Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
November 14, 2015
The Paris death count remains lower than that of the 2004 Madrid train bombings, though it is expected to rise as many victims are in critical condition. However, even while this will probably only score second place in deadliness, it is absolutely the most organized terrorist attack in European history.
And it comes at a time when security is higher than it ever has been in history.
When I first wrote about this yesterday, just a few minutes after the attack began, I cynically joked that it was “shocking.” Later, Cameron himself came out and used the exact same word.
But how can it be shocking, when we knew for a fact that it would happen, and had probably assumed it would be sooner rather than later? How can something which is inevitable be shocking to a mentally stable person?
It is a fact that if you have Moslems in your country, they blow things up and shoot people. This will happen again, it will happen the time after that, and it will keep happening as long as there are Moslems in Europe.
We can see that they do this constantly in their own countries. So even once we reach the Merkel dream of an Islamic Europe, these bombings will continue.
The politics of this become very simple: is this human tragedy worth the supposed benefits of diversity? Even if you believe that diversity has real benefits, whatever those benefits are need to be weighed against the lives of the dead and those who will die as a result of this diversity project, and then you need to ask: how many lives is diversity worth?
I think politicians need to be pressed on this. I think Merkel should be asked, directly, how many lives cultural diversity is worth.
Is it worth a thousand lives? Is it worth ten thousand lives? Is it worth an infinite number of human lives, and endless human suffering?
Or is there a point at which human life outweighs the benefits (whatever they are) of cultural diversity?
I will quote here from the current incarnation of the Wikipedia article on the attack.
On the evening of 13 November 2015, a series of coordinated terrorist attacks occurred in Paris, France, and its northern suburb Saint-Denis. The attacks consisted of mass shootings, suicide bombings, bombings and hostage taking. Beginning at 21:16 CET, three separate explosions and six mass shootings occurred, including bombings near the Stade de France in Saint-Denis. The deadliest attack was at the Bataclan theatre where attackers took hostages and engaged in a standoff with police until it was ended at 00:58 14 November CET.
At least 129 people were killed, 89 of them at the Bataclan theatre. 352 people were injured by the attacks,[3] including 99 people described as being in a serious condition.[4] In addition to the civilian casualties, eight attackers were killed and authorities continued to search for any accomplices that remained at large. In a televised statement at 23:58 CET, French President François Hollande announced a state of emergency, the first state of emergency since the 2005 riots, and subsequently placed temporary controls on the country’s borders. The first citywide curfew in Paris since 1944 was also put in place.
On 14 November, the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIS) claimed responsibility for the attacks. According to The Wall Street Journal, the attacks were motivated by Islamic State as a “retaliation” for the French role in the Syrian Civil War and Iraqi Civil War. Hollande also said the attacks were organised from abroad “by the Islamic State with internal help” and described them as “an act of war”.
The attacks were the deadliest to occur in France since the Second World War and the deadliest in the European Union since the Madrid train bombings in 2004. The attacks came just a day after another Islamic State terrorist attack in Lebanon, which killed 43; a day after the assassination of ISIS member Jihadi John; and 14 days after the crash of the Russian-chartered Metrojet Flight 9268, which killed 217 passengers and seven crew members, and for which the Islamic State’s Sinai branch claimed responsibility. Prior to the attack, France had been on high alert since the January 2015 attacks in Paris that killed 17 people, including civilians and police officers.
Seven distinct attacks took place, comprising three explosions and six shootings. The explosions occurred near the Stade de France, while shootings were reported in the vicinity of Rue Alibert, Rue de la Fontaine-au-Roi, Rue de Charonne, the Bataclan theatre in Boulevard Voltaire, Avenue de la République, and the Boulevard Beaumarchais.
