Raheem Kassam rose to prominence working for Breitbart.com before joining the Steve Bannon “War Room” podcast and eventually launching The National Pulse website where he acts as editor-in-chief.
He also served as chief advisor to former UK Independence Party (UKIP) leader Nigel Farage, with whom he has a close relationship. In fact, Farage penned the introduction to Kassam’s first book “No Go Zones.”
Both of Kassam’s books deal with the critical question of mass immigration, something Kassam opposes and something with which he has first hand experience, as the child of Muslim immigrants from Tanzania.
Kassam also wrote the forward to Gavin Wax’s book “The Emerging Populist Majority.”
No Go Zones: How Sharia Law Is Coming to a Neighborhood Near You
Not one to shy away from taboo subjects, in his first book Kassam tackles the notion of No Go Zones – Muslim dominated districts inside cities and states where the police no longer go, where Sharia Law is practiced, and which are nearly autonomous from the countries in which they exist.
While some doubt their existence (or argue over the definition) Kassam puts on his investigative reporter hat and ventures into them, from Malmö, Sweden and London, England to Hamtramck, Michigan.
Cloaked in his own skin, Kassam is able to penetrate these communities like most Western journalists cannot. He goes on the ground to expose what life is really like in these communities and how their lack of integration creates issues like how it’s the children of immigrants who become extremists.
Kassam details how inside No Go Zones things like female genital mutilation, sexual assault and even honor killings go undetected or are adjudicated in Sharia courts. He then goes on to detail how Liberal welfare policies fun and even propagate this cultural divide.
Almost unthinkable at the time of its publication in 2017, in the aftermath of CHAZ, the existence of a no go zone isn’t unthinkable. The reality of them, however, is frightening.
Enoch Was Right
The phrase “Enoch Was Right,” might not mean much to an American, but in the United Kingdom it’s been a rallying cry against the dangers of open borders for over 50 years.
British parliamentarian Enoch Powell delivered what is known as his “Rivers of Blood” speech in 1963. He warned against mass immigration after speaking to his constituents who at that time already saw England being transformed before their very eyes.
The phrase “rivers of blood” actually never appears in Powell’s speech. In fact, it’s adapted from Virgil’s Aeneid which Powell quotes, “as I look ahead, I am filled with foreboding; like the Roman, I seem to see ‘the River Tiber foaming with much blood’.”
Powell’s speech set the tone around the immigration discussion for decades and more recently, argues Kassam, has been purposefully misrepresented, painting Powell as a racist. The speech, says Kassam, is far more nuanced.
Regardless, Kassam makes the bolt point that “Enoch Was Right” and that unchecked immigration combine with no plan for integration isn’t just a recipe to tear England apart, it’s already happened.
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