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Politics : Liberalism: Do You Agree We've Had Enough of It? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: James Seagrove who wrote (212104)8/18/2018 9:31:00 PM
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Death by Entitlement
By Bruce Bawer August 10, 2018

pjmedia.com

On August 7, the New York Times ran a story by Rukmini Callimachi about Jay Austin and Lauren Geoghegan, a young American couple, both graduates of Georgetown University, who decided to quit their humdrum office jobs and go on an epic bike ride and camping trip that would take them all over the world. “I’ve grown tired of spending the best hours of my day in front of a glowing rectangle, of coloring the best years of my life in swaths of grey and beige,” Austin wrote. “I’ve missed too many sunsets while my back was turned.”

So in July of last year, they flew from Washington, D.C., to Cape Town, and from there bicycled through South Africa, Namibia, Botswana, Zambia, and Malawi to Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. From there, they flew to Cairo, and after seeing the pyramids flew on to Casablanca, from which they cycled through Morocco, Spain, France, Monaco, Italy, Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro, Albania, Kosovo, Macedonia, Bulgaria, and Greece, to Turkey. From there, another flight took them to Kazakhstan. They biked through Kyrgyzstan and entered Tajikistan. It was in that country that their journey came to an abrupt end this past July 29, when five ISIS members deliberately plowed their car into the two adventurers, killing them along with two temporary cycling companions, one from Switzerland and the other from the Netherlands. “Two days later,” wrote Callimachi, “the Islamic State released a video showing five men it identified as the attackers, sitting before the ISIS flag. They face the camera and make a vow: to kill 'disbelievers.'”

Austin, a vegan who worked at the Department of Housing and Urban Development, and Geoghegan, a vegetarian who worked in a college admissions office, were both 29 years old – old enough, one would think, to have some idea of just how dangerous a route they had mapped out. A number of the countries they passed through are considered either “not free” or “partly free” by Freedom House. In several of them, it's not uncommon for roving criminal gangs – or, for that matter, police or soldiers or border officials – to rob, rape, or kill innocent travelers without provocation and with total impunity. One assumes the two tourists had all their shots before leaving the U.S., but that's not necessarily enough to protect you from all the ailments you might be exposed to while biking along the back roads of southern and central Africa. Other perils include wild carnivores, extreme weather, unsanitary food preparation, and substandard medical care.

Both Austin and Geoghegan were seasoned travelers, who had separately gone on backpacking adventures in exotic lands and, together, had recently biked across Iceland as a sort of prelude to their odyssey through Africa, Europe, and Asia. Amanda Kerrigan, a friend of Geoghegan's, was concerned when she heard about the couple's plans for a longer expedition that would last over a year. “I said, ‘This is not the Lauren I know,’ ” Kerrigan told Callimachi. “Jay changed the trajectory of Lauren’s life.” Kerrigan was, writes Callamachi, “concerned for her friend, in part because of how bighearted she was and in part because she feared that Mr. Austin had a higher tolerance for danger than Ms. Geoghegan did.” But if Kerrigan was worried about their vulnerability on the road, that was precisely what appealed to Austin: “With...vulnerability,” he wrote, “comes immense generosity: good folks who will recognize your helplessness and recognize that you need assistance in one form or another and offer it in spades.”

Even before Austin and Geoghegan met their untimely end, they had problems. In Namibia, Geoghegan picked up a stomach virus. (As Austin wrote on his blog: “she curls into the fetal position and rests, eyes closed, fighting chills and nausea and fatigue. There's little that we can do at the moment. I give her some ibuprofen.” Whereupon they resume biking.) Also in Namibia, they were almost hit by a car while bicycling along a highway. In Botswana, they both got sick. In Zambia, Austin had a serious bike crash that sent him flying and left him bleeding all over. In Malawi, he got malaria. In Tanzania, a man tried to bully him into forking over some money. In Ceuta, a driver tried to run him over, and another rear-ended him. In Spain, Geoghegan got conjunctivitis. In Marseilles, she had to be hospitalized for an ear infection that had rendered her deaf. Given the dangers they braved, indeed, they were fortunate to have made it as far as Tajikistan.

