The European crisis viewed by Czech man – part three – Final thoughts

As you might notice from my previous articles, I am trying to avoid using words “Migration crisis” too much. You also could guess how I see the present situation in Europe. Yes, there is a crisis in Europe. But it is not only a migration crisis. It is a global crisis of the whole European society.

I will start with one example from Army of Czech Republic (ACR).

There was a survey in HQ of ACR done by army psychologist. One of the private television stations got their hands on this material and published it.

It says that every 8th employee of ACR HQ causes potential security threat.

Why?

Because they have a critical point of view at foreign policy of our government and especially NATO.

How is it interpreted?

You might guess!

“Xenophobyia”, “Racism” and our favorite “Agressivity”.
Now let the numbers to talk.

There were totally 816 tested employees of HQ. The most employees think that the third most dangerous country to CR (Czech Republic) is the USA and 71% of them think that immigrants pose grave danger for Czech Republic!

And 71% of employees of HQ think that Islam is not acceptable at all.

I don’t want to hide information like official media do, so I will mention that from those 816 people, some would accept those common Islammic forms of punishment:
– stoning would be accepted by 47 people
– whipping would be accepted by 114 people
– cutting of hands would be accepted by 134 people
When you read this, ask yourself a few questions.

“Is that really true or just another attempt to discredit members of HQ?”

That is quite common practice. Someone says something that is not “truth and love” {the Czech counterpart saying to ‘sunshine an lollipops and singing kumbaya’}, he is descredited and then no one listens to him.

The favorite way is to blame him from having a child pornography. This works every time.

Another question might be: “Are their fears justified?”

Those guys have access to information from their own secret service, so it might be at least partially backed up by the truth.

And the final one? “If not only the most of common poorly informed people, but even the most of ARC HQ thinks that immigrants might be dangerous, why does the EU let theme cross the borders with no control?”

OK let’s calm down a bit.

Even Germany closed their borders to immigrants.

But the problem is not solved. There are still thousands of immigrants crossing borders of the Shenghen area.

As I mentioned few times before, I don’t trust official media anymore. But last month there were reported those things:
– Multiple fights between immigrants in Germany.
– Immigrants are making improvised weapons from metal parts of tables etc. and hiding them.
– Hungarian prime minister Viktor Orban says that the immigrants are reminiscent of an army.

I would like to stop at the last one. Viktor Orban is the only prime minister that deserves to be the one. When he saw that immigrants are coming through his country like floods, he said “NO!”. He started to build a barbed wire fence along the borders with Serbia, where the most of immigrants were coming in from.

There were cca 230 people killed in a Russian airplane by bomb set up by Islamic State two weeks ago.

Over hundred people were killed in Paris few days ago.

One of the attackers was illegal immigrant who came to Europe through the Greek route.

And here we are now!

Is still everything OK, Frau Merkel? No, it is not!

But look at our media. There was one article with title: “We are in war with terror! Immigrants are on our side!”. It was telling us, that they run from the same enemy as we fear.

The IS.

I say: “Maybe. Maybe a few of them are.”

I can understand that Syrian family (e. g. a man, his wife and their three children) is running from a war.

But then there is a boat, where 2000 from 2300 people (source: Doctors Without Borders) in it are young men in age between 20 to 30. They are dressed in brand clothing and have smartphones?

Those are not refugees running from warzone.

They might be either economical “immigrants”, who want money from social system of Germany and Sweden, or members of IS, who will make terrorists attacks just like the one in Paris.

When this will be over?

I don’t know.

But current situation is quite bad. Not in Czech Republic, but few European countries are getting into serious trouble.

Why is Turkey not taking any action against people smugglers?

A video I had translated from a Czech news source:

http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=61a_1446231208

(sorry, still cannot embed)

The question remains:  why are neither the local police forces, nor the Turkish government, doing anything about the 25 000 people smugglers who openly operate in Turkey, complete with websites and telephone numbers?

Does it have anything to do with Turkey’s candidacy to the EU?

