If It’s OK to Degrade ISIS in Iraq, Why Not Degrade It In Canada?

If It’s OK to Degrade ISIS in Iraq, Why Not Degrade It In Canada?

Canada’s Parliament has just voted to approve a 600 member Canadian combat mission in Iraq to counter the actions of ISIS.

It remains to be seen whether this will be a wise move or not.

As readers will see in the quotation below from a Muslim, a significant ISIS-Like presence already existed in Toronto 11 years ago . It is undoubtedly much larger today. So what is Canada’s Parliament going to do about that?

The Muslim population in Canada has increased very quickly. Unnecessary immigration from Muslim-dominated countries is the cause of that increase. In the period 2001 to 2011, Canada’s Muslim population went from 579,000 to more than 1 million. Unmonitored immigration from those countries is also the major cause of any increase in Canada’s ISIS-like supporters. In 2011, Toronto had the largest population of Muslims, at just over 424,900. Montréal had just over 221,000 and Vancouver about 73,200.

A dramatic cut in Canada’s overall immigration intake would go a long way to reducing the threat of ISIS in Canada. Once again, in sending a combat mission to Iraq, Canada is acting internationally when it should be acting domestically to clean its own house.

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

“IT WAS A COLD January morning in 2003 as I walked through ankle – deep icy snow into the Toronto Convention Centre. I was attending a conference of Muslims arranged by groups allied to the Saudi – based World Assembly of Muslim Youth – WAMY. The freezing temperature and frosty welcome I received at the hands of the young Islamists had not prepared me for the chilling lecture I was about to hear. The speaker, a Kuwaiti politician, said: “Western civilization is rotten from within and nearing collapse…it [the West] will continue to grow until an outside force hits it and you will be surprised at how quickly it falls.

“The crowd burst into applause. Just sixteen months beforehand, an “outside force” had hit the New York Twin Towers on 9/11, and here was Tareq Al Suwaidan, a member of the Muslim Brotherhood from Kuwait, rubbing salt into the wounds of the West. The audience of more than two thousand young Canadian Muslims, many of them associated with the Muslim Students Association (MSA), carefully segregated into male and female sections, listened in awe. Suwaidan used elaborate charts to draw projections about the impending collapse of the West. They lustily cheered the Kuwaiti Islamist as he predicted the doom of the very civilization these young men and women were living in.

“Why were these Muslim youth, (who were) born and educated in Canada, cheering the fall of the West? Did they not consider themselves to be part of the West? If they did, why would they be cheering its imminent collapse and who were they expecting to carry out the “outside force” attack? How could they, as citizens of a democratic Western country, allow a Kuwaiti politician to write the obituary of the West, but also cheer him on as he did so?”