Ta budbringeren - kampanjen mot Politically Incorrect

Soeren Kern

Ber­li­ner Zei­tung, Frank­fur­ter Rund­schau og Der Spie­gel fører an i en kam­panje mot nett­ste­det Poli­ti­cally Incor­rect, som de mener his­ser til hat mot mus­li­mer. Det gjø­res ikke noe for­søk på å se nær­mere på hva som er hat, og om det mon ikke er andre som i langt ster­kere grad his­ser til hat.

Sta­dige ter­ror­trus­ler og en økende mis­til­lit mot mus­li­mer gjør atmo­sfæ­renn spent. 22/7 har skremt og demon­strert poten­sia­let for vold. De poli­tiske kor­rekte bru­ker dette til å demon­strere hva som vil skje hvis debat­ten får løpe fritt.

De mest aktive ønsker der­for å anvende lov­ver­ket. Kri­tisk omtale av det multi­kul­tu­relle og mus­li­mer spe­si­elt er en kren­kelse av reli­gions­fri­he­ten og deres menneskerettigheter.

Nå har visse ledere innen Ver­fas­sungs­schutz, Over­vå­kings­po­li­tiet, kom­met med utta­lel­ser som tyder på at de kjø­per denne argumentasjonen.

Poli­ti­cally Incor­rect er langt det største nett­ste­det og pådrar seg der­for mest vrede.

Stje­ling av epos­ter inn­går i kam­pan­jen. Slike meto­der har også blitt anvendt i Dan­mark. Avisne har ingen kva­ler med å motta og bruke stoffet.

Soeren Kern ser på kon­se­kven­sene av en slik poli­tikk, for ytrings­fri­he­ten og samfunnsklimaet.

 

 

Ger­many Attempts to Silence

Cri­ti­cism of Islam

by Soeren Kern
January 12, 2012 at 5:00 am


Ger­man aut­hori­ties have offi­ci­ally con­fir­med that they are moni­to­ring German-language Inter­net web­si­tes that are cri­ti­cal of Mus­lim immi­gra­tion and the Isla­miza­tion of Europe.

Accor­ding to Man­fred Murck, direc­tor of the Ham­burg branch of the Ger­man dome­stic intel­li­gence agency, the Bun­de­samt für Ver­fas­sungs­schutz (BfV), his orga­niza­tion is study­ing whether Ger­man citizens who cri­ti­cize Mus­lims and Islam on the Inter­net are fomen­ting hate and are thus cri­mi­nally guilty of “breaching” the Ger­man constitution.

The BfV’s move marks a sig­ni­fi­cant set­back for the exer­cise of free speech in Ger­many and comes amid a months-long smear cam­paign led by a triple alli­ance of leftwing Ger­man mul­ti­cul­tural eli­tes, sundry Mus­lim groups and mem­bers of the main­stream media, who have been relent­less in their efforts to discre­dit the so-called counter-jihad move­ment (also known as the “Isla­mop­ho­bes”) in Germany.

Opi­nion polls show that growing num­bers of ordi­nary Ger­man citizens are wor­ried about the con­se­quen­ces of deca­des of mul­ti­cul­tural poli­cies that have encoura­ged mass immi­gra­tion from Mus­lim countries.

Ger­mans are espec­ially con­cerned about the refu­sal of mil­lions of Mus­lim immi­grants to inte­grate into Ger­man society, as well as the emer­gence of a paral­lel legal sys­tem in Ger­many based on Isla­mic Sha­ria law.

In an effort to reverse this tide of pub­lic opi­nion, the guar­di­ans of Ger­man mul­ti­cul­tura­lism have been wor­king over­time to regain the ini­tia­tive by accu­sing the cri­tics of Islam of enga­ging in hate speech to try to inti­mi­date the so-called “new right” into silence.

The media cam­paign has been led by two finan­cially troubled news­pa­pers, the Ber­li­ner Zei­tung and its sis­ter pub­li­ca­tion, theFrank­fur­ter Rund­schau, as well as Der Spie­gel, a leftwing magazine based in Ham­burg that has long served as the mout­h­piece for Ger­man multiculturalism.

In a January 4, 2012 inter­view with the Ber­li­ner Zei­tungandFrank­fur­ter Rund­schau, Murck said the owners of anti-Islam blogs “have a dis­tur­bed rela­tion­ship to the democra­tic con­sti­tu­tio­nal state” and often pro­mote “inf­ringe­ments of human rights pro­tected under our constitution.”

Murck con­ti­nued: “I also see evi­dence of cri­mi­nal rele­vance, such as making threats and pub­lic invi­ta­tions to crime.” He said cri­ti­cism of Mus­lims and Islam con­sti­tu­tes “an attack against the free­dom of reli­gion, which is pro­tected by Article 4 of the Basic Law.”