After all, unfettered flow of Muslim migrants into Europe was the fear that prevented many EU countries from wanting Turkey’s inclusion in the Union.  But if the flow of refugees is already unfettered, why bar Turkey’s entry?

Oh, the questions we should be asking…

First videos from massive protests in the Czech Republic and Slovakia today are beginning to trickle in

Today, the 28th of October, 2015, saw massive, co-ordinated, anti-migrant protests throughout the Czech and Slovak republics.

Our sources say that the videos from these demonstrations and rallies are coming in and I will bring them to you as they become available.

Added up, over the cities and municipalities and even villages, the protests counted hundreds of thousands of people (according to our best estimates – even though the mainstream media have predictably downplayed these numbers by one or two orders of magnitude).

For example, here is RT’s coverage of the protest in Brno, the capital of Moravia:

http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=9ce_1446083929

(Sorry, still unable to embed into WordPress from LiveLeak…please follow the link.)

More to come in the coming days!!!

More interesting news coming out of Europe

Here is a clip from Czech Independent TV that I translated:

H/T – Baron Bodissey and Vlad Tepes.

Here is another, VERY important news item from CNtv (which I had translated – so blame all errors on me, please!)

It describes the plight of a Czech PM, member of a minority party ‘Usvit’ – member of the anti-Islamisation coalition – after he spoke at a PEGIDA ralley in Dresden.

HERE IS THE VIDEO (sorry, cannot seem to embed).

Following his speech, as he was heading to his bus, the Czech MP was assaulted by some sort of spray that had blinded him.  As he was blinded, he had bent over – just as he had been struck by a paving stone hurled from a bridge above…  Had he not been doubled-over in agony over his loss of sight, the paving stone would have struck him in the head (instead of his back) and caused a very serious, potentially life-threatening injury…

What kind of a world are we living in if people – even elected officials – are threatened with death should they speak to the people?!?!?

I want to get off this planet…but how?

European Commission against Racism and Intolerance claims Czech President is an ‘Islamophobe’

Here is an article in a Czech ‘Parliament sheets’ publication that a couple friends forwarded me, wondering if it is worth translating.

Hell yes!

Here is the full translation (by me – so, for errors or inaccuracies, you know whom to blame!).

I wish that they did not cut your heads off [while you are] alive.  Milos Zeman answered European Commission, which had called him ‘islamophobe’.

  1. 10. 2015 17:41

Czech President Milos Zeman is a big Islamophobe.  At least, according to the Commission with Council of Europe which deals with “racism and intolerance”.  The president himself addressed the accusation during his visit to the Zlin region.  He is apparently surprised, because he has no idea, what it means to be an islamophobe, nor how the term itself is actually defined.

Přeji vám, aby vám neuřízli hlavy zaživa. Miloš Zeman odpověděl evropské komisi, která jej nazvala islamofobem

Photo credit:  Daniela Cerna

Description:  President Milos Zeman and Mayor of the Zlin region, Stanislav Misak.

President Milos Zeman, while visiting the Zlin region, reacted to the accusation that he is an inslamophobe.  He is apparently surprised, because he himself does not know what that “islamophobia” actually is.  “The term islamophobia has never been properly defined.  I speak against Islamic radicalism,” he explained during a visit to the company Kovarna Viva in Zlin.

“So, for the authors of this information, I have just one wish:  that somebody will not cut their heads off [while they are] alive,” the President ended his speech.

This was a reaction to the assertion, which was found in a report if the Commission of the Council of Europe.  The full name of this [organization] is European Commission Against Racism and Intolerance and, on Wednesday, it released a report sharply critical of Czech politicians.

“ECRI was informed by numerous sources that political expressions of intolerance are not rare features, especially in times near elections.  The most common targets are the Roma and immigrants, lately, however, Muslims have become vicims of increased Islamophobia,” is, among other things, written in the report.

As the largest Islamophobes in the Czech political arena, the report named Tomio Okamura and also President Milos Zeman.  Regarding them, the commission raised its eyebrows over some of their statements, including some older ones.  “Even the President himself is considered to be an open holder of anti-Islamic views; in the year 2011, reportedly in an interview with a magazine, he stated that ‘moderate Muslim’ is contradicto in adjecto, or a self-contradiction, in the same way as ‘moderate Nazi’ is a contradicto in adjecto,” is an example of what is written in the report.

