Thousands
of refugees waiting in cold weather to cross Serbian border into
Croatia
Over
three-thousand asylum seekers mostly from war-ravaged countries in
the Middle East and North Africa have been stranded for days, after
Croatia curbed new arrivals.
Meanwhile, thousands more are entering Slovenia from Croatia, trying to make their way to northern Europe. Slovenia’s government has pleaded for help from its neighbors to cope with the huge influx.
It has also proposed a law which enables the army to guard the borders along police forces. At least eight-thousand refugees crossed the Slovenian territory on Monday alone.
During the question period after the ministers’ speeches, journalist Tomas Ramberg of EkotPublic Radio asked:
Meanwhile, thousands more are entering Slovenia from Croatia, trying to make their way to northern Europe. Slovenia’s government has pleaded for help from its neighbors to cope with the huge influx.
It has also proposed a law which enables the army to guard the borders along police forces. At least eight-thousand refugees crossed the Slovenian territory on Monday alone.
Sweden
On Brink Of Collapse, Worrying Report
19
October, 2015
According
to Swedish Prime Minister Stefan Löfven, Sweden is in a state
of crisis, and on the brink of complete collapse.
With
its huge influx of migrants, the government are no longer able to
guarantee a “normal service” to its citizens, according to a
report on the Gatestoneinstitute.org website.
The
report says:
Three
ministers appeared by the Prime Minister’s side at the hastily
summoned press conference, which came on the heels of an
extraordinary government meeting. The purpose of the press conference
seems to have been to convey two messages:
To
explain to the world and the Swedish people that Sweden is facing
“one of the largest humanitarian efforts in Swedish history.”
That
there is no more housing available, and migrants should be prepared
to live in tents.
During the question period after the ministers’ speeches, journalist Tomas Ramberg of EkotPublic Radio asked:
“You
say that Sweden is preparing for a crisis situation, what do you mean
by those dramatic words?”
Stefan
Löfven’s reply was incomprehensible:
“Yes,
well first of all we, we are in the middle of what I mean seriously
when I’m saying, when I express a, a big thank you to all the
people doing such a great job, because it is a humanitarian effort,
it’s just as the Minister for Justice and Migration just said. What
we are actually doing is that we are saving lives when people who
come from bombs, from, from killing, from oppression, their lives are
shattered.
We,
we help them and that is a, that is a great humanitarian effort, and
of course now that we can see the number of people who need it, that
are seeking protection, then it is one of the greatest humanitarian
efforts. And that we are facing a crisis situation, that is in part
why I, we are outlining today that we are also preparing for a
situation where we may need to house people in tents, because we
stand up with the humanitarian refugee policy, right of asylum, but
we can now also see that we cannot close our eyes to the fact that
there are more coming than ever in such a short time, and we need to
provide a roof over their heads. Then it is — other things may be
required.”
However,
the fact that the government is now talking about housing migrants in
tents, may be a signal that Sweden, despite everything, may not want
to be on the front lines of the “humanitarian” battle anymore,
after all. The prospect of spending an ice-cold Swedish winter in a
tent may make migrants choose countries other than Sweden. If not, a
complete collapse of the Swedish system is imminent.
In
2014, the Danish historian and social commentator Lars Hedegaard
prophetically remarked in the book “Farliga ord”(Dangerous
Words), that the economic breakdown of a nation always happens
quickly and unexpectedly:
“If
there is any lesson to be drawn from history, it is that what you do
not think will happen, does. Time and again. The final consequence of
the West and, above all, Sweden’s immigration policy is that the
economy will collapse — because who is going to pay for it all? And
economic breakdowns, once they happen, always happen very fast.”
Right
now, the Swedish government is borrowing money abroad to pay for
immigration. But that amount is not enough. On October 8, the Swedish
Association of Local Authorities and Regions (SKL) warned that
municipalities need to increase the tax rate by 2%. The average
municipal income tax is already 32%, on top of which many Swedes also
pay a federal income tax. A 2% rise in the tax rate would mean 15,000
kronor ($1,825) more in taxes each year for the average household.
High-ranking
politicians and officials are also saying the situation is extremely
grim. On October 1, Minister for Home Affairs Anders Ygeman said that
the current wave of immigrants will lead to “huge economic
strains;” and a few days later Immigration Service Director General
Anders Danielsson explained that “within the framework of the
system we all know, we are now approaching the end of the road.”