The Ber­li­ner Zei­tung and Frank­fur­ter Rund­schau inter­view was con­ducted by Ste­ven Geyer und Jörg Schind­ler, two jour­na­lists and pro­pa­gan­dists who have been lead­ing an ongo­ing effort to shut down a highly popu­lar German-language Inter­net web­site cal­led Poli­ti­cally Incor­rect (PI), which over the years has grown into a major infor­ma­tion resource for Ger­mans con­cerned about the spread of Islam in their country.

PI’s motto reads “Against the Main­stream, Pro-American, Pro-Israel, Against the Isla­miza­tion of Europe” which encaps­u­la­tes eve­rything the Ger­man left abhors.

The Ber­li­ner Zei­tung and the Frank­fur­ter Rund­schau, for example, have fomen­ted the hys­te­ria by pub­lish­ing dozens of agit­p­rop artic­les, some by Mely Kiyak, a first-generation Ger­man whose parents were Turkish-Kurdish immi­grants. Kiyak, who calls her­self a “poli­ti­cal pio­neer,” por­trays all cri­tics of Islam as hate-mongers.

One article, entit­led, “Poli­ti­cally Incor­rect: Vul­gar, Unin­hi­bited, Racist,” says that, “the Inter­net por­tal ‘Poli­ti­cally Incor­rect’ is part of an inter­na­tio­nal network of Islam haters and Mus­lim stalk­ers. This is con­fir­med by rese­arch con­ducted by the Frank­fur­ter Rund­schau.”

Anot­her article, “PI News: Proto­type of the New Right,” links cri­ti­cism of Islam with anti-Semitism: “The ‘New Right’ has been growing for ten years and has momen­tum. The blog ‘Poli­ti­cally Incor­rect’ shows what the move­ment looks like. The direc­tor of the Cen­ter for Rese­arch on Anti-Semitism, Wolf­gang Benz, sees paral­lels to anti-Semitism.” Open expres­sions of anti-Semitism are ille­gal in post-war Ger­many; the infe­rence here is that those who cri­ti­cize Islam are guilty of com­mit­ting a crime.

Other Ber­li­ner Zei­tung and Frank­fur­ter Rund­schau artic­les are entit­led: “Poli­ti­cally Incor­rect: Where the Inter­net Stinks;” “Rightwing Popu­lists: Uni­ted in their Hatred of Mus­lims,” and “Poli­ti­cally Cor­rect Hatred.”

A fren­zied article, “Poli­ti­cally Incor­rect: Inside the Network of Islam Haters,” asserts: “PI is far more than a harm­less web­site. It is rat­her a highly con­spi­ra­to­rial orga­niza­tion that works to demo­nize an entire faith com­mu­nity. It plays a vital role in an inter­na­tio­nal network of those who hate Islam. It pro­vi­des racists and glo­ri­fiers of vio­lence who share the world view of the Nor­we­gian mass mur­de­rer Anders Brei­vik with a forum.”

Spie­gel magazine, sif­ting through a stock of more than 10,000 pri­vate emails that were sto­len from PI, pub­lis­hed an article, “Poli­ti­cally Incor­rect Closely Knit to Far Right Scene,” in which it asserted that the people behind PI are unde­mocra­tic and pose a threat to the Ger­man con­sti­tu­tio­nal order.

Anot­her article, “Germany’s Anti-Muslim Scene: Aut­hori­ties Debate Surveil­lance of Isla­mop­ho­bes,” asserts that right-wing popu­lism is a new form of extre­mism: “There are con­cerns that the anti-Muslim scene is becoming increas­ingly dan­gerous. In essence, the ques­tion is whether the hatred of Mus­lims is enough to endan­ger free­dom of reli­gion and inter­na­tio­nal under­stan­ding, or whether it is a radi­cal but legi­ti­mate expres­sion of opi­nion by indi­vi­dual aut­hors wit­hin the limits of the constitution.”

In any event, Spie­gel magazine has wor­ked hard to por­tray all cri­tics of Islam as belon­ging to the “far right” even though opi­nion polls over­whel­mingly show that voters from across the poli­ti­cal spec­trum are con­cerned about the spread of Islam in Germany.

An opi­nion sur­vey cal­led “Per­cep­tion and Accep­tance of Reli­gious Diver­sity,” con­ducted by the socio­logy depart­ment of the Uni­ver­sity of Müns­ter in part­nership with the pre­sti­gious TNS Emnid poli­ti­cal pol­ling firm, shows that the majority of Ger­mans dis­agree with a state­ment by Ger­man Pre­si­dent Chris­tian Wulff, alle­ging that Islam “belongs in Ger­many” because of the four mil­lion Mus­lims who now live there. Ger­many has Western Europe’s second-biggest Isla­mic popu­la­tion after France, with Turks the single big­gest minority.