“He also declared that Islam is not a religion of peace and much less so of tolerance, but a religion of hatred”, is written in the report.  The report was brought to attention in Czech mainly by a non-profit organization ‘Clovek v tisni [People in Need]’.

H/T:  Vlad Tepes, Baron Bodissey

Demonstrators in the Czech Republic call for formation of armed militias, exit from EU

http://www.liveleak.com/ll_embed?f=c29ed92a11f4

Oh, how I wish WordPress would support embedding videos from LiveLeak!  Please, do click above…

The video above was translated by yours truly…

EU militarized police force?!?!?

It seems that the EU is worried that nation states which are not bribed into obedience might revolt and try to leave the EU…

…and, should any member state try to leave, and should the national police take the side of the citizens in opposition to the EU dictatorship, the EU has now created a militarized police force that answers to the EU and only to the EU – and can subdue any popularist uprising within its member states:

Sorry, I do not seem to be able to embed liveleak videos as easily as YouTube ones, so, please, follow this:

http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=456_1443643879

A bright young Czech’s perspective on the ‘migrant crisis’ – Part 1: the background

I have asked a young, bright Czech – living in the Czech Republic – to give me some insight on the ‘migrant crisis’ – from his individual point of view.

He agreed – but said it will take more than one post….because the whole ‘thing’ is so complex and complicated. 

Here is Part 1 of his response, laying out the background to the story itself.  Frankly, I think it is vitally important!

Please, do read for yourselves:

Many of you know about migration crisis in Europe. It is the most discussed topic in whole Europe right now.

There are many oppinions, TV debates, blogs, newspaper articles…

But, from my point of view, we have to look further back to the past than few months.

First, let me introduce myself. I am fresh graduate of Czech Technical University – Faculty of Electrical Engineering and I live in a city near Prague.

My first thoughts will lead us to the media.

Most newspapers, and their related internet versions, are owned by few Czech billionaires.

There are lots of TV stations, but only one of them is owned by Czech state. It is called “Czech Television” (CT). A few years back I would have said “It is the only independent media in Czech republic”.

But, times are changing and now I say “I do not believe any news containing important topics in CT”.

Our media are full of “political correctness” and “multiculturalism”.

But this situation is all around the world. It has spread like a cancer!

All media are following those lines.

Do you have different opinion? “Oh, sorry. We think you have a problem. You are not enough politically correct/multicultural (we call it that you are not  “truth and love” enough – the motto of first Czech president, Vaclav Havel, was “Truth and love will defeat hate and lies”).”

I am sick of those practices, but what can I do against them?

Absolutely nothing!

If you say something that goes against the line set by official media, you will get tagged with the sign “extremist” or “pro-Russian fundamentalist”.

One example for all is our president Milos Zeman.

He is the first president elected by the people, not the parliament.

After his election, opinions were voiced that a president should not be elected by people (clearly, somebody thinks, that the Czech citizen is stupid and not capable to choose one’s own president – democracy in its purest way) and put this duty back to Parliament.

Milos Zeman has a different opinion on almost everything that the representatives of European Union say (e. g. Angela Merkel). When he presents his oppinions to public, he is always called “pro-russian”, “xenophobe” etc.

The worst part is when media say that he acts against the “interests of our nation”, but his actions are absolutely logical!

I cannot say that our president is 100 % allright and everything he does is good, but our media are throwing dirt at him way too much. He is just not that “multicultural and politically correct”. He has his own oppinion and that is his “worst crime”.

My summary is that if media can blame democratically elected president for being a “traitor”, there is something wrong.

How could you believe your media’s ‘news-reports’ about the global situation, if they are trying to throw  dirt at the President, just because he has different opinion then the rest of the EU?

Especially if it is the only “independent” TV in your country. I will tell you, there might be something wrong.

“Aren´t we talking about freedom of speech here?”

