Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
February 5, 2017
#Leipzig Grünau Wohnsiedlung zäunt sich ein aus Angst vor Migranten. Irgendwo verständlich, nach allem was vorgeht https://t.co/NQgSUZuaC3 pic.twitter.com/ed5dz31rOZ
— A.n.n.a (@anna_IIna) February 2, 2017
Sometimes to have freedom and democracy, you have to turn your home into a prison in order to keep from getting raped and/or murdered.
It’s one of the founding principles of the EU.
RT:
While some Germans welcomed the over 1 million migrants and refugees who came to their country in 2015 with open arms, others who aren’t happy with the open door policy, like the residents of Weissdornstrasse in Leipzig, decided to take matter in their own hands – and built a 1.63-meter-high fence to keep foreigners out.
The opening of a refugee shelter in the Grunau district of Leipzig in March 2017 provides lots of anxiety among residents in the complex. More than 300 asylum seekers will be moving into an adjacent house that stood empty for over a decade, but now is being hastily renovated at a cost of €6 million.
lol six million.
But don’t worry about the cost, Germans. We’ll just take it out of your pensions.
Then these illiterate gang-rapists will pay it back when they get high-paying jobs in the tech sector.
The decision to erect the €20,000 see-through barrier was made during the annual residents’ meeting in summer. But now once the wall has been erected, some of the 400 people that live in the apartment complex feel like they are being trapped in a “ghetto” themselves.
“We feel like we are in the ghetto,” one tenant told Bild daily.
Another resident complained that elderly now have a more difficult time reaching their flats as they have a “detour of 300 meters.”
“This is an impertinence, especially for the elderly people,” the resident said, wondering who has fenced off whom.
Leipzig is required to take 13 percent of all refugees seeking asylum in the federal state of Saxony. The state itself is obliged to receive 5.1 percent of all new refugees applying for asylum in Germany.
Yes…
Spread them out like a cheese-paste on bread, so that everyone gets a taste of enrichment.