Sunday, July 31, 2016

Stop At Nothing

Whom do you trust?

Well, if you're a German a fair question today is, do you trust Chancellor Angela Merkel when it comes to your safety?

Given recent events in Germany more and more Germans are saying no, they don't trust her, as the division about open borders spreads around the globe. Globalists want to criticize any and all who question them and their madness for one world government.

Here in the last two paragraphs of the Economist, a globalist-pushing magazine, is everything you need to know if you don't like that status qou and have any questions about the way the globalists have been running things.

They are from the latest issue

As for tactics, the question for pro-open types, who are found on both sides of the traditional left-right party divide, is how to win. The best approach will differ by country. In the Netherlands and Sweden, centrist parties have banded together to keep out nationalists. A similar alliance defeated the National Front’s Jean-Marie Le Pen in the run-off for France’s presidency in 2002, and may be needed again to beat his daughter in 2017. Britain may yet need a new party of the centre.

In America, where most is at stake, the answer must come from within the existing party structure. Republicans who are serious about resisting the anti-globalists should hold their noses and support Mrs Clinton. And Mrs Clinton herself, now that she has won the nomination, must champion openness clearly, rather than equivocating. Her choice of Tim Kaine, a Spanish-speaking globalist, as her running-mate is a good sign. But the polls are worryingly close. The future of the liberal world order depends on whether she succeeds. 

economist.com/news/leaders/21702750-farewell-left-versus-right-contest-matters-now-open-against-closed-new?

There is just about everything you need to know in those two paragraphs if you value personal liberty, sovereignty and free speech. It's also a testimony about how biased MSM is.

As for the Merkel situation, Germans are noted for their reportedly stubbornness. Merkel recently displayed her defiance and lack of concern for the voices of many of her citizens. Callousness is a clear characteristic of the elite class.

With Germany having gone through a surge of seemingly daily killings in the past two weeks when 15 people have died, including four assailants, leaving dozens injured since July 18, the result of two terror attacks and a third killing carried out by men who entered the country as refugees, no one has seen their reputation impacted as much as Angela Merkel. And yet, despite admitting several weeks ago that "terrorists were smuggled in Europe's refugee flow", Merkel has been unrelenting on her immigration policy. 

Seaking at an annual summer press conference in Berlin on July 28, a defiant Merkel ignored critics of her refugee policies and insisted there would be no change to her open-door migration stance. She also said she bears no responsibility for a recent spate of violent attacks in Germany. "We are doing everything humanly possible to ensure security in Germany," she recently said but added, "Anxiety and fear cannot guide our political decisions." Merkel said the goal of jihadists was to "divide our unity and undermine our way of life. They want to prevent our openness to welcoming people. They want to sow hate and fear between cultures and also among religions." The chancellor said she knows that Germans are worried about their personal safety: "We are doing everything humanly possible to ensure security in Germany," she noted, but added, "Anxiety and fear cannot guide our political decisions."
Merkel concluded by refusing to budge: "For me it is clear: we stick to our principles. We will give those who are politically persecuted refuge and protection under the Geneva Convention." She added: "I cannot promise you that we will never have to take in another mass wave of refugees."

The problem for Merkel is that increasingly less of her countrymen share her sentiment. A recent poll found that two-thirds of Germans oppose a fourth term for Merkel. Only 36% of respondents said they wanted Merkel and her CDU to lead the government after federal elections in 2017.
* * *
It got even much worse for Merkel yesterday when Bavaria's premier, a key coalition ally for Merkel's CDU, whose state bore the brunt of recent attacks in Germany, took aim at Chancellor Angela Merkel's open-door refugee policy on Saturday by rejecting her "we can do this" mantra, withdrawing his support over this key aspect of Merkel's domestic policy.

blacklistednews.com/Thousands_Of_Germans_Demand_Merkel's_Resignation.

The people of California several years ago voted on a referendum to tamp down on its borders. The measure passed by a good margin. What did the status quo do, they took it to the judicial system where it's reportedly still tied up. This is what the entrenched think of your right to vote. It's a titular right in every definition of that term.The recent Brexit outcome is still another example as those who opposed the leave results yelled and stomped for another vote owing to the closeness of the outcome or for invoking a system of their elitist checks and balances to correct ignorant rabble mistakes.

As more and more voters in states like California went to referendums to correct government abuses of power, just what you'd expect happened, the call for limiting referendums irrespective of the difficult qualifications necessary to get them approved. Understand, you might be middle management, professional, blue collar, a successful business owner or, heaven forbid, an academic, brown, back, white or the color of a barber pole, it doesn't matter. To these elites you're just rabble.

They want what they want and will stop at nothing to get it.

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