We have lost brave women in combat in Afghanistan. And you ramble about the size of a girl's forearms?And Mark responds with this post: A Viking objects.
In the post which the Viking disliked, Norway introduces conscription for women, Mark wrote:
...Norway has become the first European country to begin conscripting women into its army. The new policy was supported on both the left and the right.Mark comments on this photo, which he has posted on his site, and continues:
The thinking behind the policy was put simply enough by one of the young women who is liable to be called up. Cana Elgvin said "I think it is natural that in an equal society girls and boys have the same duties."
Vivian Layno Jensen, Marie Mamen and Cana Elgvin
That attitude casually assumes that men and women are made the same way for the same purposes. I think Cana herself is living proof that this assumption is wrong. Cana is the 17-year-old Norwegian girl on the right of the photo below. Was she really made for aggressive physical combat? For the physical rigours of combat? Look at how slender her forearms are. Could she really lug around a heavy weapon with those arms? Is she equipped with hard chest muscle and muscular limbs? And does she look like she has the emotional hardness and the aggressiveness to stand up for herself in a bayonet fight? And should she, as a woman, be expected to be hard in this way? Would that be the highest realisation of her feminine being?But then look at the girl on the left, who is identified as Vivian Layno Jensen in this Norwegian news site. Doesn't she look, despite her short height, that she could withstand the rigors of combat, with her stocky build, thick body, strong bones, and confident expression?
Layno Jensen may yet enter the army, but meanwhile, the two meek-looking Scandinavian girls, Marie Mamen and Cana Elgvin, are no match for her. Like with all things in current immigration, native populations of whites are readily succumbing to strong-willed, non-white members of Western society, who are taking aggressive initiatives that cause harm to the countries they live in. We know about the Muslim aggression, which is at least straightforward: to kill for Allah. But how can we discern the Vivians?
The two Scandinavian natives, Marie Mamen and Cana Elgvin, who are meekly following behind Vivian, would protest war because they think no-one should die at war, including Vivian. But, Vivian would most likely retort that whites are killing off non-whites, who have to protect themselves against the evil whites, and therefore are entitled to "fight" however they see fit, even by exploding bombs in buses and schools. How shocked Marie and Cana would be to realize their "close" friend Vivian probably thinks like this, and is not some radical Muslim immigrant living so far away in those closed-off ghettos in the outskirts of their cities.
Unlike Mark, I would have separated Vivian from the trio, and written:
Given the betrayal by non-white members of Western societies (look at what happened in England recently), can Australians really trust non-white young women (and men) to fight for Queen and Country (as Australia is still part of the British Commonwealth)?Of course, Mark's point is that no woman should be conscripted into the army. Yet, what happens when one allows people, men or women, who have no cultural, ethnic, historical, or even a sliver of patriotic ties to a country into the army? How can we be sure that they will defend a country to their last breath? How can we trust the ultimate fate of a country (war is as far into an ultimatum as we can get) to people whose loyalty we can never be sure of?
Below I describe how Vivian Layno Jensen is proving my point.
I tried to find out more about Vivian Layno Jensen. Here is what looks like her twitter page, it is partly in English, partly in Norwegian, and some in a Philipino language. She peppers her comments with information about the Philippines such as:
Vivian Layno Jensen @ViviJens 4 AugAnd has E. Aldrin S. Angulo as her twitter "friend."
@chloeblatter which one? Filipino 60y bday?
6:31 AM - 4 Aug 12Looking up E. Aldrin S. Angulo's profile here, he's most likely of Philipino background, with his Spanish names.
E. Aldrin S. Angulo @AldrinAngulo 4 Aug
@ViviJens @chloeblatter lol mamma og pappa skal dit :P
The image below shows the photo Layno Jensen posted on Instagram (her Instagram profile reads: Vivian Jensen WHATTUP! DREAMTEAM Twitter:vivijens Oslo, Norway), with the caption, "One heck of a family day" which looks like her sprawling, Asian, family:
And here is a photo from a collage at her twitter pictures page twicsy, who look like they could be her Asian parents or grandparents:
And from her twicsy page, with a blonde-haired, blue-eyed friend, who looks like a typical Norwegian:
And this looks like the blonde friend. (The twicsy video is really disturbing, with an animalistic sound emitting from this pretty blonde, as she flicks her long blonde hair around and writhes on her bed. This is what she has up for the world to see.)
And finally, I typed in the name layno name philippines in Google Search, and these are some of the links that came up:
- Belen Layno - Philippines | LinkedIn
- Amado Layno, MD Profile | The Filipino Doctor
- Danielle Layno Philippines flew to the United States and
took part in the 2012 Miss Universe pageant
And so on.
My assessment is that Vivian Layno Jensen is half-Philipino, half Norwegian, if not full Philipino.
Can Marie and Cana ever see Vivian for what she is? Vivian most likely has no illusions about them, and knows where she stands. Will these two sweet-looking girls ever learn to fight? But they're going to have to, and quickly.
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Posted By: Kidist P. Asrat
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