Saturday, November 19, 2011

Extra! Extra! UN rules against the "offendedness" industry

As this article says, UN judgments aren't binding, but what an exciting development:

Dutch State Taken to UN Human Rights Commission over Wilders
http://www.amren.com/mtnews/archives/2011/11/dutch_state_tak.php

What's significant is that three diversity poster-boy types wanted to gain an important symbolic ruling against politicians who speak up against "reverse" discrimination, but they have been left totally holding the bag by one of the main enforces of "diversity" worldwide -- the United Nations.

It may appear merely another obvious nut-job suit being thrown out, but where it is symbolically very potent is in the fight to save Europe from disappearing in a tidal wave of "immigration" from elsewhere. European governments have a disgraceful record of favoring the invasion (to call it by its proper name) and the invaders, and persecuting anybody who stands up for indigenous Europeans.

Geert Wilders, the intended victim in this case, is a brilliant and courageous Dutch statesman, noted for speaking out against the ongoing Islamic takeover of his homeland. Wikipedia's adverse summary of him:

a Dutch right-wing politician and leader of the Party for Freedom (Partij voor de Vrijheid – PVV), the third-largest political party in the Netherlands.[1][2] He is the Parliamentary group leader of his party in the Dutch House of Representatives. In the formation in 2010 of the current Rutte cabinet, a minority cabinet of VVD and CDA, he actively participated in the negotiations, resulting in a "support agreement" (gedoogakkoord) between the PVV and these parties. Wilders is best known for his criticism of Islam, summing up his views by saying, "I don't hate Muslims, I hate Islam".

Leftists are desperate to re-define defense of European and European-populated countries as hotbeds of bigotry and hate, and to wreck the lives of anybody who rises up to refute their new "diversity" state religion. To its credit, Wikipedia -- which also exists to push this cult on the world -- reports other instances of Wilders' international persecution and how they blew up in their perpetrators' faces:

Wilders was banned from entering the United Kingdom between 12 February 2009 and 13 October 2009 by the Labour government, the Home Office saying his presence would be a "threat to one of the fundamental interests of society".[18] The ban was overturned after Wilders appealed[19] and he visited the UK in October 2009,[20] and again in March 2010 to show his film. In January 2009, the Amsterdam Court of Appeal ordered Wilders' prosecution for "incitement to hatred and discrimination".[21] Wilders was acquitted of these charges on 23 June 2011.

We should thank God that such victories are still possible in this world whose supposed leaders are truly bigoted and hateful against people who look like this blogger. It could very well be evidence of increasingly massive resistance against the ghoulish "diversity" fetish.

We who are still alive after the storm activities last Wednesday have extra reasons to feel thankful. I certainly am. As I drove up visit my mother that night, I passed Davidson, NC, and a short while later on route 29 heard that Davidson had been hit by a tornado. The next day, considerable tornado damage was reported in Blairs, Va. -- five miles from my mother's place!

.........The normally useless news feed at Charter.net has this interesting news blip today:

Giant mound of tires in SC visible from space
http://www.charter.net/news/read.php?rip_id=%3CD9R3TVT80%40news.ap.org%3E&ps=1020

Sometimes I wonder if SC has long been slated as a human and technological dumping ground. Did you ever ask yourself why it was chosen as the home of the Savannah River Site -- and for that matter, what the Savannah River Site does? Thank you, Wikipedia -- it's a "nuclear reservation" which "was built during the 1950s to refine nuclear materials for deployment in nuclear weapons." At 310 square miles it eats up almost one percent of SC's total area. Our friend Reb Sutherland worked there for many years and warns that scores of millions of gallons of atomic water are stored there, sitting a mere nine feet above an aquifer that serves three states.

/\/.\/\/.

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