But to read Austin's blog is to see no hint of hesitation, on the part of either of them, to keep on cycling – no sign of fear that their luck might run out at any moment. Their naivete is nothing less than breathtaking. “You watch the news and you read the papers and you're led to believe that the world is a big, scary place,” wrote Austin during their trek. “People, the narrative goes, are not to be trusted....I don't buy it. Evil is a make-believe concept we've invented to deal with the complexities of fellow humans holding values and beliefs and perspectives different than our own.” This rosy view of humanity suffuses Austin's blog: “Malawians and Zambians are fantastically friendly people.” And: “All throughout western Europe, when folks asked us where we were headed and we'd say Albania, their faces would drop and they'd start muttering 'Oh, no, no, no.' Albania, they'd tell us, is dangerous. The people of Albania will steal your spleen....The Albanians we come across are perhaps the warmest, friendliest, smiliest...people we've met on the continent.”

Austin's blog also provides a window on his (and presumably her) hippie-dippy worldview and ultra-PC politics. Elephants, writes Austin, “may very well be a smarter, wiser, more thoughtful being than homo sapiens sapiens.When white South Africans tell them “that the nation and its redistributionist government are making poor, ignorant choices,” Austin sneers at their “Eurocentric values” and their failure to realize that “[n]otions like private property” are culturally relative. This is apparently a comment on the South African government's current expropriation of white farmers' land without compensation. (To be sure, when a friendly Afrikaans man advises Austin and Geoghegan to move their tent because they've pitched it too close to a black settlement and may antagonize the locals, they're quick to let him lead them to a safer spot.)

Austin also sneers at Thanksgiving, “a strange tradition built upon a glossy, guiltless retelling of a genocide, in which we show our appreciation for what we have by killing a quarter-billion turkeys, eating to the point of discomfort, queueing up outside shopping malls to buy electronics at reduced rates, and otherwise yearning for that which we do not have.” When President Trump announces his plans to move the U.S. embassy to Jerusalem, Austin and Geoghegan are in Morocco, where the people are outraged. Yes, because they hate Jews. But Austin's response is to be so ashamed of his American identity that he tries “to disappear into the soft plush” of a couch cushion.

The Times article about Austin and Geoghegan drew hundreds of reader comments. A surprising number were by other people who'd bicycled or backpacked in far-off, dangerous places. Most saw Austin and Geoghegan as “heroic,” “authentic,” “idealistic,” “inspiring,” “a Beautiful example of Purity and Light.” Sample reactions: “Their candle burned brightly before it was extinguished.” And: “Good for them! They followed their dream.” Then there's this: “I only see the beauty of two people taking steps to live the life they envision....The good experienced in their journey far far outweighs any negative.” (LMAO!!!) Easy to say when you're not the one in the body bag. “What is more dangerous,” asked yet another reader, “exposing yourself to the world and its dangers, and living a full vivid life, or insulating yourself in a safe box, in front of screens, where the world and its marvels and dangers cannot touch you? Jay and Lauren understood that safety is its own danger. They are awesome people.” No, they're mangled, decaying corpses. “Safe boxes”? That's what they're both in now: boxes.

Perusing all the reader comments, I found exactly two that mentioned Islam critically. Here's one: “Tajikistan is 96.7% Islamic. It is a dangerous place for American tourists....This is not Islamophobia. It is common sense.” Here's the other: “As a Western woman I have no desire to visit a majority Muslim country because of the religious and cultural bias regarding their treatment of women.” Both of these comments attracted outraged replies. (“Many parts of the US are not so kind to women either, particularly those states that have managed to close just about all their Planned Parenthood clinics.”) Several readers railed against “religion” generally, as if terrorism by Quakers and Episcopalians were a worldwide problem.

Indeed, this being the New York Times, moral equivalency was rampant (“Yes, they [the ISIS murderers]were brutal....But what about our treatment of prisoners in Guantamino Bay?”), as was a readiness to blame Islamic terrorism on America (“There are consequences to our nation's decision to murder Muslim civilians by the hundreds of thousands”) or, specifically, on Donald Trump. One reader comment, a “Times Pick,” read, in part, as follows: “A great story and an admirable couple. But those who condemn their killers as evil probably fail to recognize that ISIS fighters see themselves as being on the side of good. For them, these young Americans were an embodiment of the Great Satan....Instead of bandying around moral absolutes, perhaps we should recognize that good and evil are relative categories, dependent on your culture and your values.”

