George Cabot Lodge pointed out that, "When you are accustomed to anything, you are estranged from it." It seems to me that Canadians, in our presumed duty of bending over and accepting the most contrary types into our society-even those whose religion demands of us that we relinquish at their behest all vestiges of our Judeo-Christian culture (except those indicants which demand the submissive act of bending over)-have become disjointed from the disturbing consequences of what has altered into, since Pierre Trudeau's pernicious gift of "multiculturalism," this nation's acquiescent behaviour toward those immigrants refusing to assimilate into what little remains of our Canadian identity.
What patriotic English Canadian could have dreamed or imagined, even a year ago, that a bastion against this gross imprudence and pluralistic madness would hail from the beautiful and rebellious province of Quebec? But it has, and in the person of Pauline Marois. Here is another women (where are the men?) willing to take on the imposing idiosyncrasies of Islam's protagonists, whose only recourse to having their religion's egregious culture publicly scrutinized is the over-worked, knee-jerk accusation of Islamophobia and racism. But cavil will enter at any hole...
Pauline Marois, like Ayann Hirsi Ali, like Wafa Sultan, like Oriani Fallaci, has found the courage to expose veridical Islam (not the self-aggrandized, fantastic Islam promised by its apologists) and its growing number of invidious followers, who have no intention of integrating into the French speaking society of Quebec, nor into the English and French speaking societies existing in the Canada outside of Quebec. Like Pauline Hanson of Australia, who complained recently about Muslim immigrants, that they "have no intention of being Australian," Pauline Marois is also shedding light on the same politically obfuscated problem now facing Quebec, which is that the vast majority of Muslim immigrants, as a result of the antipathetically insular tendencies of their religion, arrive here already disinclined to learn or speak the official language of Quebec, which is the one essential step toward integrating into Quebec's French culture. These Muslim immigrants have no intention of being Quebecois.
The rest of Canada should follow the example set by Pauline Marois and the brave Quebecers of Herouxville, which is to defend our Western traditions and our Judeo-Christian morals, as they have served us rewardingly for well over a century, and long before the hateful culture of Islam darkened our horizons. The Conservative Government of Prime Minister Stephen Harper should have taken note of the prescient people of Herouxville, of the courageous Pauline Marois, and followed their lead. Instead, in making pretence of deterring what has been realized too late within European democracies as Islam's religiously intended evisceration of Judeo-Christian cultures in countries like France and Holland and England, the Harper Government has accommodated Islam in order, as reported in the CBC, "to make it feasible for veiled Muslim women to uncover their faces behind a screen and in front of a female elections official."
If a Sovereign Quebec is needed to wake up the rest of Canada to the threat of Islam's hateful and violent culture, then I'm all for it. I much rather would prefer to live beside a sovereign French Quebec passionately protective and conscious of democratic Quebecois culture than beside a caliphate Quebecistan inhabited by those angry apologists for Islam who mendaciously demand I believe them when they tell me that a majority Muslim electorate in that province will not result in the total extirpation of the French language and French culture. Pauline Marois is not so foolish as to consent to such an insidious and malefic encroachment upon her beautiful French Quebec, and neither am I.
Long live a sovereign French Quebec! Long live Pauline Marois and the PQ!
Written by Michael Devolin