In this mailing:
- Soeren Kern: Germany Heading
for Four More Years of Pro-EU, Open-Door Migration Policies
- Bruce Bawer: The Latest Victim
of the Campus Hate Industry
by Soeren Kern • September 8,
2017 at 5:00 am
- The
policy positions of Merkel and Schulz on key issues are
virtually identical: Both candidates are committed to
strengthening the European Union, maintaining open-door
immigration policies, pursuing multiculturalism and quashing
dissent from the so-called far right.
- Merkel
and Schulz both agree that there should be no upper limit on
the number of migrants entering Germany.
- Merkel's
grand coalition backed a law that would penalize social media
giants, including Facebook, Google and Twitter, with fines of
€50 million ($60 million) if they fail to remove offending
content from their platforms within 24 hours. Observers say
the law is aimed at silencing critics of Merkel's open-door
migration policy.
German
Chancellor Angela Merkel (right) and her main election opponent,
Martin Schulz (left), whose policy positions on key issues are
virtually identical. (Image source: European Parliament/Flickr)
German Chancellor Angela Merkel, leader of the
Christian Democratic Union (CDU), is on track win a fourth term in
office after polls confirmed she won the first and only televised
debate with her main election opponent, Martin Schulz, leader of
the Social Democratic Union Party (SDP).
A survey for the public broadcaster ARD showed that
55% of viewers thought Merkel was the "more convincing"
candidate during the debate, which took place on September 3; only
35% said Schulz came out ahead.
Many observers agreed that Schulz failed to leverage
the debate to revive his flagging campaign, while others noted that
Schulz's positions on many issues are virtually indistinguishable
from those held by Merkel.
Rainald Becker, an ARD commentator, described the
debate as, "More a duet than a duel."
by Bruce Bawer • September 8,
2017 at 4:00 am
- "All
men are trash." — Esme Allman.
- Allman
is a young woman who, although a student at one of the finest
universities on earth, considers herself to be a multiply
oppressed victim and who sees the world around her as swarming
with oppressors. She has been so well-schooled in the idea
that whites are always the oppressors and dark-skinned people
always the victims that when she sees a fellow British subject
rooting for his own nation's side in a war against jihadists,
her first and only thought is to brand him an
"Islamophobe" -- this, even though the enemy in that
war are men who would force her into a burka or consider her,
as an infidel, deserving of rape and/or death.
- So
it is that Robbie Travers, whose only offense is believing in
freedom and opposing a totalitarian ideology, has found
himself in hot water -- a real victim of a mentality
that is all about power and dogma even as its pretends to be
devoted to "dignity and respect" for all.
Robbie
Travers. (Image source: Robbie Travers Facebook page)
Robbie Travers is a 21-year-old law student at the
University of Edinburgh and an articulate, insightful contributor
to Gatestone as well as other websites. In his essays, he has
illuminated the topsy-turvy values that dominate contemporary
British political discourse – as exemplified by the refusal of the
Speaker of the House of Commons to invite President Trump to
address Parliament and the refusal of Labour Party leader Jeremy
Corbyn to ban Al Qaeda from Britain as a terrorist organization.
Now, Travers has become the victim of the very
forces about which he has written. In April, after the US Air Force
carried out a successful anti-ISIS action, he posted a comment on
Facebook:
"Excellent news that the US administration and
Trump ordered an accurate strike on an Isis network of tunnels in
Afghanistan. I'm glad we could bring these barbarians a step closer
to collecting their 72 virgins."
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