Gratifyingly, there were some voices of sanity. The words “naive” and “foolhardy” appeared several times. “Mr. Austin's understanding of people was not beautiful,” maintained one savvy reader. “It was fanciful.” Another saw the couple as examples of “hipster millennials who think the world is their playground.” This was wise: “Liberals are always so naive about human nature[;] conservatives...are realistic about it.” Austin's painfully puerile paeans to the goodness of humanityreminded one reader, as they did me, of a sentence Anne Frank wrote not long before the Gestapo came to ship her off to Auschwitz: “In spite of everything I still believe that people are really good at heart.”

Austin was willing to wager not only his own life but that of Geoghegan, a woman he purportedly loved, on the belief that people are all good – or, at least, that bad people are so rare as to be not worth worrying about. He apparently prepared for their trip by studying maps; he appears not to have bothered to examine any of the comprehensive human-rights reports that are issued annually by Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, and the U.S. State Department about every one of the countries along their route (except, perhaps, Monaco).

Hundreds of Times readers, as we've seen, celebrated him as an inspiring idealist. One wonders what Geoghegan's parents feel about him now. He comes off, between the lines, as something of a Svengali, persuading Geoghegan, as her friend Amanda Kerrigan feared, to take risks she would otherwise have avoided.

One can only be glad that they didn't have children: if taken along on the journey, they would likely have shared their parents' horrific end; if left back home, they would be orphans now.


Times readers called the couple heroes. No, the heroes are not these poor fools who stumbled into an ISIS-controlled area; the heroes are the soldiers from the U.S. and elsewhere – most of them a decade or so younger, and centuries savvier, than Austin and Geoghegan – who, while the two 29-year-olds were on a year-long cycling holiday, were risking their lives to beat back ISIS. What, then, is the moral of this couple's story? In the last analysis, it's a story about two young people who, like many other privileged members of their generation of Americans, went to a supposedly top-notch university only to come away poorly educated but heavily propagandized imbued with a fashionable postmodern contempt for Western civilization and a readiness to idealize and sentimentalize “the other” (especially when the latter is decidedly uncivilized). This, ultimately, was their tragedy: taking for granted American freedom, prosperity, and security, they dismissed these extraordinary blessings as boring, banal, and (in Austin's word) “beige,” and set off, with the starry-eyed and suicidal naivete of children who never entirely grew up, on a child's fairy-tale adventure into the most perilous parts of the planet. Far from being inspirational, theirs is a profoundly cautionary – and distinctly timely – tale that every American, parents especially, should take to heart.



To: James Seagrove who wrote (212104)8/19/2018 5:12:25 PM
From: FJB2 Recommendations

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STANDING ALONGSIDE EVIL Jeremy Corbyn is pictured with terrorist in Tunisia who plotted to blow up Israeli cinema

In the same group photo is the exiled leader of a banned Palestinian group that murdered a British rabbi



By Ellie Cambridge
18th August 2018, 12:48 pm
Updated: 18th August 2018, 2:16 pm

thesun.co.uk

4

Jeremy Corbyn posing with Fatima Bernawi, who was given a life sentence for trying to blow up an Israeli cinema



To: James Seagrove who wrote (212104)8/20/2018 12:42:29 AM
From: FJB4 Recommendations

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Canadian Government Moves To Block Freedom of Speech in Effort to Prop-up Justin

The Conservative Treehouse ^
| August 19, 2018 | sundance

Under the auspices of making moves to block election interference from outside interests the government of Justin from Canada is moving to block internet content critical of Trudeau and his policies. Simultaneously and ironically, the same Canadian government is spending millions lobbying U.S. politicians in Washington DC to retain their one-sided NAFTA trade benefits. Funny that, eh?



To: James Seagrove who wrote (212104)8/20/2018 12:46:38 PM
From: FJB3 Recommendations

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Beautiful German town ‘unrecognisable’ after it accepted 1,200 migrants


By Voice of Europe 20 August 2018

Procyk Radek - Skliarchuk Olga / shutterstock.com
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The mayor and the residents of Boostedt are increasingly worried about how migrants are affecting their hometown. In the last three years, around 1,200 migrants were settled in the town’s military barracks, which is a 26 per cent population increase.

Hartmut König, the mayor of the town with 4,600 inhabitants, tells German broadcaster NDR in an interview how admitting so many migrants has had a negative impact on the town.

“It’s quite simply the behaviour. For example, in shops things are stolen. I experienced it myself: three refugees walking on the pavement, not making enough room for a woman with a pushchair and a child coming in their direction. They make no room; she has to move onto the street to get around them,” the mayor says.

