Sometimes, someone comes along and just casually reframes an entire bitter, long-running debate in just a handful of words.
Like this:
This is one of the things that European policymakers never stop to ask themselves when they import thousands upon thousands of male "refugees" into various developed European countries.
This exchange took place a few months ago in the northern England town of Crowborough. It's small — the population is around 21,000. Like many English towns of its size, it's quiet, quaint, and low-key; it's got some old traditions, some historic sites. It sounds like a nice, easy place to live.
But leaders decided to heck with all that: As The Guardian reported in April, the government is moving several hundred migrant men into nearby housing:
Hundreds of asylum seekers have been removed from government-funded hotels while others have been sent to live in army barracks, the Home Office has announced.
Eleven 'asylum hotels' in England, Scotland, and Northern Ireland have been closed, as first reported by the Guardian, and more will close 'in the coming weeks'. About 350 claimants have been moved to the Crowborough military camp in East Sussex, described by a spokesperson as 'basic accommodation'.
Ahead of the decision, residents of Crowborough turned out en masse to protest the migrant placement. If you know the modern English, you know it takes a lot to get them out into the streets and mad — and brother, were they out in the streets and mad.
As GB News reports, the decision to house the migrants in the nearby Crowborough barracks was apparently carried out in secret:
Nusrat Ghani, the Conservative MP for Sussex Weald, claimed neither she nor Tory councillors were informed of the decision to house hundreds of men at the Crowborough camp, accusing Wealden District Council's Green and Liberal Democrat coalition of conducting 'secret' talks behind the community's back.
How bad is it in Europe?
Well, a while ago this horrific animated map made the rounds on social media, and it captures the staggering scale of the problem quite adequately:
You can understand why residents are concerned about the "sexual needs" of hundreds or thousands (or millions) of grown migrant men, particularly when you consider the scale of the depraved rape gangs and sex trafficking operations that so many immigrant men have already carried out.
And yet, when pressed as to how they planned to deal with this crisis, all of the leaders seem to have the same response as the one in the video above:
Q: 'How do you plan to meet the sexual needs of 600 men?'
A: 'I don't.'
Pray tell, where will those 600 men turn?
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