You Won’t Believe What This World Leader Said
By Clarion Project

When a world leader speaks candidly — especially with issues having to do with Islamism — do we judge him based on the truth of his words or if his words are politically correct?

Speaking at the World Youth Forum held in Egypt last month, Egypt’s President Adbul Fattah el-Sisi participated in a session where he answered questions from the floor.

The following is an extremely candid answer from el-Sisi to the question: Why are world leaders closing their doors to immigration?

His answer speaks volumes to the problems of the growth of Islamism in the West and the lack of integration by Islamist immigrants in Western countries.

continue:

https://aresathena.wordpress.com/2018/12/12/egypts-president-adbul-fattah-el-sisi-states-the-unvarnished-truth/

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  • I'm really afraid that he will be assassinated.

    Byron wilkins said:

    Al Sisi saved his country from the Muslim Brotherhood and is lucky to be alive. Muslims hardly get along with themselves and do not assimilate well with other races.

  • You nailed it!

    Cheryl Nelson said:

    al Sisi has common sense, and he is right.  The solution to problems inside one's own country lies within the country, not outside of it. What if the Demos win in 2020?  Do we have the right to flee to other countries and say take care of us?  No.  Because we did not take care of business in the US when we should have.  Would we have the right to force those countries to respect our laws and our way of life?  No.  Individual cultures are built by those who built them.  Who else would have the right to them, but those that built them and assisted them.

    Some elements of Mexico want to retake parts of the US southwest.  While the land itself may be the issue, what has been built on it was not built by the would-be re-conquistadors.  My opinion is that if something is not built by an invading people, that people is not likely capable to maintain it and would fall into disrepair and decay.  What victory is in that? 

    But what al Sisi doesn't speak of is the fact that migration is being used, not just by non-violent refugees, but the violent jihadis to take over other countries.  To say that truth would get him beheaded. 

  • al Sisi has common sense, and he is right.  The solution to problems inside one's own country lies within the country, not outside of it. What if the Demos win in 2020?  Do we have the right to flee to other countries and say take care of us?  No.  Because we did not take care of business in the US when we should have.  Would we have the right to force those countries to respect our laws and our way of life?  No.  Individual cultures are built by those who built them.  Who else would have the right to them, but those that built them and assisted them.

    Some elements of Mexico want to retake parts of the US southwest.  While the land itself may be the issue, what has been built on it was not built by the would-be re-conquistadors.  My opinion is that if something is not built by an invading people, that people is not likely capable to maintain it and would fall into disrepair and decay.  What victory is in that? 

    But what al Sisi doesn't speak of is the fact that migration is being used, not just by non-violent refugees, but the violent jihadis to take over other countries.  To say that truth would get him beheaded. 

  • Al Sisi saved his country from the Muslim Brotherhood and is lucky to be alive. Muslims hardly get along with themselves and do not assimilate well with other races.

  • Most  moderate Muslims who reside in Islamist nations and speak the truth are beheaded.  Let us all hope that Al Sisi will survive!

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