Decision Time: Germany is Voting Today

Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
March 13, 2016

VBK-ANGELA_MERKEL_14534 76f

St. Mama Merkel, Mother of Nations

If these people vote for Merkel again, we will know for a fact that they actually want to destroy their own country – and the whole of Europe as well.

There can be no confusion at this point. We have seen what is happening. We know who Merkel is, and we know what her Moslem children are.

This is the last chance.

RT:

Voting booths have opened in Germany, where people are going to the polls in three states in what is widely seen as the biggest electoral challenge for Chancellor Angela Merkel ahead of next year’s general election, and a test of support for her open door migrant policy.

“We can of course see a certain connection between recent developments in immigration policy of the government of Chancellor Angela Merkel, and there’s a certain unsatisfaction among the population that shows that this increases the tendency to vote for right-wing parties in Germany,” geopolitical analyst and consultant Reiner Rothfuss told RT.

“We would need different political answers, we need a change to policy in the Middle East, we need an open debate on the problems of immigration. As long as this is not put on the political agenda neither by the established parties nor by new parties as the alternative for Germany, we will not have any long-term solution,” he added.

Germany is preparing to allocate tens of billions of euro for migrant accommodation, integration and language lessons in 2016-2017. A forecast prepared by the Cologne Institute for Economic Research estimated that incoming asylum seekers will cost the federal budget about €50 billion (US$54.3 billion) in 2016-2017. This year, Germany could let in some 1.5 million refugees, compared to 1.1 million in 2015.

The mass assaults that saw groups of men, presumably of North African and Middle East origin, sexually harass and rob about 1,000 women in the German city of Cologne on New Year`s Eve sparked outrage across the country, with many demanding punishment for the perpetrators as well as stricter border controls.

A poll of German citizens in early February found that 81 percent of the population feel the refugee crisis is “out of control” under Merkel’s government, with most people in favor of more restrictive measures towards asylum seekers. Voter support for Merkel’s government dropped from 57 percent in July 2015 to 38 percent in February 2016 – “the worst estimate during the current government’s term,” the pollster concluded.

In all honesty, I’m not especially hopeful.

It’s going to be interesting. Either way.