Muslims Not Gypsies: Germany Wants a Different Brand of Subhuman Invasion

Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer

September 8, 2014

The gypsy trail
The gypsy trail

Germany is planning to tighten up immigration, you say?

Oh yes. They are going to block gypsies from the Balkans so they can import more Muslims from the Middle East.

They are also going to do exactly nothing for Greece and Italy as they are being flooded with these savages – even though it is the EU policy that forced the Southern states to allow these apes into their countries in the first place.

AFP:

The Bundesrat upper house of parliament is due to debate draft legislation later this month that would make it easier for authorities to deport asylum seekers from the formerly war-ravaged states of Serbia, Macedonia and Bosnia-Herzegovina. Berlin says it wants to focus instead on refugees from more dangerous warzones such as Syria and Iraq.

Lawmakers in the lower Bundestag have already approved the measure, which is opposed by human rights organisations. Ministers from Germany’s 16 regional states held two days of discussions on the issue, ending on Friday. Thuringia state’s interior minister Joerg Geibert said the measure aimed to cover asylum seekers whose request “is obviously unjustified”.

After a surge in applicants in recent years, Berlin has argued that the three Balkan states are safe and citizens do not face persecution, torture, arbitrary violence, or inhumane or humiliating treatment.

Chancellor Angela Merkel said efforts now needed to be focused on refugees fleeing current hotspots. “We must watch that we concentrate on refugees who urgently need help or for whom there are grounds for asylum, such as people from Syria,” she told the Maerkische Allgemeine regional newspaper.

Serbs, often from the impoverished Roma minority, are among the biggest groups of asylum seekers in Germany. Even if their requests end up being rejected, they receive benefits while their applications are being considered – possibly for several months – that often exceed what they can hope to earn back home.

Petra Follmar-Otto of the German Institute for Human Rights said all the measures boiled down to a “restrictive” policy on asylum law that would “seriously change the way in which one deals with people who are looking for protection”.

Since the end of 2010, the number of asylum requests in Germany has soared. For the last two years, Europe’s biggest economy has attracted more asylum requests than any other country in the European Union. In 2013, requests jumped 64 percent to 127,023, according to German government data, making up 29 per cent of the total number of requests registered in the EU.

lol @ “Serbs… who are gypsies…”

Seriously, if they are Serbs, how can they also be gypsies?

Can you imagine the enrichment of these cultures?
Can you imagine the enrichment of these cultures?

I have spent time in the Balkans, and no one is “persecuted” – so they’ve got that part right. However, the logic that if a person has a problem in their own country it is the duty of Germany to bring them into their country makes absolutely no basic logical sense. It is more of this “oh the poor dears” feminized nonsense.

Things are bloody tough all over. Our duty is to our own people, who are suffering immensely.