
THE little blonde EU dictator Ursula von der Leyen breezes into Australia today to do trade deals with Albanese and company.
We hope it’s just trade they stick to, because we don’t European Union “social policy”. It’s totalitarian and it stinks.
Von der Leyen represents an EU whose so-called “human rights” court considers a Christian mother and father who attend church three times a week and who imposed some restrictions on their daughters’ activities as “extremists”.
But do state authorities these same EU countries make the same rulings against Islamic families who forbid all sorts of things and even indulge in forced marriages of young teens? You bet they don’t, because the EU has a horde of bureaucrats “combatting anti-Muslim hate”.
The exceptions to this are states with so-called “far right” governments: Italy, Finland, Slovakia, Hungary, Croatia and the Czech Republic.
Once upon a time the Swedish couple would have been called devout, but according to their nanny state, they were extremists because they decided to limit their two eldest daughters’ use of makeup and phone usage. The state kidnapped the children and have had them in “foster care” for four years after one of the daughters complained.
And this month the European Court of Human Rights rejected their appeal against the cruel seizure of their daughters, even after Swedish authorities withdrew the extremism allegations and confirmed no evidence of abuse existed.
The US-based Christian Post reported that Daniel and Bianca Samson’s ordeal began in late 2022 when government authorities took the daughters into their “care”. The intervention was prompted by an allegation by the eldest daughter that her parents would not allow them to wear makeup or own a phone due to their purported “religious extremism.”
According to Alliance Defending Freedom International, which is helping the Samsons, the daughter later retracted her accusations and the authorities could find no evidence that either girl had been abused in any way.
Despite this, the girls have still not been allowed to return to their parents and are being kept in separate foster homes. The girls have reportedly said they wish to be reunited with their parents and have started to suffer health problems. At present, the Samsons can only see their daughters once a month and under supervision.
Having taken the case to the ECHR, the court said that it could not rule on the issue on the grounds that all possible legal remedies in Sweden have not yet been exhausted.
“The case raises a chilling question for believers everywhere: When does biblical parenting become a state offense?” asks the Christian Post. “As this family faces a closed door in the legal system, they remain steadfast in their identity in Christ, seeking a miracle that only He can provide.”