Statements such as these have never been heard before in Sweden,
especially in connection with the “sacred” issue of migration.
Until now, Swedes have perpetually been told that we live in a rich
country that has no problem handling all asylum seekers who want to
come here.
In
the shadow the 1.5 million migrants expected to arrive this year in
Germany, the EU’s largest country (population 81 million), migrants
are also pouring into a rather smaller Sweden. Geographically Sweden
is large, but consists mainly of forests and wilderness, and fewer
than 10 million people live in the country. Until 2010, Sweden took
in about 25,000 migrants a year. However, in 2010, then Prime
Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt made a deal with pro-immigration Green
Party, (Miljöpartiet) — by his own admission to punish voters for
allowing the anti-mass-immigration Sweden Democrats party
(Sverigedemokraterna) into parliament.
Reinfeldt’s
deal opened the immigration floodgates. In 2014, 81,000 people sought
asylum in Sweden; and 33,500 were granted asylum. However, as many of
the immigrants subsequently brought over their relatives, that figure
substantially increased. Last year, 110,000 people were granted
residency status in Sweden. One should add to this figure an unknown
number of illegal aliens.
There
is now talk of 180,000 asylum seekers coming to Sweden in 2015. That
number is more than twice as many as the year before. If half of them
are granted asylum, and they each bring over three relatives, we are
talking about 270,000 new immigrants to Sweden — within one year.
Over 8000 people arrived just last week, 1,716 of whom were so-called
“unaccompanied refugee children.”
Swedes
who only follow the mainstream media get the impression that all the
migrants arriving are war refugees from Syria, but the number of
Syrians is actually less than half of the total: 2,864 people last
week claimed to be from Syria. 1,861 claimed to be from Iraq, and
1,820 from Afghanistan. Clearly, many people from countries that are
not at war are taking their chances and applying for asylum in
Sweden; but this is something about which the mainstream media does
not see fit to inform its followers.
That
there is an exchange of populations going on, should be clear in any
sober assessment. The Swedish economist Tino Sanandaji (of
Iranian-Kurdish descent, and therefore tougher than most Swedes, who,
if they criticize the immigration policy, are immediately accused of
racism)writes on his blog that Swedes could soon be in the minority
in their own country:
“1,000-1,500
asylum seekers a day for 15 years equals 5.5 to 8.2 million asylum
seekers. At the end of 2014, the Statistical Central Bureau, SCB,
calculated that 21.5% of the Swedish population were of foreign
descent: 2.1 million, out of 9.7 million. The number of people of
Swedish descent — born in Sweden with two parents born in Sweden —
has been stable at about 7.7 million and is expected to remain stable
or increase slightly due to birth surplus. If those of foreign
descent increase their number by about 5.6 million, they will become
the majority.”
One
of the municipalities that has been flooded with migrants is
Trelleborg (population 43,000), located on Sweden’s southernmost
coast. Over 100 “unaccompanied refugee children” arrive from
Germany via ferry on a typical day.
During the last two weeks, more
than 1000 such youths have been registered; more than half of them
have now vanished and are listed as missing. No one knows why, or
where they have gone. Add to this 13,000 adult asylum seekers.
Impromptu
temporary lodgings have been created in sports centers, ice rinks,
and at the Sturup airport hotel, to name a few.
Trelleborg
has written a desperate letter
of appeal for
help to the government, just as, a few weeks ago, the Örkelljunga
municipality did in vain. The mayor and the Municipal Director of
Trelleborg, who signed the letter on October 1, wrote:
“In
the past, many asylum seekers have taken the route through Denmark to
Malmö, but this changed about two weeks ago. From September 10 until
the morning of October 1, 14,100 asylum seekers arrived in Trelleborg
by ferry. There is no indication that the pace is slowing; if
anything it is continuously increasing.
On
Tuesday, September 22, Trelleborg received word from the Immigration
Service that the municipality where children and young people arrive
is by law the authority that is required to provide housing, care and
living expenses, until such time as the Immigration Service decides
upon a designated municipality. … Trelleborg has quickly ended up
in a situation where the regular services to the community are at
great risk of being affected. … By writing this letter, we would
like to bring to your attention the enormous strain we now find
ourselves under.”
