Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
November 17, 2015
Denmark is stepping things up again.
Saying that Denmark “should not take in so many refugees that it threatens the cohesion of our country,” the government announced a series of proposed changes to its asylum policies on Friday.
If approved, the changes would represent the third round of tightened restrictions in the past 15 months. The previous Social Democrat-led government introduced temporary residence permits for asylum seekers and limited refugees’ ability to bring family members to the country.
Shortly after taking power in June, the Venstre government slashed the benefits given to asylum seekers and then publicized the changes through an advertising campaign and social media.
On Friday, PM Lars Løkke Rasmussen, Integration Minister Inger Støjberg and Justice Minister Søren Pind announced a series of initiatives aimed at aimed at further discouraging asylum seekers from coming to Denmark.
Full list of changes here.
It’s inspirational and instructive to see. Instructive in that we see that rather than an event triggering mass round-ups, Denmark is slowly but surely moving toward both stopping new immigrants and sending back the ones already there. This speaks to the concept of supporting anything that moves in the right direction, rather than complaining that politicians or specific measures are not hardcore enough.