than immigrant crime.
Criticism of immigration means that one weighs the advantages against the disadvantages. One looks at how immigration has gone so far and asks himself: Has it gone well?
That is what sensible people do. You cannot continue to do what does not go well.
"I condemn this terrible act," says Löfven about the terror in Vetlanda. Those are empty words as long as he cannot criticize his immigration policy.
It is because of Löfven's, and his like-minded (colleagues') irresponsible immigration policy that 7 people were stabbed in Vetlanda.
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