Londonistan

by Melanie Phillips

Paper Book, 2006

Status

Available

Call number

363.3250941

Publication

New York : Encounter Books, 2006.

Description

The suicide bombings carried out in London in 2005 by British Muslims revealed an enormous fifth column of Islamist terrorists and their sympathizers. Under the noses of British intelligence, London has become the European hub for the promotion, recruitment and financing of Islamic terror and extremism - so much so that it has been mockingly dubbed Londonistan. In this ground-breaking book Melanie Phillips pieces together the story of how Londonistan developed as a result of the collapse of traditional English identity and accommodation of a particularly virulent form of multiculturalism.

User reviews

LibraryThing member danoomistmatiste
A really frightening account of the inroads that Islamists have made into British Society and Polity. At this rate one would not be surprised if the green crescent were to fly over Big Ben in a few years. Wake up and smell he Cordite.
LibraryThing member Novak
Londonistan: Melanie Phillips’s (The Times) frightening reality of the last days of Britain. Her predictions from 2006 all too evident today. Even this book does not speak for the thousands of Londoners displaced when this Muslim invasion began. In just a few short years the Cockney accent and
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the London families fled. Those families could tell exactly what was happening and what the future held. They were screaming it from the rooftops. The intelligentsia, politicians and judges were far too distant from the reality to understand or care, they ignored the problem and were deaf to the protests. They have created in Britain exactly the unsolvable situation that has existed in the Balkan states for generations.

Now it is too late.

How do I know all this? I was there. Uncle Sam will not be riding to the rescue this time.
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LibraryThing member georgee53
Controversial arguments about the failures of multiculturalism, Islamic terrorism, the open society and political correctness stymying debate.
LibraryThing member citizencane
As a follow-up to my belated reading of Lawrence Wright's "The Looming Tower" I chose "Londonistan" by Melanie Phillips. Her book, as the title suggests, is focused on the history and progress of Islamism in the United Kingdom. Phillips's recitation of the facts and her analysis are brilliant
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albeit familiarly sobering and depressing. On the face of it it is hard to understand how an alien, minority culture with no roots in a nation's past can within a matter of a couple of generations come to, if not dominate, then certainly to intimidate the majority, native culture. In this clash of civilizations we see the results of what happens when a top down "trahison des clercs" that rejects a nation's history, religion, social traditions and institutions eventuates in a complete hollowing out of that country's esprit, it's ability to resist. attacks from within.

Written in the aftermath of the 2005 suicide bombing attacks on the London train system, Phillips relates the now familiar response of most of what used to pass for liberal, democratic, historical Western civilizations which can be summed up as what can we Westerners do to make you hate us less, or at least not hate us so much that we can resume our day to day lives without fear that a chance encounter with you will end in my bodily parts strewn about the public square. The failure of Britain's elites, the Labor, Tory and Liberal Democrat parties, the media, the academy (bien sur!), and the Church of England at the top of the hierarchy to defend the institutions and traditions and freedoms that made Britain great is chronicled in detail.

There might always be an England, but I wouldn't bet that it will be in any recognizable way English. The big picture lesson for the West at large can be summed up as follows. In any clash of civilizations the one whose members maintain the essential truth of their religion and the superiority of their way of life will overcome the one whose members believe in the essential truth of nothing and regard their culture as one that is no better than and in some ways considerably worse than that of their adversaries, always assuming of course that they are capable of recognizing their adversaries.
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Language

Original publication date

2006-05-08

Physical description

xxv, 213 p.; 24 inches

ISBN

1594031444 / 9781594031441

Pages

xxv; 213
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