By using this site, you agree to our Privacy Policy and our Terms of Use. Close
Normchacho said:
Qwark said:
Normchacho said:
This is a serious question, do most European countries actually lack the mechanisms to separate religious law and state law? In the U.S. there can't be any laws based on religious beliefs and federal law always takes precedence over religious doctrine.

 

State law goes above religious law in Europe although some exceptions have been made for religions. Point is that a state law in Europe could be annualized and reformed by a religious based law if there are enough votes, for a political party given the fact that the percentage of muslims in Europe is rising, mostly low educated north Africans or people from the middle-east a Muslim party could do very well and make the scenario which I stated above happen.


But...that's a long way off isn't it? I mean...only like 5% of people in the Netherlands are Muslims...and what percentage of those are even pro sharia law? Also, doesn't the Netherlands have some sort of protection from religious based law?


It is a long way off but with uncontrolled immigration ans a deflation of Dutch people ans a relatively higher fertility rate of immigrants numbers tend to change pretty quickly over a period of ten years and the ten years after that etc. especially considering that Africa's and Asia's population tends to grow rather fast and in times of instability which is inevitable guess where they are heading to.



Please excuse my (probally) poor grammar