GHETTO
BRITAIN (44% of Muslims against integration)
UK Daily Star ^ | January 23 2008 | Emma Wall
Posted on Friday, January 23,
2009 2:23:15 PM
Muslims seek to work on colonizing Britain just as they have
successfully colonized France with there thousands of enclaves, towns, cities,
villages, and zones in cities that the country of
MUSLIMS want
to create their own communities and remain segregated from British society.
A shocking 44% think they should be free to
develop along separate lines.
But critics claim Muslims will create their own
ghettos if they are left to their own devices.
The poll found religion has replaced race as the
biggest equality issue, with six in 10 Brits thinking it is more divisive. Mass
tension has grown following terror attacks from Muslim fanatics, including the
7/7 Tube bombings in 2005.
The war in
But critics are fuming Muslims are refusing to fit
into our way of life.
English Democrats’ chairman Robin Tilbrook said: “As far as I’m concerned, what we want to be
about is having an integrated society.
“If people don’t want to integrate, they shouldn't
be here.
“It’s not at all right to have what’s really a
sort of ghetto situation developing – it’s going to lead to trouble.
“We can’t have a single society with lots of
different rules.” Stephen Green, national director of Christian Voice, said:
“I’m not surprised because there are already Muslim enclaves all over the
country. They keep themselves to themselves anyway.”
The Equalities and Human Rights Commission poll
found 67% of Muslims would not be happy for their child to marry someone of a
different religion. But marrying someone from a different race bothers them
less, with 61% content with the idea.
The shock results come a day after commission
chairman Trevor Phillips said
And the commission said the poll confirmed Brits
are “increasingly at ease with racial diversity”.
It found 58% of ethnic minorities are optimistic
about the future and 56% of the public think
Mr Phillips, 55, said: “At this historic moment, when
“The survey points to emerging religious
divisions. And as we mark a darker moment in our history, the 10th anniversary
into the murder of Stephen Lawrence, it is clear the police still have work to
do to convince our ethnic minority communities they deserve their trust.”