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Milo Yiannopoulos Says Break With E.U. Is Britain's 'Best Chance' to Protect Against Ideology That 'Threatens Our Way of Life
Image source: YouTube

Milo Yiannopoulos Says Break With E.U. Is Britain's 'Best Chance' to Protect Against Ideology That 'Threatens Our Way of Life

"I'm not even principally concerned with British sovereignty. I'm more worried about the influx of a culture that wants me dead."

Gay conservative firebrand Milo Yiannopoulos released a video on World Immigration Day explaining why he favors Brexit, the proposal for Britain to leave the European Union.

In the video, which he recorded in Alaska, he begins by explaining why he's been spending so much time in America lately instead of his native Europe.

"I've seen the continent change very dramatically in my 30-odd years on the planet," Yiannopoulos says. "Britain prides itself on being a nation of immigrants, and to some degree that's certainly true. But Muslim immigration is different."

Image source: YouTube

He asserts that, unlike previous waves of immigrants, Muslims haven't adapted to British culture, adding that successive generations of immigrants, particularly those from Pakistan, "have gotten worse, not better."

"We're sending hundreds of fighters to ISIS — nearly as many as Belgium, which is a hotbed of jihadism," he says.

The parties to blame for this profusion of radical ideology, Yiannopoulos claims, are the British media and politicians: "The idea that you can't criticize somebody or identify a problem or solve a crime properly for fear of being called racist led to 1,400 girls being raped in Rotherham."

Image source: YouTube

Yiannopoulos proceeds to blame the media for "covering up" the problem of Islamic extremism.

"Just think of how long it takes for any of your news stations or newspapers to mention the 'M-word' [Muslims] or the 'I-word' [Islam] after the latest terrorist atrocity," he says.

"As a gay man, I'm not so worried about GDP," he continues. "I'm not even principally concerned with British sovereignty. I'm more worried about the influx of a culture that wants me dead."

Yiannopoulos then asserts that the mass shooting in Orlando last week that left 49 dead was the work of "mainstream Islam," not radical Islam, and he warns that "this culture is coming into Europe":

For hundreds of years Europe was a mesmerizing and unique place in world culture. It was the pinnacle of art, music, philosophy, history, science — you name it. This is the continent of Hume, Hobbes, Shakespeare, Mozart and Wagner. But something's happened to that continent lately — something has changed as a result of unaccountable and incompetent bureaucrats.

By severing from the E.U., Yiannopoulos argues that Britain will not be subjected to the same fate of other European countries, who he claims have suffered greatly as a result of open-door immigration policies: "The U.K. has a brighter future — or at least it could if it makes the right decision this week."

Yiannopoulos goes on to state that London Mayor Sadiq Khan, a "so-called moderate," has compromised British safety and values since his election. He notes that Khan's wife has begun wearing a hijab in public, the mayor's televised political events often feature women in head scarves standing behind men and, most recently, the new mayor has banned certain ads featuring women from appearing in subway stations.

He continues:

"Immigrant" used to mean somebody who moved from one country to another to better their chances, to improve the quality of life for them and their family. But the Muslim immigrants in Europe don't seem to want that — they want something different. They want to drag us down to the regressive social attitudes and terrifying religious conservatism of the Middle East. The U.K. is better than that. The U.K., in fact, has always had a better record of being proudly independent, pro-free speech, and pro all of those other great things that make Western Civilization a great place to live ... a much better record than all of its counterparts in Europe.

Yiannopoulos concludes by calling Brexit the U.K.'s "best hope" and "best chance to stem the tide of immigration that threatens our way of life."

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