Today some good news from Sweden … no wrong story there, there is no good news:
https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2019-08-10/dont-go-out-alone-swedish-cops-warns-women-after-4-rapes-4-days
“It doesn't feel very safe" exclaimed one young Swedish lady following reports of a fourth rape in as many days in the Swedish city of Uppsala. "I even bought a self-defense spray yesterday. I'll have it in my hand when I go home myself. If something should happen, you are always prepared." Women in town should not be worried, but must think how to behave,” the city’s police force said in a statement to newspaper Expressen. “Feel free to walk on illuminated streets and not alone in alleys or parks,” they continued, adding that because officers “cannot be in all places, both men and women have to think ahead.” Women’s rights groups criticized the warning, calling for a greater police presence on the streets: “Reducing girls’ freedom of movement is a serious development,” activist Mariet Ghadimi told SVT Nyheter in March. “It is a structural problem that restricts girls’ freedom and rights, and in the long run affects women generally.” These are not isolated incidents as Sweden’s rape count has been rising since 2005, and jumped ten percent in 2017 alone. Between 2005 and 2017, rapes nearly doubled and sexual molestation incidents more than doubled.”
That’s the spirit, women’s rights trump any concerns about safety. What should be said here is that this problem, like all social problems is due to a radical lack of immigration. Only by super-ramping up the numbers can there be a critical mass of problem solvers who will solve the problems using their qualifications in rocket science.
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-45269764
https://www.rt.com/news/436642-rape-sweden-sexual-assault/
More migrants means more homes …doesn’t it … according to conventional economics?
https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/homeless-newcomers-refugees-canada-studies-1.5242426
“A growing number of newcomers to Canada are ending up in shelters or are finding themselves homeless, newly released government figures show. Two new reports released this week by Employment and Social Development Canada offer a glimpse into the extent of the homelessness problem across the country and reveal the populations that are most vulnerable. The national shelter study, which looked at federal data on shelter users between 2005 and 2016, found an "observable increase" in refugees using shelters. In 2016, there were 2,000 refugees sleeping in shelters, not counting those facilities designated specifically for refugees — an increase from 1,000 just two years earlier when the figures first began to be tracked. Tim Richter, president of the Canadian Alliance to End Homelessness, said he believes refugees are being forced to turn to homeless shelters because of a lack of housing capacity in areas where refugees are settling. "Many of them are coming to Toronto in Ontario, and to Quebec, and in those communities, the rental market is just really tight and we just don't have the capacity to house them," Richter said. "Homelessness is a function of housing affordability, availability and income.
When you're new to Canada, you generally won't have the income to be able to buy a house, and there's just not enough affordable housing options." Canada has been experiencing an influx of asylum seekers crossing into Canada "irregularly," avoiding official checkpoints between the Canada-U.S. border in order to file for refugee protection without being turned away under Canada's Safe Third Country Agreement with the U.S. Over 46,000 irregular border-crossers have been intercepted by RCMP since early 2017. Many of them have been staying in Toronto and Montreal to await the outcome of their refugee claims, which has put pressure on temporary housing capacity in those cities. The city of Toronto estimated in late 2018 that about 40 per cent of people using its shelters identified as refugees or asylum claimants. Other Ontario cities have been asked to help relocate refugees in order to ease the burden on Toronto's shelter system. Meanwhile, a second study released this week by Ottawa that offers a "point-in-time" snapshot of homelessness in 61 communities also noted a trend of homelessness among newcomers. It found 14 per cent of people who identified as homeless in 2018 were newcomers to Canada. Of that total, eight per cent indicated they were immigrants, three per cent identified as refugees and four per cent as refugee claimants.”
See, no problems at all. Let her rip Boris!
https://www.amazon.ca/Canada-Decay-Immigration-Diversity-Euro-Canadians/dp/1912759985/ref=dp_ob_title_bk