"ALL CAPS IN DEFENSE OF LIBERTY IS NO VICE."

Saturday, August 30, 2014

MOHAMMED NOW MOST COMMON NAME FOR. MEN IN OSLO NORWAY

Islamization continues, UNABATED - SLOW AND STEADY... AND ON EVERY FRONT:

BBC: MOHAMMED MOST COMMON NAME FOR  MEN IN OSLO; (please note how the leftist bureaucrat reacts)
"It is very exciting," Jorgen Ouren of Statistics Norway tells The Local news website. A recent count of the city's population showed more than 4,800 men and boys in the city are called Mohammed, beating out other popular names like Jan and Per. Although Mohammed - with various spellings - has been the favourite name for baby boys in Oslo for the past four years, this is the first time it has also topped the men's list. 
And it's not only in Norway that the name is gaining ground. The UK's Office for National Statistics says Mohammed was the most common name parents gave to baby boys in England and Wales in 2013.
Unless Europeans start having more kids and start expelling non-citizen muslims who want sharia, or who have fought for islamists or donated money to islamists or who attend mosques which support islamists, then Norway and Europe are finished and 1000 years of islamist tyranny and utter darkness will reign.

THEY ALSO NEED TO SHUTDOWN THOSE MOSQUES.

AND THEY DON'T HAVE MUCH TIME. MAYBE... 10 YEARS....

SIGH...

1 comment:

Punditarian said...

Actually, it's more than just babies.

The article says: " A recent count of the city's population showed more than 4,800 men and boys in the city are called Mohammed, beating out other popular names like Jan and Per."

The population of Oslo is about 600,000 - almost 1% of men & boys in Oslo are named "Mohammed" - the proportion among newborns is probably higher than that.

There are about 100,000 Muslims in Norway, most of them coming from Pakistan, Somalia, Iraq, and Bosnia. If half of them live in Oslo, that would be 50,000, of whom about 50% are probably men and boys - so about 25,000. If only 5,000 are named Mohammed, I wonder what are the other popular names they use in Norway.