Rue Bichat and Rue Alibert
The first attacks occurred on the rue Bichat and rue Alibert, near the Canal Saint-Martin in the 10th arrondissement. Attackers shot at people outside Le Carillon, a café-bar, at approximately 21:20. They then crossed rue Bichat and attacked Le Petit Cambodge, a restaurant, killing between four and eleven people. According to French police, eleven people were killed at the restaurant, and an eyewitness said that one of the gunnmen shouted ‘Allahu Akbar’ The assailants reportedly fled in one or two vehicles after the shootings.[44] One of the vehicles was known to have had a Belgian licence plate. Doctors and nurses from nearby Hôpital Saint-Louis were in Le Carillon when the attacks occurred and supplied emergency assistance to the wounded after the attack.
Rue de la Fontaine-au-Roi
Shots were fired at the terrace of La Casa Nostra, an Italian restaurant, on rue de la Fontaine-au-Roi, south of rue Bichat, by a man wielding a machine gun. The Paris prosecutor reported that five people were killed and eight were injured. An eyewitness reported that people were being killed by a gunman firing “bursts of three or four shots.”
Stade de France explosions
Three explosions occurred near the country’s national sports stadium, the Stade de France, in the suburb of Saint-Denis, resulting in at least five deaths. The explosions happened at 21:17, 21:30, and 21:53. At least 10 people were injured or killed in an explosion at a bar near the stadium at approximately 21:30, about 20 minutes after the start of an international friendly football match between France and Germany, which President François Hollande was attending. The first terrorist detonated his suicide belt while trying to enter Gate J of the stadium, killing at least three fans. Hollande was safely evacuated from the scene at half-time, while the German foreign minister stayed, and Hollande met with his interior minister, Bernard Cazeneuve, to coordinate a response to the emergency. Two of the explosions were heard on the live televised broadcast of the match, but players and the audience were kept unaware of the danger until the game had finished. Following the game, fans were brought onto the pitch to await evacuation as police monitored all the exits around the venue. Security sources confirmed that all three explosions were suicide bombings. On 14 November 2015, the Wall Street Journal reported that at least one of the assailants had a ticket for the football match, but was hindered from entering the stadium at the security check, at which point he detonated his vest. The attacks occured just seven months before France is set to host the UEFA Euro 2016 tournament.
Rue de Charonne
Two attackers fired for several minutes at the terrace of La Belle Équipe, a restaurant on the rue de Charonne in the 11th arrondissement before returning to their car and driving away at approximately 21:50. Police confirmed that 18 people were killed by gunmen who opened fire on the restaurant’s outdoor terraces.
Bataclan theatre massacre
A mass shooting and hostage taking occurred at the Bataclan theatre on Boulevard Voltaire in the 11th arrondissement where the US rock band Eagles of Death Metal were playing to an audience of around 1,500. About an hour into the concert, four black-clad men with AK-47 assault rifles entered the hall. Witnesses heard shouts of “Allahu akbar” just before the gunmen calmly and methodically opened fire into the crowd. A witness said that he saw armed men enter the Bataclan, and two or three men not wearing masks fired indiscriminately on the crowd. The attack lasted about 20 minutes, with witnesses reporting that the attackers also threw grenades into the crowd. A radio reporter, Julien Pearce, who attended the concert, described the attackers as calm and determined, telling CNN they had reloaded three or four times.
At around 22:00, the men started rounding up hostages, as police massed outside the concert hall. Between 60 and 100 hostages were taken. The band’s members escaped without injury. A witness who escaped the attack told a journalist there were five or six attackers and that they mentioned Syria. One witness in the Bataclan stated that a gunman yelled, “This is because of all the harm done by Hollande to Muslims all over the world.” There were further attacks reported on police and first responders who arrived at the scene after initial reports of shooting inside the theatre. One of the attackers at the Bataclan had explosives, according to a police officer at the scene.
At about 00:15, the police started an assault on the theatre after reports that the attackers had started killing the hostages. The siege ended at 00:58 CET. Initial police reports indicated that an estimated 100 people were killed at the theatre; however, the toll was later revised to 87. Four attackers died, three of them by detonating their suicide vests. The fourth was hit by police gunfire, and his vest blew up when he fell. The entire neighborhood around the area was closed off after the attacks.
