In this mailing:
by Soeren Kern
• October 31, 2016 at 5:30 am
- During the
first six months of 2016, migrants committed 142,500 crimes,
according to the Federal Criminal Police Office. This is equivalent
to 780 crimes committed by migrants every day, an increase of nearly
40% over 2015. The data includes only those crimes in which a
suspect has been caught.
- Thousands of
migrants who entered the country as "asylum seekers" or
"refugees" have gone missing. They are, presumably,
economic migrants who entered Germany on false pretenses. Many are
thought to be engaging in robbery and criminal violence.
- Local police in
many parts of the country admit that they are stretched to the limit
and are unable to maintain law and order.
- "Drug
trafficking takes place right before our eyes. If we intervene, we
are threatened, spat on, insulted. Sometimes someone whips out a
knife. They are always the same people. They are ruthless, fearless
and have no problems with robbing even the elderly." — Private
security guard.
- According to
Freddi Lohse of the German Police Union in Hamburg, many migrant
offenders view the leniency of the German justice system as a green
light to continue delinquent behavior. "They are used to
tougher consequences in their home countries," he said.
"They have no respect for us."
- "It cannot
be that offenders continue to fill the police files, hurt us
physically, insult us, whatever, and there are no consequences. Many
cases are closed or offenders are released on probation or whatever.
Yes, what is happening in the courts today is a joke." — Tania
Kambouri, German police officer.
German police are shown deployed to break up a mass
brawl between migrants (Image source: SAT1 video screenshot)
The rape of a ten-year-old girl in Leipzig, the largest city in
Saxony, has drawn renewed attention to the spiraling levels of violent
crime perpetrated by migrants in cities and towns across Germany — and the
lengths to which German officials and the media go to censor information
about the perpetrators of those crimes.
The girl was riding her bicycle to school at seven o'clock in the
morning on October 27 when a man ambushed her, threw her to the ground
and raped her. The suspect is described as being in his mid-thirties with
short brown hair and a stubble beard.
Leipzig police have explicitly refused to say whether the suspect is
a migrant, but have implicitly admitted that he is. They published a
facial composite of the suspect with the politically correct warning:
by Jagdish N. Singh
• October 31, 2016 at 4:30 am
- King Solomon
built the First Temple here around 1000 BC. The Babylonian King
Nebuchadnezzar tore it down 400 years later. In the first century
BC, King Herod refurbished a Second Temple. It is here that Jesus
Christ lashed out against the money-changers. The Roman General
Titus exacted revenge against Jewish rebels, sacking and burning the
Temple in 70 AD.
- UNESCO seeks to
erase this history of faiths and replace it with a jihadi narrative
that would deny both Christians and Jews their age-old access to the
symbols of their faiths. If they are not stopped, the Islamist
backers of the UNESCO resolution will be emboldened eventually to
back Islamist elements in India to question its Hindu historical and
religious sites.
- After so many
recent votes at UNESCO erasing Judeo-Christian history in favour of
Islamist misrepresentation one thing is clear: the sooner
democracies leave the UN, the better. Consider the UN's oil-for-food
scandal of 2004-2005 and its growing sex-for-food scandal that is
still ongoing. Now, with the UN's wholesale erasure of Biblical
history, the only intelligent response is to head for the exits. The
UN seems nothing more than a bloated, corrupt jobs program of
champagne for diplomats. It does far more harm than good. Nothing
worth having can come from such a degraded place.
The second Jewish Temple, completed by King Herod in
19 BC, was destroyed by the Romans in 70 AD (depicted at left in a 1626
painting by Nicolas Poussin). The current al-Aqsa Mosque (right) on the
Temple Mount was first built in the year 705 AD, seventy-three years
after Muhammad's death in 632, and rebuilt several times after
earthquakes. (Images source: Wikimedia Commons)
One wonders what India's Permanent Delegation to the United Nations
Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) is doing in
Paris today. India joined it way back on November 4, 1946. Given the
potential of this cultural agency in spreading enlightenment derived from
scientific education and fostering development throughout the world, New
Delhi sent to the organization internationally acclaimed philosopher and
future President, S. Radhakrishnan as a member. He rose to become its
chairman during 1948-49. New Delhi's abstention from voting on the
October 18 resolution in UNESCO's Executive Board, however, indicates the
Indian delegation now in Paris is absolutely ineffective.
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