Hell yeah!

Freedom of speech started to disappear in our country around the year 2003.

First, there was a great attenuation of provocative humour.

You cannot see those innuendos from 90´ s now!

And if you do something like that, you would be definitely sent to prison for “racism” or “xenophobia”.

Maybe prison is way too comfortable. You get qa warm meal three, times a day, you do not have to work and you can watch TV all day.

Better way is to push you down. You will lose your job and no one will hire you.

Then you know what comes next…

A question – please answer, if you can!

Yes, I usually post my never-humble-opinions.

But this time, I know I would be out of my depth had I offered one….

Still, the question itself has kept me up on more than one night.

Granted, my early schooling came behind the Iron Curtain – so, perhaps the very premises of my question are flawed.  Yet, I have read enough (among the little bits of ‘H’istory that I have indulged myself in) here, in The West, that suggests to me that this question may, indeed, be more valid today than it has been in, well, almost a century.

Therefore, my dear reader, I beg you to indulge me in asking my question and, if you can, in enlightening me with the answer.

Thank you!

Now, for my long-winded question:

Before World War 1, the movement of peoples between nations was not regulated.

At least, it was not regulated in the manner in which it became regulated later on in the 20th century.

Yes, of course, there were border controls:  but these were meant mostly for economic purposes (import/export taxes) and to apprehend criminals.

After all, it was not so long ago that mainland Europe was still using the Feudal System of governance, where the freedom of movement of country folk was under complete control of their landlords.

And the aristocracy was not limited by borders:  crossing them freely and unencumbered to pursue political marriages.  The land they held was their only anchor to the kingdom in which they held it.

The craftsmen were also not anchored in place by ‘kingdom-governance’ (I cannot think of a proper term for this), but by the self-regulated guilds of their region, under which they were permitted to practice their craft:  guilds were built upon the apprentice-based artificially created scarcity of their products within various regions, calculated to ensure higher-than-market value of their work and thus inflating guild-members standard of living and social standing.

Similarly, scholars and artists moved freely between kingdoms, based on where they could find private patrons willing to fund them and their works.  (Note:  painters may be regarded as ‘artists’ today, but, prior to accessible photography, they were considered craftsmen and thus subject to the guild system.)  For example, consider the alchemical court of Rudolph the Second.

After centuries of feudalism, it took a bit from when the shackles were shattered to when people gathered the courage to reach for freedom and travel to far-away lands – not just to learn, or as a right of passage, but to settle for good.

At the end of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th century, the human migrations truly became unfettered and populations began to migrate.

From my own cultural background – this is where the huge exodus of Czechs into Texas began:  so great was this migration that it was not until the 1970’s that Spanish overtook Czech as the second language of Texas. The University of Austin still has the largest Czech Studies department outside of the Czech Republic…  And don’t even get me started on ‘Miss Czech Texas’..

Yes, I realize that I am providing just one example here, but, I am no historian:  which is why I hope to get responses which will enlighten me.

Now that I have set the stage…

It has been suggested that one of the most important ‘behind-the-scenes’ reasons for the First World War was the absence of proper regulation on

the migration of populations across political borders.

Yes, of course – there were the ‘obvious’ reasons:  but I have heard the claim that these ‘obvious’ reasons were, in fact, brought about because of the cultural instability and tensions brought about by, in practical terms, unregulated migration of populations across culturo-political borders.

It would be difficult to argue that what we are seeing now, in the EU in particular and in all of Europe in general is exactly the same type of unregulated migration of populations across cutluro-political borders!

But, it is even more pointed now than what it had been prior to WW1:  at least back then, the migrations did not tend to cross religio-cultural borders – something that is most definitely happening now.  The new migrants flooding Europe, without any true governance, are not just politically and culturally different, they are also religiously different:  subscribing to an intolerant, supremacist religion that permits exploitation and violence against non-members of said religion and refuses to recognize any culture other than its own…

Finally, the question:

Are the current, practically unregulated migration conditions into Europe as dangerous, if not more, than the ones that sparked World War 1?

Ici Londres: How the Euro killed democracy