The building’s Jewish owners stated that the theatre had been threatened before.
Boulevard Voltaire
Another attacker detonated his suicide vest on the Boulevard Voltaire near the Bataclan theatre.
Here’s a PressTV documentary on the attacks.
And hey, this is fun – turns out at least one of them came through Turkey to Greece as an asylum seeker/migrant/whatever.
Who could have possibly seen that coming? No one could ever even have suspected it.
According to the Greek Public Order Minister Dimitris Toskas, the attacker found at the Stade de France who was found with a Syrian passport passed through the Greek island of Leros.
This happened in early October, under EU rules which mean migrants passing through must identify themselves.
I wonder if Cameron will come out and claim that he’s “shocked” someone would abuse the European asylum system?
We appear to have quite literally imported an army. Will Merkel be punished over these attack?
In other news, Britain is deploying special forces onto the streets while Cameron says people need to “brace” for attacks.
Special forces soldiers have been deployed on to Britain’s streets to monitor stations, shopping centres and key public places amid fears the UK could be the next target for an Isil terror outrage.
Personnel from the elite Special Reconnaissance Regiment (SRR) are backing up undercover armed police officers to protect the UK in the wake of the Paris massacre.
A “French” man with a gun has been arrested at Gatwick.
A French man has been arrested on suspicion of firearm offences at Gatwick Airport today, but there is no suggestion it is linked to terrorism.
The 41-year-old from Vendôme had not checked in or passed through any security checks and is being interviewed by police.
Detective Superintendent Nick May from Sussex Police said: “The man is being interviewed as we try to determine the circumstances of the incident, but at this time it is too early to say what his intentions, if any, were.
“However, given the events in Paris on Friday evening, there is heightened awareness around any such incident and it is best that we treat the matter in all seriousness.
“We are aware that there is concern about what has happened in France, but the general threat level remains the same and people should be aware as usual of anyone acting suspiciously and report any concerns immediately.”
A man in Brussels has been arrested in connection with the Paris attacks.
Picture of arrest made in Molenbeek (Brussels) after attack in Paris (by @SebastienGeoris) pic.twitter.com/PMav3fhhF2
— Victor Wouters (@vicwou) November 14, 2015
Even a hotel in Moscow was evacuated.
At least 900 people have been evacuated from the Hotel Cosmos in Moscow following a bomb threat.
“The hotel is being evacuated following a telephone call about a bomb. 900 people have already left the building,” a police source told RIA Novosti.
One Way Out
I’m not going to do live updates tonight, but right now they are evacuating areas of Paris as the whole of Europe enters panic mode.
There are going to be more attacks, and they are going to come soon. They can’t possibly be stopped, as many of them are going to be single individuals.
We need to focus the narrative onto: is it worth it?
I personally don’t see any benefits to diversity. I suppose the main thing is that for some people, mainly women and men with dysfunctional endocrine systems, there is a emotional satisfaction from the myth that they are helping people. The act performs the same psychological function as a religious sacrament. But a religion that requires that you cause people to suffer and die is not a very good religion.
I have never felt any type of endorphin release upon seeing these healthy adult males marching into Europe. Obviously, many people do.
The endorphin release these people are experiencing needs to be quantified and weighed against the amount of suffering and death they are causing by demanding this emotional stimulation.
Enough is enough.
These people need to be rounded up and sent home, and no one has any “moral” right to stand in the way of this. They are the ones causing these deaths. All we want is to be left alone.
Invasion activists never had the moral high-ground, but they had the ability to claim it. That ability is fading, rapidly.
You’ll notice that the burning of the Calais camp, which does appear to be a revenge attack by White French, has been getting virtually no coverage. Once it would have been “oh my god these specific individuals weren’t responsible for the actions of other specific individuals how dare you.” But those days are gone. People are suffocating under the weight of this invasion, now the invaders are killing people on a mass scale, and any normal person who hears about Calais burning is going to say “fair enough.”
The acceleration has begun.
The Race War has dawned.
Hail Victory.