“That’s just one incident, but it shows the entire picture. Besides that, they leave piles of rubbish and use every available space to sit around and drink beer,” he adds.

While broadcaster NDR attempts to minimise the issues, saying that these migrants are mostly young men with little chance of permanent residency in Germany, residents share their worries in front of the camera.

“Helping makes sense, it’s our ecclesiastical obligation, but the way things are going — that these people are being left to themselves, walking around, sitting everywhere in the city; no one recognises our city anymore — Boostedt used to be a beautiful place,” an elderly man says.


Since Merkel opened Germany’s borders in 2015, the country accepted around 1.5 million migrants, from mostly the Middle East and Northern Africa.

Instead of what was told, a lot of them don’t work, are poorly educated and are not refugees. The migrant crisis is a slowly unfolding disaster for Germany.



To: James Seagrove who wrote (212104)8/21/2018 10:29:38 AM
From: FJB2 Recommendations

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The Arab Clans of Berlin
Posted on August 20, 2018 by Baron Bodissey

The following documentary concerns criminal Arab clans in Berlin. Twenty families have divided up the turf and settle their disputes with violence.

You can’t really call them an underclass; it’s more like an underworld — an Arab mafia that manages larceny, rackets, and drug trafficking in the Berlin underworld.


Many thanks to MissPiggy for the translation, and to Vlad Tepes for the subtitling:



Video link


Video transcript:

Continue reading ?



To: James Seagrove who wrote (212104)8/21/2018 10:53:08 AM
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NEVER AGAIN! Austria shuts down its borders to the Muslim invasion plaguing most of Western Europe

AUGUST 20, 2018 BY BARENAKEDISLAM 11 COMMENTS

Despite the hostile leftist media’s tone in this video, Austria’s new conservative government has made good on its most important campaign promise to the people: “No longer will Austria be a dumping ground for illegal alien Muslim invaders.”

GERMANY: Somali Muslim asylum seeker stabs a doctor to death in front of the doctor’s 10-year-old daughter

AUGUST 21, 2018 BY BARENAKEDISLAM 7 COMMENTS

And all the idiot female mayor of Offenburg can think of to do is to warn people against exhibiting “anti-Muslim migrant sentiment.” Breitbart In what was a seemingly unprovoked attack, a 26-year-old Somali man is reported to have stormed a family doctor’s surgery at 8:45 a.m. without an appointment and stabbed the doctor, named by […]


MICHIGAN: Polish white flight from what now has become the first Muslim-majority city in the country


AUGUST 20, 2018 BY BARENAKEDISLAM 14 COMMENTS

NO, it isn’t Dearborn, as you would expect, its Hamtramck, Michigan, that lays claim to having the first Muslim-majority community in America. Hamtramck, where 75% of it population used to be Polish, but has been reduced to just 10% today, is the result of mass Muslim migration from Bangladesh, Yemen and Bosnia. And in the final few […]



To: James Seagrove who wrote (212104)8/21/2018 5:11:08 PM
From: FJB1 Recommendation

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Twitter's White Genocide Problem

• DANGEROUS

dangerous.com

While Twitter hunts for imaginary Nazis under America's bed, an actual genocidal movement is brewing across the world and uses the platform to recruit and spread racial hatred.

The leader of South Africa’s Economic Freedom Fighters party, Julius Malema, has a verified Twitter account with 2.1 million followers. The official EFF account on Twitter is also verified, with 607,000 followers. On March 17 of this year, Malema tweeted, “Hahaha, you are going white man. I’ve got no sympathy for whiteness, it feels so good for a black child to determine the future of the white one. #Kubo.” This was, for Malema and his followers, and anyone familiar with South African politics, nothing out of the ordinary. EFF is the far-Left South African political party that soared to power on a platform of extreme racial hatred toward the country’s white minority.

EFF is also the party behind South Africa’s plan to steal land from white farmers. This week the nation began to fulfill that promise. South Africa’s government expropriated two farms in Limpopo. The owners of the property have disputed the government seizure and are asking for 200 million rupees in compensation. The government is offering 20 million rupees, about ten per cent of the land’s value. The motion to expropriate land without compensation was proposed by Malema and passed in Parliament by a margin of 241 votes to 83. The measure also was supported by Cyril Ramaphosa, who took over as President of South Africa when Jacob Zuma resigned. Land expropriation was a key talking point in Ramaphosa’s campaign for Zuma’s seat. EFF and Malema have also proposed a section of the current South African Constitution to be amended to allow for the expropriation of land without proper compensation to white farmers. While the seizure has received support from the ANC, it is widely opposed by the Democratic Alliance, Freedom Front Plus, Cope and the African Christian Democratic Party.