Apparently,
the Minister for Justice and Migration, Morgan Johansson, has since
been in contact with Trelleborg’s mayor via telephone to discuss
possible solutions. On October 9, the Immigration Service decided
that Trelleborg should be exempt as a designated municipality for
unaccompanied children. However, it is unclear how this will
alleviate Trelleborg’s plight as far as the new arrivals go.
The
only concrete help so far has come from some of the neighboring
municipalities, who have opened up facilities to house some of the
Trelleborg migrants.
Malmö,
about 18 miles from Trelleborg, is also in dire straits. For the last
few weeks, the central train station in Sweden’s third largest city
has been overrun with migrants, and the volunteers that showed up for
the first few days with food, water and clothes now seem to have lost
interest. The daily Sydsvenska
Dagbladet summed
up the desperate situation in Malmö, where even the city’s empty
jail was considered (and rejected) as possible housing for refugee
children. It now looks more like a possibility for adult refugees.
The
Social Democratic mayor of Filipstad, Per Gruvberger, also recently
raised the alarm that his municipality of 6,000 people will not be
able to provide schooling and childcare for the 1,100 asylum seekers
now assigned to his municipality.
The
reply of the Minister for Justice and Migration, Morgan Johansson, to
this cry for help was: “If need be, Filipstad will just have to
expand its operations.”
This
insensitive statement from Johansson caused the Mayor of neighboring
Årjäng, Daniel Schützer, to go ballistic. He wrote about his
fellow party member on Facebook:
“Pardon
my French, but Morgan Johansson is totally f—ing stupid. ‘Expand,’
he says. It is not f—ing bricks and planks that we are lacking, it
is teachers!!!!”
The
Immigration Service, which is tasked with reviewing the asylum
seekers’ reasons for immigrating, is understandably swamped with
work. Even before the latest “refugee crisis” — and despite
1,200 new employees being hired last year — its staff is
struggling. The employees’ union is now raising the alarm,
concerning more and more incidents of violence, vandalism and suicide
attempts — this year (up to August), 1,021 such incidents were
reported.
“The
work situation for the entire authority is very strained. The
pressure is enormous. The work environment has deteriorated
severely,” said Sanna Norblad, local chairperson of the ST union,
to daily Norrköpings Tidningar.
While
all this plays out, large portions of the Swedish people watch in
horror from the sidelines and wonder when the unavoidable collapse
will occur. At the same time, a surprisingly large portion of the
citizenry still overconfidently believe that “Daddy State” will
make everything all right. This a very Swedish view, like the wishes
of children, that Peter Santesson, head of polling institute
Demoskop, wrote about on the website Dagens Opinion. Santesson states
that the Swedes have an unusually high level of trust in the social
order, and that they are convinced that “somewhere higher up, there
is always someone smarter and more informed, taking responsibility
and making sure everything works.” If the government officials turn
out to be incapable of handling the refugee chaos they themselves
have created, it could be disastrous. Santesson continues,
“Responsible
decision makers need to ponder the trust the people have now bestowed
on them, and they need to handle this trust with care in this
difficult crisis. If the people’s confidence is betrayed by them
turning out not to be able to handle the situation – if ‘Sweden’
turns out to be insufficient as a miracle cure and the crisis becomes
too much to handle — the outcome could be political and social
consequences reaching far beyond the issue of immigration.”
The
blogger Johan Westerholm, a Social Democrat who is critical of the
government, points out in an October 7 titled “System infarction in
the Immigration System,” that in addition to those who are already
in Sweden, we need to add those who are not granted asylum in Norway
and Finland, and will therefore be sent back to the last country they
were in — Sweden. Considering that Finland rejects 60% of asylum
applications, it is fair to assume that during the coming weeks, the
chaos will only escalate.
Westerholm
writes that the situation in Malmö is “out of control,” and
states that we do not have any idea who those arriving in Sweden are:
“A
very large group of administrators [at the Immigration Service] do
not even know the designated terror organizations, and then there are
the sympathizers — people who, on principal, would never file a
report to the Immigration Service security department, for
ideological reasons. A large group consists of those who are scared
into silence. In an organization characterized by fear and stress, to
do nothing is a surefire way to keep your job. If a report of
suspicion is filed anyway, typically nothing happens. If the life and
health of the terrorist is threatened, as is often the situation, the
person gets to stay. Initially he is given a temporary residence
permit, but in practice, this turns out to be гermanent.”