The study shows that only 34% of the West Ger­mans and 26% of the East Ger­mans have a posi­tive view of Mus­lims. Fewer than 5% of the Ger­mans think Islam is a tole­rant reli­gion, and only 30% say they approve of the buil­ding of mos­ques. The num­ber of Ger­mans who approve of the buil­ding of mina­rets or the intro­duc­tion of Mus­lim holi­days is even lower.

Fewer than 10% of the West Ger­mans and 5% of the East Ger­mans say that Islam is a peace­ful reli­gion. More than 40% of Ger­mans believe that the prac­tice of Islam should be vigorously restricted.

Only 20% of the Ger­mans believe that Islam is suit­able for the Western world. Sig­ni­fi­cantly, more than 80% of the Ger­mans agree with the state­ment “that Mus­lims must adapt to our cul­ture.” More than one mil­lion immi­grants living per­ma­nently in Ger­many can­not speak German.

Anot­her sur­vey, “Glo­bal Views on Immi­gra­tion,” con­ducted by the London-based Ipsos glo­bal rese­arch firm, found that more than half the Ger­mans believe “there are too many immi­grants” in their country.

In response to the pol­ling ques­tion “Would you say that immi­gra­tion has gene­rally had a posi­tive or nega­tive impact?” 54% of the Ger­mans said the impact has been nega­tive. Nearly 60% of the Ger­mans agree with the sur­vey state­ment: “Immi­gra­tion has placed too much pres­sure on pub­lic ser­vices” in Germany.

Anot­her report, “Muslim-Western Ten­sions Per­sist,” pub­lis­hed by the Wash­ing­ton, DC-based Pew Rese­arch Cen­ter, sta­tes that 61% of the Ger­mans believe their rela­tions with Mus­lims are bad. The poll also shows that 72% of the Ger­mans believe Mus­lims in their countries do not want to inte­grate; and that 79% of the Ger­mans believe Islam is “the most vio­lent” reli­gion. More than two-thirds of the Ger­mans are wor­ried about Isla­mic extre­mists in their country.

A sepa­rate poll con­ducted by the Pew Glo­bal Atti­tu­des Pro­ject sta­tes that 71% of the Ger­mans believe Isla­mic veils should be ban­ned in pub­lic, inclu­ding in schools, hos­pi­tals and govern­ment offices.

Anot­her sur­vey, pub­lis­hed by the Frie­drich Ebert Foun­da­tion, a think-tank lin­ked to the center-left Social Democra­tic Party (SPD), found that 55% of the Ger­mans believe that Arabs are “unp­lea­sant,” and over 33% believe the coun­try is being “over­run” by immi­grants. The study also noted that “far-right atti­tu­des” are not iso­la­ted at the extre­mes of Ger­man society, but to a large degree are “at the cen­ter of it.”

These sur­veys cle­arly and con­sis­tently show that most Ger­mans are wor­ried about the impact that Mus­lim immi­gra­tion is having on their daily lives.

In a coun­try stif­led by deca­des of poli­ti­cal cor­rect­ness, Poli­ti­cally Incor­rect has been giving a voice to mil­lions of frust­rated Ger­mans who see the harm being wrought by the cult of mul­ti­cul­tura­lism. But Germany’s estab­lish­ment now seems deter­mined to use all means at its dis­po­sal to silence free speech in the nation.

Soeren Kern is Senior Fel­low for Trans­at­lan­tic Rela­tions at the Madrid-based Grupo de Estu­dios Est­raté­gicos / Stra­te­gic Stu­dies Group. Follow him onFace­book.

Opp­rin­ne­lig:

http://www.stonegateinstitute.org/2752/germany-silence-islam-criticism


Om du ikke følger Document på sosiale media kan du følge oss på e-post.

Donere engangsbeløp?Kan du forplikte deg til fast betaling?

Penger kan også doneres til kontonummer 15030249981.

Leserkommentarer på Document er gjenstand for moderering, som ikke skjer kontinuerlig og under enhver omstendighet ikke om natten. Vi ønsker en respektfull tone uten personangrep, sleivete språk eller flammende retorikk. Vis særlig nøkternhet når temaet er følsomt. Begrenset redigering av skjemmende detaljer kan finne sted. Skriv til debatt@document.no dersom du ikke forstår hvorfor en kommentar uteblir. Se her for nybegynnerhjelp.