Excerpt:
Europe is already lost to a Muslim takeover and America has started down that same path. That's the proposition persuasively made by Mark Steyn in his book "America Alone: The End of the World As We Know It."
Mr. Steyn notes that America and Australia "grew the institutions of their democracy with relatively homogeneous populations and then evolved into successful 'multicultural' societies. But the continent isn't multicultural so much as bicultural. You have hitherto homogeneous Scandinavian societies whose cities have become 40 percent Muslim in the space of a generation. Imagine colonial New England when it was still the Mayflower crowd and one day they woke up and noticed that all the Aldens and Standishes, Cookes and Winslows were in their 50s and 60s and all the young guys were called Ahmed and Mohammed.
That's what happened in Rotterdam and Malmo. There are aging native populations and young Muslim populations — If there's three, four, or more cultures, you can all hold hands and sing "We Are the World." But if there's just two — you and the Other — that's generally more fractious. Bicultural societies are among the least stable in the world, especially once it's no longer quite clear who's the majority and who's the minority — a situation much of Europe is fast approaching, as you can see by visiting any French, Austrian, Belgian, or Dutch maternity ward."