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Monday, November 25, 2024

The Enrichment Report #12

A selection of articles showcasing the benefits of diversity, equity and inclusion:

    A federal judge denied a request to dismiss a gun charge against an illegal immigrant in Ohio who had been in the US for more than 15 years, rejecting the man’s argument that he has a right to bear arms.

    Carlos Serrano-Restrepo was charged earlier this year and was subsequently indicted for possession of a firearm by an alien unlawfully in the US, according to WSYX.

    The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives began investigating and watching Serrano-Restrepo after he purchased at least 22 firearms, and claimed to be a US citizen on the firearms forms.

    Agents conducted a search of his home and seized roughly 170 firearms, tens of thousands of rounds of ammunition and smoke/marine markers.

The worst affected countries were France, the United Kingdom and Germany. France recorded nearly 1,000 incidents. In the UK, the number of anti-Christian hate crimes in England and Wales rose from 609 in 2022 to 702 in 2023, an increase of 15 per cent. (Figures for Scotland were not available.) The number of anti-Christian hate crimes in Germany more than doubled, from 135 incidents in 2022 to 277 in 2023. German police documented more than 2,000 cases of vandalism against Christian places of worship during the year. OIDAC Europe Executive Director Anja Hoffmann said the organisation assumes ‘a high number’ of cases went unreported. 

Also:

The most common form of anti-Christian violence in Europe was vandalism against churches. This made up 62 per cent of recorded incidents. Among these, 24 per cent involved desecration, including beheading and destruction of religious statues. Ten per cent of the church attacks involved arson, with some churches being utterly destroyed.

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