Dieudonné on Trial for Secretly Recorded Joke About Gassing a Jew Journalist

Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
January 29, 2015

The guy just has a likeable face, doesn't he?
The guy just has a likeable face, doesn’t he?

The Stormer’s favorite Black guy is once again on trial for hurting the feelings of the Jews with bone-breaking words of pure hatred.

Because as the ancient Jew proverb goes: “sticks and stones thrown by little children may scratch the paint on my tank, but words will break my bones and lead to another lampshading.”

Dieudonné M’Bala M’Bala, who was recently arrested and charged for making a joke on Facebook about dead Jews, is not on trial for that one yet.  Right now he’s being tried for making a joke about a Jewish journalist getting gassed.

Dieudonné said: “You see, when it comes to him, when the wind turns, I’m not sure he’ll have time to pack his bags. When I hear Patrick Cohen talking, It reminds me, you see, of the gas chambers. Pity.”

New York Times:

The case being tried Wednesday against Mr. M’bala M’bala, on charges of inciting racial hatred, dates to 2013 when footage of him taken by a hidden camera was broadcast on France 2, including his comment about the journalist, Patrick Cohen. The comment helped prompt a police investigation and a government ban of his show. France has stringent laws restricting racist speech; if found guilty, he could face one year in prison and a fine of 45,000 euros, or about $51,000.

Obviously Dieudonné, like the Daily Stormer, does not believe in this idiot gibberish about gas chambers, but understands the meta-level humor of continually joking about Jews being gassed. So with the joke, he was calling the Jew a nuisance and making fun of the Jew for spreading gas chamber gibberish. He was not actually wishing death upon him.

But even if he was, who cares? Not only is it a person’s basic human right to wish another person was dead, but this was a private conversation in which Dieudonné was being secretly recorded.  This is incredibly hardcore thought-police behavior they’ve got going on in France.  But I guess it’s necessary to maintain this multicultural paradise.

The NYT article quoted above contained something I hadn’t heard said in an attempt to explain the disconnect between celebrating Charlie while locking up Dieudonné:

Referring to the recent publication of a cartoon of the Prophet Muhammad by the satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo, his defenders say that the legal cases against him reflect a double standard by which it is acceptable to insult Muslims but not Jews.

However, some legal experts counter that while Charlie Hebdo heaps scorn on all religions, Mr. M’bala M’bala has targeted a specific group, Jews, and that has made him more vulnerable to legal complaints.

I don’t know who “some legal experts” are, but that is simply an false statement. In 2009, Charlie Hebdo fired a cartoonist for mocking Jews.  They did constantly mock Christ and Christians, but all that does is further go to show that these laws are specifically designed to protect Jews.

This entire situation in France is so stupid it is difficult to even process. Those millions in the streets saying “I am Charlie” were lined up to support free speech, while France has probably the most restrictive speech laws of any country in the world. Including China. I’m serious. Chinese speech laws are limited almost exclusively to questioning the government, and I can’t imagine them putting someone on trial for questioning the government in a secretly recorded private conversation.

I will say again what I have said over and over and over again in the wake of this massacre: the idea these speech laws are to prevent violence is completely insane, because Charlie actually did cause violence and then they were encouraged to continue printing the same material while Moslems continued to threaten violence.

I will also say again that the people out on the street weren’t really protesting in support of free speech, they were protesting against Moslems.  They just weren’t allowed to say that and maybe many of them didn’t consciously know it. But that was the deal.