
Europe has fought off Islamic conquest for 1,600 years. The struggle appears to be winding down:
A Danish court on Friday for the first time meted out a verdict in the first criminal case using the country’s new law prohibiting “improper treatment of a religious text.” The court sentenced Islamism critic Rasmus Paludan and one of his associates to each pay a fine of DKK10,000 (just over €1,300) for destroying copies of the Quran at Folkemødet, a civic festival aimed at fostering open debate, in Allinge, Bornholm, last summer.
Paludan was expressing opposition to the policy of displacing the European population with Muslim colonists.
In the tent of Paludan’s migration-critical political party, Stram Kurs, the two tore pages out of copies of the Quran, which Muslims consider a holy book, put the book on a grill, and let it drop into puddles on the ground.
Doing that to a Bible will earn you a pat on the head from the establishment, even if technically the law applies to holy books other than the Koran.
Paludan can be thankful that the Great Replacement has not yet reached full flower. By the time Muslims attain majority status, dissidents like him will be summarily killed.