Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
October 23, 2015
One of the biggest problems with democracy is that no one has any basic freedoms, such as the right to criticize government policy.
German politicians and lawyers fear that an increase in anti-refugee hate speech on German social media and in public is violating the country’s strict hate speech laws, as tensions continue to rise over the government’s willingness to allow nearly 1.5 million asylum seekers to enter the country this year.
On Monday the anti-Islamic group PEGIDA, or Patriotic Europeans Against the Islamization of the West, held a rally in Dresden, which attracted an estimated 20,000 protesters. One protester showed up with mock gallows and nooses labelled for German Chancellor Angela Merkel and her deputy, Sigmar Gabriel. Later, speaking to the crowd, Akif Pirincci, a Turkish-German writer, said it was “unfortunate that the concentration camps are closed right now,” in reference to what should be done about the influx of refugees, according to the New York Times. State prosecutors in Dresden are now investigating Pirincci’s remarks, on suspicion of hate speech.
Under German law, anyone who makes a public comment that incites hatred or violence against a person on the grounds of ethnicity or religion can face up to three years in prison. Under the same law, a person can be imprisoned for attacking the “human dignity of a person or group of people by insulting that group.” The government has also banned the swastika and other Nazi symbols and denying the holocaust is a criminal offence.
For the record, denying the hoax faces a much greater prison sentence than “inciting hatred.”
Zundel got locked up for 5 years for having denied this lampshade gibberish in other countries.
One German lawyer, Chan-jo Jun, who specialises in information technology, this week filed criminal complaints against three German directors of Facebook and the managing director for northern Europe. He says he previously sent numerous emails and letters to the company’s German branch demanding that they remove posts and comments that violate Germany’s laws.
Wow. Filing charges against Facebook itself for not deleting posts is hardcore.
But the true German Chan-jo Jun is a hardcore sonovabitch.
Some of the content that Jun flagged to Facebook is extremely graphic. One post, seen by Newsweek, shows the body of a small girl allegedly beheaded by Islamic State militants. Another shows the body of a decapitated man surrounded by severed heads. The pictures have been posted with accompanying comments accusing Merkel of inviting murderers to enter the country. Other postings contain Nazi symbols and comments calling on refugees to be sent to the gas chambers or be shot.
“Facebook is not obeying German law,” Jun says, pointing out that just three of the 105 examples he discovered on Facebook and flagged up to the company have been removed at first notice. He’s also concerned that Facebook is not respecting German hate crime laws: “Most people agree that Facebook should not import its legal system or values to Germany.“
This guy really does not seem to understand the internet at all.
The idea that you are going to shut down every post critical of ISIS on Facebook is ridiculous. This is why China bans Facebook. Germany is going to have to look into this, I think. Just outright blocking all social media, inventing their own form that they run.
Especially as there is a direct correlation between numbers of immigrants and the number of people complaining about it.
More worrying, however, is a hardening of attitudes in Germany towards the refugee crisis. “In the past there was a culture in Germany whereby you would not openly say you like the concept of concentration camps, for example, and there was a common understanding that you would not publicly call for the hanging of the chancellor or the vice-chancellor,”Jun says. “But this has changed, and I do believe the Internet has played a part in that.” According to Jun, even humorous complaints against refugees are becoming more accepted.
Yes. The internet allows people to voice their opinions. This is a serious problem for the authoritarian system of Jew democracy.
You know what would be funny? If this guy’s Twitter feed got flooded with pictures of Hitler and demands he return to Asia.
.@cjun1005 Why don't you go back to Ching-chong land you rat? pic.twitter.com/sjZPPPcdVO
— Andrew Anglin (@stormer9k) October 23, 2015
.@cjun1005 gtfo of Germany, you slant-eyed snake. Everyone hates you. pic.twitter.com/PZ86ybfQg7
— Andrew Anglin (@stormer9k) October 23, 2015
.@cjun1005 The internet itself hates you, chink. pic.twitter.com/2o8kMp0YEO
— Andrew Anglin (@stormer9k) October 23, 2015
.@cjun1005 Freedom is rising, gook. Germany is on it's way back. Go home, rat. pic.twitter.com/rGq499q0rh
— Andrew Anglin (@stormer9k) October 23, 2015
#ISaluteWhitePeople because unlike dog-eating gooks such as @cjun1005, White people believe in freedom. pic.twitter.com/rf6KaTrg7i
— Andrew Anglin (@stormer9k) October 23, 2015
Meanwhile, Germany is upping it’s security operations against “xenophobes,” claiming they are trying to stop violence.
More likely, they are trying to shut down speech.
According to the Düsseldorf-based daily, the government coalition in Berlin was planning on Friday to increase staff numbers at these security agencies in the wake of recent xenophobic attacks against refugees.
“We need a massive increase in staff numbers at the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution and the Federal Criminal Police Office,” the Social Democrat Burkhard Lischka was quoted as saying by the newspaper “Rheinische Post” in its Friday edition.
The financial preconditions for strenghtening these German security agencies were to be created very soon, during the ongoing budget consultations, the newspaper reported.
Thomas Strobl from chancellor Angela Merkel’s conservative Christian Democrat Party (CDU) stated that the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution was to be strenghtened. “We will not allow right-wing extremists to soil Germany’s reputation as a tolerant country,” he underlined.
The attacks on refugees are still incredibly low – especially in comparison to refugee attacks on Germans.
More than likely, we are going to see very soon the security forces turned directly on the German people, on a massive scale, in a Soviet-style crackdown on all forms of dissent.