Multiculturalism is an
anti-Australian
political ideology


The letter below, from an Australia First organiser, was published in the Maroondah Leader in its 18 July 2006 issue, following an article reagrding a call from Australia First for local councillors to support Australian culture, not divisive Multiculturalism (reported in the Maroondah Leader, 27 June 2006).



7 July 2006

I would note that the heading "Council reaffirms culture policy" (Leader, 27 June) was - to my understanding - quite wrong, in that the Council has not reaffirmed its culture policy - but, rather, only the Mayor has.

The Council's Multiculturalism policy was, of course - in typical Council fashion, never submitted by referendum to Maroondah residents for approval. Also, the interviewees have missed the whole point of Australia First's criticism; they spoke of supporting migrants, when - as they should know - that is not what Multiculturalism is about.

Multiculturalism is a political ideology that is anti-Western in nature; an ideology that engenders hate and seeks the cultural destruction of its host nation. Its long-term aim is not to protect migrants, but to destroy the host nation's culture.

To illustrate the difference, Japan has a core-culture society whereby the mainstream culture is protected and nurtured by its government. There are Japanese holidays based upon their culture, and their culture is taught and reflected in government schools.

Australia, on the other hand, is ruled by an anti-national elite who espouse and enforce Multiculturalist values, contrary to the values of the core-culture population. Australian holidays and cultural events are being undermined by Liberal-Labor politicians and their Multiculturalist fellow-travellers. Christmas is banned from many public institutions for "not being culturally inclusive", whilst many schools and kindergartens have banned Santa Claus and Christmas Carols for the same reason.

It is obvious that our culture is being undermined by Multiculturalism - our children are not being taught our society's traditions by those educational and public institutions which were once a major part of the cultural learning of our young people.

Western national traditions and cultures are being destroyed by Multiculturalism, whilst those of Asian nations - like Japan - are instead sustained and protected.

If my children went to school in Japan, they would be taught Japanese culture while in Australia the Multiculturalists scream that teaching Australian cultural traditions may offend others, so Aussie culture is removed, and our culture is being slowly destroyed. Guess which way is best?

Multiculturalism is a hate-filled political ideology that seeks the destruction of White communities worldwide by large-scale immigration. Multiculturalism advocates developing a world where everyone of every nation mixes in together, eventually to become all one world-wide people - and therefore becoming of one world-wide culture. Long-term Multiculturalism doesn't advocate cultural diversity; instead, it advocates no cultural diversity at all!

Few have stopped to consider the long-term effects of Multiculturalism upon our world, which mean not only the destruction of Western cultures, but also the disappearence of unique peoples, such as Australia's Aborigines, American Indians, and Fijians. Multiculturalism actually advocates the world-wide destruction of all unique peoples and of all unique cultures; it is truly the most genocidal ideology of our time.

The Aborigines complain about the assimilation of their people and culture as being genocide, but the Multiculturalists can say to them "You ain't seen nothing yet!"



Bob Beavers
assistant organiser
Australia First Party



Editorial comment

Over the years, the Maroondah Leader has shown itself - on many issues - to be a newspaper of high integrity, unlike the major city newspapers (the latter have journalists willing to lie to push their globalist-Multiculturalist agenda.

Obviously, any newspaper cannot publish all letters or even publish them in their entirety. In the letter above, the sentences in italics are text that the Leader was unable to fit in, presumably due to the restricted space of its letters section (the writer has kindly provided a copy of the original letter).

In being even-handed, the Maroondah Leader also published a letter from a couple against Australia First, thus giving space to both sides, as should ideally be the case with all newspapers.

A follow-up reply was sent to the Leader, in response to the anti-AF missive, but was not published. Obviously, the Leader has many issues to cover, and cannot enable all letter-writing debates. However, for readers' interest, the follow-up letter is reproduced here.




References:

"No referendum"
Maroondah Leader, 18 July 2006, p. 27

"Council reaffirms culture policy"
Maroondah Leader, 27 June 2006, p. 9

August 2006



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