‘35,000 dead’Malema and the EFF’s rhetoric has deadly consequences. In South Africa a white farmer has been killed every five days in 2018, a number that has been on the steady uptick since the ANC became the primary ruler the country’s parliament post-apartheid, which began with the election of Nelson Mandela in 1994. The ANC itself has been accused of often aligning itself with radicalized groups. Mosiuoa Lekota, President and leader of the Congress of the People, blames both the ANC and EFF for the white? ?farmer murders. Addressing parliament last year, he pointed out the 35,000 dead farmers who “provide food for all of us in this country,” and called for peace, warning of what appears to be an impending, full-scale genocide.

Peace is not on the agenda for Malema and the EFF. And while the murders are an almost daily occurrence, Malema, who is not on Facebook, uses Twitter exclusively to recruit and inflame hatred toward many groups, not just whites. On Saturday, during the EFF’s four year birthday celebration at Curries Fountain Stadium in Durban, Malema said Indian people are “worse than Afrikaners.”

“This is not an anti-Indian statement, it’s the truth. Indians who own shops don’t pay our people, but they give them food parcels,” Malema told thousands of supporters at the event. The group AfriForum has called for an open investigation into Malema’s alleged role in white? farmer murders after an imprisoned gangster was caught on leaked audio claim Malema offered to help him murder white farmers. EFF Deputy President Floyd Shivamvu attacked a white journalist, Adrian de Kock, earlier this year outside of the parliament building, choking the reporter as his colleagues attempted to steal his equipment. In a video posted on YouTube, Malema addressed EFF members saying, “Let us show them toe to toe. Let us show them who is in charge of this country. This is our land, this is our country, we will defend it with everything; if it means defending it with our?—?lives, let us defend it with our?—?lives. Let us see when the boers come back, which side will the police take.”

Boer originally referred to white? ?farmers in South Africa of Dutch ancestry and has in recent years been deployed as a derogatory term for white South Africans. Malema received backlash in 2010, then a youth league leader for the ANC, for singing “shoot the boer, kill the farmer.” Subsequently, South Africa’s high court ruled that the anti-apartheid song “Shoot the Boer” is hate speech and banned the ruling ANC from singing it.

In a YouTube video posted by Stop Farm Murders in February, both ANC and EFF members are caught singing “kill the boer, kill the farmer” at a public gathering. Malema, while addressing supporters in Soweto in February can be heard saying “We don’t back whites, we don’t care about their feelings. They make us suffer for a very long time now, it’s their turn now. They must be happy we are not beating them up. They must be happy we are not calling for genocide.” In an interview Malema gave with TRT World in July he said “I’m saying to you, we’ve not called for the killing of white people, at least for now. I can’t guarantee the future.” The presenter challenged him, saying to this sounded like a “genocidal call.” Malema responded, “Cry babies, cry babies!”

“I can’t give you a guarantee of the future,” he repeated. “Especially when things are going the way they are … If things are going the way they are, there will be a revolution in this country. I can tell you now. There will be an unled revolution in this country, and an unled revolution is the highest form of anarchy.”

James Bond never gets AidsTwitter defines hateful conduct violating its Terms of Service as, “You may not promote violence against or directly attack or threaten other people on the basis of race, ethnicity, national origin, sexual orientation, gender, gender identity, religious affiliation, age, disability, or serious disease. We also do not allow accounts whose primary purpose is inciting harm towards others on the basis of these categories.” The company goes on to say, “examples of what we do not tolerate includes, but is not limited to behavior that harasses individuals or groups of people with violent threats; wishes for the physical harm, death, or disease of individuals or groups; references to mass murder, violent events, or specific means of violence in which/with which such groups have been the primary targets or victims; behavior that incites fear about a protected group; repeated and/or non-consensual slurs, epithets, racist and sexist tropes, or other content that degrades someone.”

