Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
July 19, 2015
So “neo-Nazis” took the data for planned “refugee centers” across Germany and made a map of them on Google Maps. Because it was completely insane, the map went viral.
At the request of the German government, Google has removed the map, but we have a screenshot.
Though the information on the map is accurate, and from the government’s own information, they are claiming that the act of making it was an act of pure hatred.
That’s right: making facts available for the people in a simplified format is now a hate crime in Jew-run Germany.
A quick look at the online map, whose title translates roughly to “No refugee center in my backyard”, suggests there is little space left in Germany that isn’t already home to an asylum center or refugee shelter. Dots on the map are of equal size regardless of whether an address houses a single refugee or over a hundred.
A click on a dot offers more information – often, it’s a full address with a street name and number. Sometimes the extra information spells out how many refugees currently live at a shelter or details how many people will reside at a center currently under construction. The former British military base in Niederkrüchten, for example, is expected to house “up to 1,000 asylum seekers,” the map said.
In other instances, it’s pointed out how refugees are “taking over” – a former medical clinic will be turned into a home for asylum seekers, just like a former school gym or a parish hall.
These Jews love to use quotations as a form of attempted condescension.
How is this not a “take over”?
The article then blames the map on “neo-Nazis,” before going on to tell us how horrible this is for the innocent African invaders.
There, is, however little that can be done in terms of legal prosecution when it comes to the map, said Robert Lüdecke of the Amadeu Antonio Foundation, which works to eliminate neo-Nazism and right-wing extremism. The foundation is one of the groups that have urged Google to take down the map.
“We realize, of course, that [deleting the map] is not the solution that will solve all problems, but it’s important to send a message to operators such as Google to say that we don’t tolerate such a thing,” Lüdecke told DW.
At time of writing, the map has been taken down.
Revealing the addresses posed a threat to asylum seekers, he added. That’s also the case with shelters that have yet to be built or converted to housing.
“As soon as I say this is going to be housing for asylum seekers, there is the fear and risk as we’ve seen in the past months and years that right-wing extremists mobilize early on to prevent such housing projects,” he added. “This, unfortunately, seems to be a tactic that’s working.”
…
“They don’t just want to document addresses, they also want to visualize this ‘wave’ of asylum seekers they always talk about,” Lüdecke said. “They don’t just want to reach the potential violent criminals and racists, but also those who might voice their displeasure with refugees and tell them: ‘Look, in every German state there are refugees now and it’s time to act.’
“I really fear that this map could provide a travel route for right-wing extremists,” Lüdecke said.
That seems to me to be a conspiracy theory.
People have a right to know where these people are living, for their own protection. These Blacks and Arabs are violent and dangerous – known fact. And instead, these people want to frame it that the local people are a threat to the invasion?
What dimension is this?