Quantcast

Wills and Kate should have talked about the Islamization of Britain during their New York trip

Prince William and Catherine, the Duchess of Cambridge, called the shots when they took in a Nets game at Barclays Center last week — including telling journalists how to dress and behave — because British royalty is the final word on kings and queens. Bhumibol Adulyadej, the king of Thailand, is richer than Queen Liz. Mohammed VI, the king of Morocco, is more powerful. The Japanese, Cambodian, and Omanese monarchies are older than the British Crown. But who cares about them?

The House of Windsor may find its days are numbered though, if the radical Islamization of Britain continues to depose the English way of life — a grim reality that could hit tolerant America next. The writing is on the wall:

Mohammed is the most popular name for baby boys in the nation which birthed the Anglican Church.

• A senior Church of England bishop wants Prince Charles’s coronation service opened with a reading from the koran.

• A rising, parallel Muslim society threatens to bump Christianity as the dominant religion within the next generation.

• The capital is nicknamed Londonstan because of its growing number of Muslims, also known as Asians.

• The country’s legal system permits shariah-style wills, penalizing widows and non-believers.

• Areas once as British as steak and kidney pudding have become sharia-controlled zones banning gambling, alcohol, music, and western clothing.

• Islamo-rappers meld thug culture with extremist ideology, brandishing guns and the koran in music videos.

• Self-styled Muslim vigilantes spout proudly in lawless cyber videos, “Islam is here in London, Mr. David Cameron, Mr. police officer, whether you like it or not.”

Britain’s acts of accommodation for its problem community amount to national suicide, making it a sitting-duck for extremist trends and the type of violence that killed 52 people and injured more than 700 in the 2005 London terror attacks, and big-hearted America can learn from its ally’s dismal experience.

Prime Minister David Cameron once said, “It is mainstream Britain which needs to integrate more with the British Asian way of life, not the other way around.” He can toss and turn at night knowing Britain has done that — to a fault.

Follow me on twitter @BritShavana

Read Shavana Abruzzo’s column every Friday on Brook‌lynDa‌ily.com. E-mail here at sabru‌zzo@c‌ngloc‌al.com.