Multiculturalism means that eating people is on the table. Diversity is our strength means putting some people on the menu.
“If you are not prepared to use force to defend civilization, then be prepared to accept barbarism.” — Thomas Sowell
If you do not fight for what is right, what is wrong will win. Evil has no brakes. It will not stop with sin between its ears, it will seek to perpetrate evil with its hands. If no one stops it, it will not be able to stop itself.
"It is common enough to blame Rome for not making peace. But it was a true popular instinct that there could be no peace with that sort of people. It is common enough to blame the Roman for his Delenda est Carthago; Carthage must be destroyed... but Carthage fell because she was faithful to her own philosophy and had followed out to its logical conclusion her own vision of the universe. Moloch had eaten his children." — G.K. Chesterton, The Everlasting Man
Evil eats itself. It is the illusion of eternity. It is a snake chewing its own tail. It is suicide. And if no one stops it, it will will devour everything.
“The Barbarian hopes — and that is the mark of him, that he can have his cake and eat it too. He will consume what civilization has slowly produced after generations of selection and effort, but he will not be at pains to replace such goods, nor indeed has he a comprehension of the virtue that has brought them into being. Discipline seems to him irrational, on which account he is ever marvelling that civilization, should have offended him with priests and soldiers.... In a word, the Barbarian is discoverable everywhere in this, that he cannot make: that he can befog and destroy but that he cannot sustain; and of every Barbarian in the decline or peril of every civilization exactly that has been true." — Hilaire Belloc
Whether it is a prodigal apostate spending all of his inheritance or it is a foreign locust devouring all your harvest, evil consumes. Wickedness is never full. Its god is its belly and it will gorge itself to death.
"That nursery tale from nowhere about St. George and the Dragon really expresses best the relation between the West and the East. There were many other differences, calculated to arrest even the superficial eye, between a saint and a dragon. But the essential difference was simply this: that the Dragon did want to eat St. George; whereas St. George would have felt a strong distaste for eating the Dragon. In most of the stories he killed the Dragon. In many of the stories he not only spared, but baptised it. But in neither case did the Christian have any appetite for cold dragon. The Dragon, however, really has an appetite for cold Christian—and especially for cold Christianity. This blind intention to absorb, to change the shape of everything and digest it in the darkness of a dragon's stomach; this is what is really meant by the Pantheism and Cosmic Unity of the East. The Cosmos as such is cannibal; as old Time ate his children. The Eastern saints were saints because they wanted to be swallowed up. The Western saint, like St. George, was sainted by the Western Church precisely because he refused to be swallowed. The same process of thought that has prevented nationalities disappearing in Christendom has prevented the complete appearance of Pantheism. All Christian men instinctively resist the idea of being absorbed into an Empire; an Austrian, a Spanish, a British, or a Turkish Empire. But there is one empire, much larger and much more tyrannical, which free men will resist with even stronger passion. The free man violently resists being absorbed into the empire which is called the Universe. He demands Home Rule for his nationality, but still more Home Rule for his home. Most of all he demands Home Rule for himself." — G.K. Chesterton, A Miscellany of Men
Christendom is not willing to be consumed and so it refuses to fight ire with ire. It does not demean itself to the tactics of its enemies. It will not feast on sin. It fasts from evil. If it does not, it merely becomes what it tolerates and is either destroyed by abdication or conformed to cannibalism.
The war cry of the world is, "your body for mine."
The war cry of Christendom is, "My body for yours."
Christ gives life.
Chaos consumes.
Christ converts and saves.
Chaos devours and dies.