Muslims, Mosques and Mosquitoes
by Paul Weston
Although the population of Great Britain is reputed to consist of only sixty million people, a recentIndependentnewspaper article argued there may well be up to eightymillion inhabitants of this poor benighted island, and as the Muslim population isexpanding atten timesthe rate of the demographically dying post-Christian population,one can only reasonably conclude that a good percentage of these possible extra twentymillion bodies are of Islamic descent.There is no particular reason to disregard such a possibility just because it is not of mainstream acceptance. The number of Sharia courts operating in Britain was thoughtto be only five until yesterday, which proved to be yet another naïve and delusionalliberal
hope
shattered by the news that there are actuallyeighty-fiveSharia courts sittingin Britain, a seventeen-fold increase on received opinion. One is almost tempted to notethat Sharia courts are expanding like mosquitoes, but perhaps that would be a littledangerous in the modern Western world, so I will refrain from saying so.When Mark Steyn attracted the attention of the Canadian Thought Police by relaying in print the words of Mullah Krekar… “
Just look at the development within Europe, wherethe number of Muslims is expanding like mosquitoes”
his utilisation of another man’swords led directly to his hate speech trial as the authorities reflexively tried to censor out any semblance of truth as to the real number of Muslims in Europe.Comparing the reproductive proclivity of Muslims with mosquitoes is to make a rather distasteful association and not one that sits easily with the average European, his or her mind filled with notions of oppression, prejudice and general Western ne’er do well,unlike the good Mullah who presumably has no such mental shackles. But although Mr Krekar is a member of a faith not universally known for its contribution to stand upcomedy, was his linking of Muslims and mosquitoes not perhaps subconsciously drawnfrom an old sketch by Peter Cook and John Cleese, in which Cook took it upon himself to inform Cleese of an interesting fact?PETER COOK: The grasshopper is an interesting creature… up and down and upit goes, all over arable land. That’s land that’s actually tilled byArabs. You see the interesting fact about your Arab is that he can
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