But Twitter doesn’t just police users for what they tweet. Twitter also likes to take swipes at prominent users–virtually all conservatives–for their behavior off-line, such as when the site removed journalist Laura Loomer’sverification badge after she got into a public row with Uber, or when it suspended British activist Tommy Robinson for being Tommy Robinson.

A look through Malema’s timeline reveals several tweets that would appear to violate Twitter’s Terms of Service (were such a thing consistently or comprehensively enforced) on what the San Francisco-based tech giant defines as hateful speech and conduct. Malema’s Twitter account reveals a bizarre obsession with white people and skin pigmentation, as well as boasting conspiracy theories that AIDS was invented by Western governments, and British intelligence agencies have the cure.

Jungle feverIn January, EFF supporters made international news after they trashed an H&M store in Guateng over an advertisement featuring a black child wearing a hoodie that read “coolest monkey in the jungle.” The mother of the boy in the ad, who allowed her son to model it, issued a statement on Facebook days before the break-in occurred, stating “Am the mum and this is one of hundreds of outfits my son has modelled … Stop crying wolf all the time, unnecessary issue here … get over it.” She continued: “If I bought that jumper and put it on him and posted it on my pages, would that make me racist? I get pples opinion, but they are not mine.”

The media-manufactured myth of America’s violent white supremacy problem reached a laughable conclusion in August. After the media hyped a white nationalist rally in Washington, D.C. for weeks, giving tens of millions of dollars in free advertising to the Unite the Right 2 event, a sad, rag-tag bunch of only a couple dozen characters actually turned up to quietly march down the street. Yet before the event, Twitter, for no legitimate reason whatsoever, permanently banned the accounts of Gavin McInnes and his organization, the Proud Boys. The media, in lockstep, associated McInnes’s ban with the upcoming rally, in an attempt to falsely connect his group with white nationalists (they aren’t, and have repeatedly condemned both Unite the Right events). Writing for this magazine, McInnes said, “We were banned for making Trump look cool. When Proud Boy Rufio Panman knocked out that antifa dunce in self defense, it was called, ‘The punch heard ’round the world.’ Info Wars had Panman on as a guest and they were de-platformed. I had him on as a guest, too. Same story. I’m told Twitter’s lawyers have been contacted about a lawsuit and they specifically said it was due to ‘inciting violence.’ I’m sure that’s the crux of it and I strongly believe it all comes back to that punch.”

If Twitter is concerned about its platform being used to spread racial hatred and incite violence, then one might point to an actual genocidal movement brewing across the world that is very active on Twitter. Yet Twitter has made its priorities clear: to spend countless dollars and man hours looking for imaginary Nazis under America’s bed.

Appearing on television last week, Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey told CNN’s Brian Stelter, “Are we doing something according to political ideology or viewpoints? We are not. Period … We do not look at content with regards to political viewpoint or ideology. We look at behavior.” Conservative pundit Candace Owens tested this claim before Dorsey’s statement. She copied tweets from racist New York Times editorial board member Sarah Jeong, replacing “whites” with other groups then acknowledging these were repurposed Jeong tweets. “Black people are only fit to live underground like groveling goblins. They have stopped breeding and will all go extinct soon. I enjoy being cruel to old black women,” Owens tweeted. Owens immediately received a suspension from Twitter. Jeong did not and retains her job at the Times.

Dorsey told CNN, “I think we need to constantly show that we are not adding our own bias, which I fully admit is left, is more left-leaning.”



To: James Seagrove who wrote (212104)8/22/2018 8:40:29 AM
From: FJB2 Recommendations

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Help the Migrants and Win a Chance to be a Sex Slave!
Posted on August 21, 2018 by Baron Bodissey

Below is a propaganda video put out by the German government. It’s very disturbing, not just because it’s a glassy-eyed promo for more invaders, but because it exploits a pretty little barely pubescent (pre-pubescent?) girl to sell the wonderfulness of immigration. It’s as if they had put up a billboard with a picture of her as an inducement for more “refugees” to come to Germany — “Here you go, boys! This is Li’l Sex Slave — your reward for making the trip!”

The translator adds this context:

It is in the news a lot here in Germany that they are running out of volunteers for the refugee centers and the government is looking into forcing high school graduates to do a social year (like Macron’s idea). Forced labor for Merkel’s guests.

Many thanks to MissPiggy for the translation, and to Vlad Tepes for the subtitling:

Video link

Video transcript:

Continue reading ?