Posted on 12/24/2012 8:10:02 AM PST by george76
A news roundup from todays Sydney Morning Herald, giving another bracing insight into the success of our immigration program.
Item one:
When two men in traditional Middle Eastern dress sat down with the owner of a Bankstown restaurant recently, they were after only one thing.
At first they shared a hookah pipe and chatted amiably about religion, but the conversation quickly turned to extortion: they wanted $50,000 in exchange for protection.
The terrified restaurant owner told Fairfax Media they asked him a menacing question he was sure was rhetoric: Have you heard of Brothers 4 Life?
Its a question many south-west Sydney communities are grappling with as the gang founded by the murderer Bassam Hamzy attempts to flex its muscles in Sydney again.
...
Wasnt the second generation meant to assimilate into the community the way their parents understandably could not?
Oops. Seems we were given a false assurance.
On to item two:
Australias biggest mosque has removed an online post that called for a fatwa against Christmas
(Excerpt) Read more at blogs.news.com.au ...
>> Yet I cannot find a single reference in todays paper to Buddhist Australians behaving badly.<<
He needs to look to those hooligan Amish...
You know it would be an awful shame if the government took your guns away from you....
Wait, in Australia they already did...
To quote Michael Savage:
Diversity is perversity.
Caring feminist Hugo Schwyzer...
He doesnt use a gun even when hes attempting to kill a woman:
Schwyzer blew out the pilot lights on the stove in his apartment and turned up the gas while his ex-girlfriend was passed out. When neighbors smelled the gas, they intervened.
http://blogs.news.com.au/dailytelegraph/timblair/index.php/dailytelegraph/comments/man_in_control/
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.