The
152 asylum seekers reported to the Security Service so far this year
as possible threats to national security, are thus most likely just
the tip of the iceberg.
The
Swedes who have already lost faith in the authorities and the
politicians are now preparing for the unthinkable — that their once
so secure society is about to collapse. On the website72timmar.se,
the Civil Contingencies Agency informs the public on “our five most
basic needs: Water, food, heat, sleep and security.” The readers
are told to keep water and canned goods at home, and make sure they
can stay warm.
“Prepping”
is becoming more common in Sweden. Last summer, the daily Svenska
Dagbladetran a story on the first Swedish online store for preppers,
and that interest was huge. According to the polling institute Sifo,
until recently, seven out of ten Swedes have been completely
unprepared for a crisis that knocks out the power supply and thereby
the infrastructure. The owner of the online store, Fredrik
Qvarnström, told the paper that, in his estimation, the Swedes are
the worlds most poorly prepared for a crisis:
“There
is lot of talk about the greenhouse effect and economic crisis.
People seem to be aware that there are problems, but I do not think
they know how vulnerable we really are. We rely on the state to take
care of us, as it has in the past.”
It
will not be long until the Swedes realize that the state will not
look after them. The country that just 20 years ago was considered
one of the safest and most affluent in the world, is now in danger of
becoming a failed state.
Germany
EU SITREP October 21st, 2015 by Gepard Schröder
20
October, 2015
The
political conflict over the refugee issue intensifies.
There
is a growing schism in German society and even within political
parties.
Local
politicians who by the nature of their positions are closer to the
concerns of the citizenry are beginning to defect from the dictate of
the party leaders.
SPD:
The mayor of Magdeburg has left the SPD over a dispute with his
higher-ups regarding his stance on the refugee issue:[source]
CDU:
Merkel faced a lot of criticism at the CDU “Future-Conference”
near Leipzig.
Some
comments by “grassroots” CDU members as reported by SPIEGEL:
- “Close the borders”
- Michael Weickert, CDU member of parliament in Leipzig: “Many here say, the Merkel-CDU is no longer our CDU.”
- “If we do not stop this process, Germany will slip into a national catastrophe.”
- Manfred Kolbe, member of the Bundestag until 2013: “More and more people tell me: This is no longer my chancellor.” [source]
The
most popular candidate for mayor in Sunday’s election in Cologne
has been the victim of an allegedly politically motivated terror
attack on Saturday morning.[source]
She
was stabbed in the neck and severely injured by a man reportedly
saying:
“I
am the Messiah. I’m doing it for you all.”
The
attacker allegedly described his actions as some form of self-defense
to combat the destruction of Germany by the political elites through
an uncontrolled influx of migrants.
Reker
won the election on Sunday but it is unclear when she will recover to
take over her duties. I think it is worth noting that the
participation in the vote was under 50% despite the media hype
surrounding the attack.
Democracy
is basically dead in Germany. No one believes in it anymore as a
force to change things for the better.
More
and more people realize that they are not represented and just quit.
Often
when I try to talk to people about some political topic that
interests me they tell me outright:
“I
am sorry, I do not have an opinion. I quit reading the news or
thinking about political issues. It depresses me too much and it
doesn’t change anything anyway.”
During
the last campaign for the last vote for the Bundestag I made it a
habit to ask people who they would vote for.
People
would usually say “Merkel” or name one of the parties. But among
those that named a party and not Merkel, it was hardly ever CDU. The
CDU campaign was all about Merkel. And it worked.
When
I asked people why they would vote for Merkel, they usually said they
liked her politics. But when asked for just one specific policy or
law as an example of her work, they usually could not think of
anything at all.
The
parties still go through the routine of formulating programs and
campaigning on them, and many voters still go through the routine of
reading news papers, attending political meetings and making crosses
on ballots. But even those voters are sometimes sure that they
support some specific candidate, but cannot really say for sure why…
How
is Democracy supposed to work like that?
Many
Germans are totally disgusted by the German political, so called,
“elite”. And it is not hard to see why. They are treated by their
“representatives” like school children by an arrogant
teacher.Video. (Thanks
to Scott for the link)
Here
we have a German politician telling his electorate, that they can
always leave their country, if they have a problem with the
government’s decisions. How very democratic.
