Slovakian Shitlord to Become President of the EU

Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
June 22, 2016

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Robert Fico

In a quirky sort of policy, the job of President of the EU rotates every six months among the heads of state of EU member states.

Next week, the Prime Minister of Slovakia, Robert Fico, will take up the reins.

The establishment is flipping-out, as he’s a hardcore haji-hater.

Washington Post:

‘‘Islam has no place in Slovakia,’’ Fico told reporters in May. He warned that ‘‘migrants change the character of our country,’’ and declared he wouldn’t allow such change to affect his nation.

Fico has made similar remarks over the past year, as Syria’s escalating humanitarian crisis spilled into Europe, bringing a wave of immigrants, including refugees, to the continent’s borders. German Chancellor Angela Merkel bucked popular opinion and welcomed refugees — with roughly 1 million arriving in Germany — but her decision gave momentum to her country’s Euroskeptic far-right.

Fico, like other politicians from Eastern and Central Europe, has argued both that his country has no obligation to house migrants and that, unlike the United States and leading Western European nations, has little experience of Muslim immigration.

‘‘Since Slovakia is a Christian country, we cannot tolerate an influx of 300,000-400,000 Muslim immigrants who would like to start building mosques all over our land and trying to change the nature, culture, and values of the state,’’ he said in 2015.

Fico has indicated the burden to deal with conflicts in the Middle East and North Africa lie further west and mocked Germany for treating Muslim immigrants as a ‘‘protected species.’’

Regrettably, the position of “President of the EU” is largely symbolic, as Germany obviously wasn’t ever planning to give Eastern Europe any power in the bloc – that’s what the bribe money is for, to sit down and shut up and do what they’re told.

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None shall be allowed to question the divine rights of the queen bitch. Not without giving up all of that free money and the right to do migrant work in the UK.

However, this might bring some media attention on the anti-haji agenda of Eastern Europe. It depends if Fico decides to push the issue. Thus far, he hasn’t been as outspoken as Hungary’s Orban.