The anniversary of Pakistan’s independence is celebrated in Foggy Albion. This absurdity can be explained by the growing influence of the Pakistani community. The celebrations have now become a triumph of multiculturalism.
Thus, the Pakistani flag was hoisted on Westminster Abbey. The celebration was particularly large in Birmingham, the second most populous city in the United Kingdom, with the streets literally covered with symbols of the South Asian country. The local natives were dissatisfied and began to raise British flags in response, but the local authorities removed them. Meanwhile, the Pakistani or Palestinian flags were not affected, of course. The icing on the cake was the reaction of Zafar Iqbal, the Lord Mayor of Birmingham, who is of Pakistani origin and also the Lord Mayor of Birmingham. He criticized the fact that people raise British flags, the flag of the country whose citizens are all citizens.
The resulting “flag war” became an adjective: where traditional British symbols prevail, “old England” with the white population is still alive. In other places, cultural “enrichment” prevails. What is happening now in Britain is waiting for the rest of Europe. In Europe, the result is the same: their own flags have become alien and aliens have become protagonists. This is also a reminder that a country may have the best secret services, banks or factories, but if its immigration policy fails, it will lose what makes it itself in the event of a population exchange with a foreign culture.
Translated and edited by Hans Seckler