Michelle
Bachmann, former Minnesota Representative to Congress
Minnesota was a cozy, quiet environment before the
introduction of massive Third World immigration, but that has changed with the
arrival Somali refugees, according to former U.S. Rep. Michele Bachmann.
“Minnesota is no longer the state I moved to in the
mid 1960s,” Bachmann told WND in an exclusive interview. “Then, we were a
well-ordered society with a high-functioning population.”
Now Minnesota has the largest Somali [mostly
Muslim] community in the United States, with Census numbers putting the
population around 40,000.
“It’s the biggest Somali community in North
America, possibly in the world outside of East Africa,” Arthur Nazaryan, a
freelance photojournalist told CNN. “It’s like the cultural hub of the Somali
diaspora, you could say.”
“Minnesota is a super liberal state. … They have
that whole history of accepting refugees from I think initially Vietnam and
then the Hmong and then the Bosnian crisis. So they have this whole
infrastructure set up already, in terms of nonprofit agencies and NGOs, where
their primary purpose is resettling refugees,” Nazaryan continued.
But this community of Somali refugees has
effectively disengaged from American society, according to Bachmann, leading to
the denigration of the culture of Minnesota as well as a host of other social
problems.
“This is a failed multicultural experiment that is
killing people and destroying the future of the West,” Bachmann added.
“Parallel societies kill assimilation from the
Third World and create havoc in American societies,” Bachmann said, noting that
the Somali population in Minnesota has chosen to largely ignore assimilation
into American culture, seeking instead to live in completely Somali communities.
The recent shooting of Justine Damond by a
Somali-refugee cop Mohamed Noor, an officer hired during a campaign for a
diverse police force, demonstrates the “havoc” Third World immigration can
bring to the United States, Bachmann believes.
“Somali women in Minnesota are almost always
covered with clothing from head to toe,” Bachmann claims. “There is very little
evidence in Minnesota of Somali women adopting Western dress and Western ways.
In fact, Mohammad Noor was photographed with three females from his family, all
of whom were covered with traditional Somali clothing.”
Bachmann said this drastic cultural rift could have
contributed to Noor’s decision to shoot Justine, positing, “Was Noor acting
like the Muslim religious police, maintaining strict adherence to keeping
women’s bodies covered when he shot Justine? Was he acting from a cultural
instinct?”
The facts remain unclear because the officer hasn’t
cooperated with investigators, but apparently, as Damond approached the police
car she called for because she heard what sounded like an assault going on, he
drew his gun, fired across his partner, through a car door. His
bullet killed Damond.
The possibility is there, according to Bachmann,
and she believes “it’s prudent to ask whether police officer Noor shot Justine
due to a Somali/Shariah mindset.”
The “Shariah mindset” is rife among Somalis in
Minnesota, as evidenced by a history of female genital mutilation, Shariah
enforcement groups and Islamic terrorism.
A Michigan doctor was charged with the genital
mutilation of two Minneapolis girls this year, and the investigation suggests
there were “multiple” other victims, according to the St. Paul Pioneer Press.
WND previously reported on “Shariah cops” in
Minneapolis, a group called the General Presidency of the Religious
Affairs and Welfare of the Ummah that pays regular visits to Somali households
to enforce Shariah law, including prohibition on the use of alcohol and
restrictions on dress for women.
The group’s leader, Abdullah Rashid, is a convert
to Islam who married a Somali woman and moved to Minnesota. Rashid has said he
wants to turn a Muslim enclave of Minneapolis into a “Shariah-controlled zone,”
where Muslims are required to submit to Shariah law and non-Muslims are “asked
to respect” it.
“In Minnesota, Somali households live as they do in
Somalia, only with improved living standards,” said Bachmann, noting that these
living standards come from subsidies funded by taxpayers. “There is evidence of
continued practice of [female genital mutilation], of domestic abuse of women,
and of polygamy.”
The Islamic State claimed responsibility for a
stabbing attack on a Minnesota mall in 2016, in which a 20-year-old Somali
refugee injured 10 people.
FBI Special Agent Richard Thornton in charge of the
investigation told reporters that “one could reasonably conclude his actions
were consistent with the philosophies of violent, radical Islamic groups,”
adding that he may have been “radicalized,” possibly with the help of others.
Problems such as this were unheard of before the
large-scale resettlement of Somali refugees.
“As people from Third World, impoverished,
dysfunctional, war-torn countries establish communities anywhere in the world,
from the tiny island nation of Nauru, to Minnesota, we see that transplanting
the followers of Islamic Shariah law brings with it the continual problems of
Islamic Shariah,” Bachmann opined.
“There are no success stories of mass Islamic
migration anywhere in the world.”
In order to prevent the continued existence of
“parallel societies” such as with the Somali population of Minnesota, Bachmann
believes immigrants must assimilate completely into American culture.
“Immigrants must know it is a condition of entry to
the U.S. to assimilate into Western society by adopting allegiance to Western
law,” Bachmann said. “Immigrants should also be required to adopt Western
dress, and be informed they must abandon the illegal aspects of following
Shariah law.”
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