Ongoing Violence & Riots in France

There are many similarities between the immigration in France and the US.

The key difference is the first, the type of immigrant. The average Mexican and American can share a beer together, the average European and Muslim cannot. Even though that is a small example, it translates to a very wide cultural gap.

The second and more important, are the attitudes dealing with this.

Here in America a good part of the nation is not socialist leaning nor polically correct, and they are not afraid to voice it. Any politicain who is going to give away disporportionate amounts of tax money to immigrant welfare may not last long in office in alot of areas in the US. Not to mention people do make noise when something not to their liking even though it is deemed pollitically correct, they do not always win, but sometimes it is enough to tip the balance to not make it go any further.

Europe on the other hand is a different story. Politically correction rules. Socialist programs that pour money into these "multi-cultural" programs immigrants is the status quo and has been for decades. Not to mention basically the majority of Europe is ruled by a politically correct left leaning attitude, from politics to the major press. Anyone who sees different is more or less branded a nazi or a racist. The desenting views were shut out. They were used to basicly one way of seeing things now this is where it got them.

The birth rate of the immigrants will soon outstrip the native European and in around 50 years they will become the majority.

France is an example of more to come in Europe. Whether they do something about it is we shall see. Maybe France will surrender again as easily as it did agaisnt Hitler, I hope not.


As for me I'm glad I live in America, and I will keep my voting conservative(right wing), and not liberal(left wing) lest we turn into another France.
 
Italian Guy said:
mmarsh said:
What a crock! Compare crime rates, poverty in the Muslim Areas against those poor areas in the US (like South-Central LA). The US is much higher, right?

I don't know, is it?

As for national figures (not just poor areas, which I have no data about, but in general terms), the ratio is actually different:

"In the course of the last two decades French crime rate has been growing steadily. Do you think the US society has the highest crime rate in the world? You'd better give it a second thought: Since 1973, the overall crime rate has decreased 40 %, the murders rate has gone down 50 % and robberies almost 60 %.
While the US crime rate has decreased, the European one has increased. According to the Interpol data, in 2001 there were 4,161 murders out of 100,000 people in the US. In France, 6,941.
A partial reason is: US average sentence for armed robbery, 54 months; in France, 18.".

Found it on Italian newspaper http://www.ilfoglio.it/downloadpdf.php?id=41805.
 
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