An Examination Of The Logic of Multiculturalism
Below is a copy of an article from the Daily Express from 2008:
–——–
SIR GULAM: WE NEED A 10-YEAR BAN ON MIGRANTS
Monday
December 1,2008
By
Alison Little, Deputy Political Editor
BRITAIN
should shut its borders to all immigrants for up to 10 years to
prevent racial unrest, a top Indian-born businessmen said yesterday.
High-profile
Labour donor Sir Gulam Noon, known as the “curry king” because of
his multi-million-pound ready meals empire, said a ban was needed to
stop racist groups exploiting tensions.
“I
strongly feel that whoever are the immigrants here, we’d better
give them jobs and give them dignity to live here before we import
some more,” Sir Gulam told BBC1’s Andrew Marr Show.
“I
do not want a situation whereby a party like the BNP says, ‘Listen,
all your jobs are being taken away by immigrants’. We have to be
extremely careful.
“Some
sort of a ban should be there,” said Sir Gulam, who last week
survived the terrorist attack on the Taj Mahal Palace hotel in Mumbai
by barricading himself into his suite.
Sir
Gulam, 72, who came to the UK in 1966 with just £50 in his pocket,
is understood to have said: “We should wait for five or 10 years,
until all the newcomers have been properly integrated and assimilated
into the country.
“Until
then we should just shut the door. We can only accommodate so many.
There is always a danger that for the sake of political correctness,
or a party’s political advantage, we find ourselves filling up the
country with too many immigrants who will disturb the balance and
upset the people – particularly the young people – of the host
community.”
He
also warned: “You can’t just put hundreds of thousands of people
on this small island. There is a limit.”
He
believes that immigrants must learn English and schoolgirls should
not wear veils. The moderate Muslim also called on Britain to be
tougher on extremists, saying it was a “soft target because we are
mollycoddling these people”, who then saw it as a sign of weakness.
His message to extremists was: “If you don’t like this country,
get out.”
A
Home Office spokesman said in response to Sir Gulam’s comments:
“People understand that migration can bring benefits but they also
rightly demand that we have robust systems in place to control those
coming here.
“Our
new points-based immigration system is about getting only the right
people and no more.
“It
is a powerful set of controls, which allows us to raise and lower the
bar depending on the needs of the labour market and the country as a
whole. We will use those levers.”
–——–
Following the London bombings in 2005, Sir Gulam Noon had told those Muslims who refuse to embrace British traditions to: ‘go back to whatever you regard as your home country and leave us in peace’. Sir Gulam Noon further pointed out that:
‘We are relative newcomers to a community with a long tradition of liberal democracy. If immigrants do not like that, the answer is simple. Get out.’
Sir
Gulam Noon
added:
‘I dearly want to see Muslims in my chosen country thriving as part of an integrated, intelligent, vibrant society. That means affirming our nationality as British but our religion as Muslim. It also means escaping our ghettos and assimilating fully into society.’
Gerald
Howarth, a
Tory MP, had made
similar comments previously.
In reference to the 3,000 odd Muslims who, according to the former
police chief Lord Stevens, had undergone terrorist training, Mr
Howarth said:
‘We can’t compromise with these people. Those who are brought up in this country – born, bred and educated in Britain, but despise everything we stand for, despise our values, loathe our country and do not show it any allegiance – I’m sure we are better off without them. Go and find somewhere else to live. I stand by that.
Quite clearly, we have got to try to work with this disaffected youth, but the ones for whom there is no compromise – if that’s their attitude, perhaps they should go and find another country where they would feel more at home.’
Mr
Howarth’s comments provoked protests from all the usual quarters,
although Sir Gulam Noon’s comments did not. One cannot imagine why.
Recently,
President Trump and his supporters have encountered similar protests
for raising the same issues.
The
problem then (and now) was far worse than had been acknowledged. The
Home Office’s own figures had revealed that 26% of British Muslims
felt no loyalty to Britain; 13% defended terrorism; and 1% were
either involved in or supported terrorist activity both in the UK and
abroad. Given that the Muslim population was then at least
1.6million, then 1% is 16,000.
It
should not be the case that those who advocate, support, participate
in and excuse terrorism have the option to leave, and that if they do
not, then the host nation will just have to be killed and bombed
regardless. Those immigrants who hate the host nation and are out to
cause trouble, should be sent back to their own countries.