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Originally Posted by Redshadowz
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I looked at the stats in your link. Frankly I'm surprised that such statistics exist or that they are available as public information. European countries seem to take great pains to hide such statistics and minimize the impact of immigration to their nations (through the use of non-coverage by media, deliberate reclassification of crimes by law enforcement agencies, national leadership direct and indirect warnings to citizens that questioning is racist, and by overall suppression of information by governments who have embraced high illegal and refugee intake).
The numbers tell the tale and thank you for posting them.
I am Norwegian by birth. We left when I was a little kid and I have only been back there one other time (when I was 12 years old and spent a year with my grandparents). I am an American citizen now, and someone who came to this country as a legal immigrant. But Norway has always been "my homeland".
I remember Oslo being a beautiful, clean, safe city. A beautiful city. It saddens me to think of what that city has become and when I think about it I always wonder "how could Norwegians forget their occupation during WW2"? How could Norwegians not understand the impact of bringing so many third world people to their first world nation? And now that it's happened, how could Norwegians just sit back like sheep and accept what their nation has become? How could Norwegians not FIGHT for their country?
A elderly German couple used to live across the street from us when we lived in Idaho. The man was a little kid when the Russian tanks drove through his town at the end of the war and he also grieves for what has happened to HIS country.
It's not racist to demand that your leaders make decisions that are solely in the best interest of the nation. Decisions that ensure your nation remains safe, thriving and prosperous. Nations have the RIGHT and the RESPONSIBILITY to do that.
European and Scandinavian countries can do whatever they want - elect who they want, live by the policies they want, bring whoever they want into their countries. I don't understand it and I don't agree with it, but it's their decisions to make. But if other countries have that right, then so do we here in the United States. We have no obligation to accept anyone into this country who is not in the best interest of this country. And we have NO obligation to apologize to anyone for the decisions we make related to this issue.