The
electorate is not too happy as you can hear.
In
this context I think it needs to be stressed again that the actions
of the German government with regard to the migration crisis are not
even in line with German constitutional law unless many bordering
nations leave the EU and were declared as “non-safe 3rd party
states”.
See
GG Art 16:
Article
16a [Right of asylum]
(1)
Persons persecuted on political grounds shall have the right of
asylum.
(2)
Paragraph (1) of this Article may not be invoked by a person who
enters the federal territory from a member state of the European
Communities or from another third state in which application of the
Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees and of the Convention
for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms is
assured. The states outside the European Communities to which the
criteria of the first sentence of this paragraph apply shall be
specified by a law requiring the consent of the Bundesrat. In the
cases specified in the first sentence of this paragraph, measures to
terminate an applicant’s stay may be implemented without regard to
any legal challenge that may have been instituted against
them.[source]
Merkel
has received an open letter, initially sent by 34 CDU members, who
mainly hold office in the local or municipal political system. They
harshly criticize Merkel.
Some
notable excerpts:
- Our EU-partners Greece, Italy, Hungary, Croatia, Slovenia and Austria guide the refugees to Germany in violation of European law.
- The current policy of “open borders” does not conform with European or German law, nor is it in line with the CDU’s political program.
- A large part of our party’s members and voters does not feel represented by the policies of the CDU lead federal government.[source]
The
letter has since been signed by a total of 126 CDU politicians. Most
of it is disgusting politician gibberish, but it does certainly
signal some pressure on the “political-bottom-feeders” to change
their tune as it becomes uncomfortable to feed their voters lies that
conflict too much with what they perceive. And it does state some
inconvenient truths.
The
CDU-CSU conflict is also heating up.
There
is talk about Bavaria suing the federal government over the issue of
uncontrolled mass migration at the BVG (German constitutional court).
[source] [source]
Threatening
the German government with a high-profile lawsuit in front of the
highest court of the nation is a very unconventional move for a
German party that is itself part of the government.
A
Russian Imam has been arrested in Berlin for recruiting members and
supporters for Daesh. He is also accused of having provided night
vision systems and scopes to Islamic terrorist groups.[source]
Next
to the migrant crisis two big international scandals have surfaced
recently that dominated the headlines in Germany.
And
the corruption around the decision to give the FIFA world cup to
Germany in 2006.[source]
That
is really shocking!
Who
would have thought Germans might be corruptible?
Not
a lot of Germans it seems…
I
think the problem some Germans
face already and many more will face soon, is that the keeping up the
doublethink becomes harder.
The
world they live in, perceive and can reason about, and the fake world
constructed in their minds, through exposure to lifelong propaganda,
peer-pressure, misinformation and, beneath the surface, self-loathing
and fear, mismatch more and more as current events unfold.
Consciousness
is a gift but can also be a burden.
Especially
if you realize that you are waking up to a terribly frightening
situation, in which you are an insignificant pawn in a game of
ruthless psychopaths, shoved around by agents of these psychopaths.
The
agents pretend to care only for you and tell you that they take their
authority directly from you, the sovereign, while they turn your
pockets over once more, to see if there might be something left. None
of their actions back up their claims, but there is no one to turn
to, no one who could keep these people in check.
Your
government allows wars of aggression to be supported from your
people’s territory by foreign occupiers.
Your government steers
your people head on into a conflict with the only internationally and
regionally important actor that might itself have an honest
interest in your independence.
Your
government is OK with its people being spied on by the foreign
occupiers, it actually helps with that.
Your
government is itself spied on by the occupiers, but they could not do
anything about it, even if they wanted to, because they are just
corrupt puppets. So they have the media announce that they protest
the spying and then… do…. nothing.
So
one can wake up to that reality or keep on dreaming the dream.
Conveniently
you do not even have to dream up something for yourself. The dream is
available nonstop 24/7 on all mayor channels, in all the newspapers,
you just have to submit and enjoy the soma.
I
think the German people is being held hostage and suffers from a
severe case of collective Stockholm-Syndrome and an almost broken
backbone.
Probably
not unlike many other peoples.
There
will be time to talk about this later. And Stockholm is so beautiful
this time of the year.
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