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The Israeli war and the migrants: an emergency on the doorstep


It's a parade of hypocrites and fraudsters: Although German dignitaries and cultural figures mantra-state their rejection of anti-Semitism by migrants, they have done nothing about it in recent years. A comment from Michael Paulwitz for Junge Freiheit.

Yelling and smirking anti-Semitism on the streets. Jewish homes marked with Stars of David. Bomb threats in the name of Hamas against schools and television stations. Demonstrative mass prayers in front of the Brandenburg Gate. Aggressive oriental young men who engage in street battles with the police in which dozens of officers are injured: Germany has a massive problem with Islamism and anti-Semitism, and this problem has obviously and significantly immigrated.

The war waged by the Islamic terrorist Hamas against the state of Israel, launched a few thousand kilometers away, has brought the emergency to our doorstep in real time. Germany also has its Gaza Strip - on Sonnenallee in Berlin-Neukölln, in Düsseldorf, in Hamburg and in numerous other large and smaller cities. Hamas and its henchmen have their bases right in the middle of us, and the supporters of Islamic terror swim like fish in water in the milieu of Muslim parallel societies in Germany's cities.

Double standards of German politicians
A spark is enough to mobilize entire battalions of combat-ready young men who stand up to the overwhelmed German state power, cheered on by women with headscarves, about whose supposed “discrimination” feature writers and social functionaries had just lamented. The state power sends signals of helplessness and withdrawal. It has to accept it when anti-Israel rallies that were banned by the authorities simply take place anyway because it lacks the strength to enforce the bans that have been imposed.

Alternatively, it holds harmless those who dare to protest with counter-demonstrations and, for example, want to publicly name the victims and hostages of Hamas. They are considered a risk of escalation. Little remains of the furor with which the security forces cracked down on anti-government Corona demonstrations just a few years ago, given the intifada test runs in the hotspot districts that waved Palestinian flags and chanted anti-Israel slogans.

The hollow slogans of the politically responsible and their media allies sound even more meaningless against this dark backdrop. Pathetic declarations of solidarity and martial promises of support are easy for the Sunday speakers at their sparsely attended and fortress-like state rallies. They still sound unreal coming from representatives of a state that has unnecessarily brought the conflicts of the Middle East into the country and is unable to cope with them.

Connecting hatred of Jews with migrants was taboo
Anti-Semitism and hatred of Jews should have “no place” in our country, it is said again everywhere. The bitter truth is: They have long since taken this place because the political and media elites let them. The realization dawns only reluctantly. “We” have “let hundreds of thousands of anti-Semites come to us,” is the headline of the tabloid that was once one of the most enthusiastic cheerers and defenders of Merkel's welcome coup.

“We looked away for too long,” goes the new tune. The “we” of the caught politicians is treacherous. It is intended to hold citizens responsible for the blindness of those responsible, including those who were put in the corner at the time because they dared to warn about the inevitable consequences of uncontrolled mass immigration from foreign cultural areas. The established parties have “deliberately hushed up” Islamic anti-Semitism, criticizes lawyer Seyran AteÅŸ, who lives under police protection while her reform mosque is closed again due to threats of Islamist attacks.

It was also too convenient to suppress the Muslim anti-Semitism that had been brought into the country and to narrow the view one-sidedly to “right-wing extremist” anti-Semitism in order to discredit oppositional efforts. All it took was a simple statistical trick with which every “unexplained” anti-Semitic crime was recorded as “right-wing extremist”.

This made it possible to deceive the public for a while, but it did not eliminate Islamic anti-Semitism, which has become obvious since the excesses of the last few weeks. Federal Interior Minister Nancy Faeser wants to stop this absurd practice now. Of course not right away, but next year at the earliest. You don't want to have the unpleasant numbers on the table all too soon, it's almost an election campaign.

Overdue and necessary debate
The Federal Interior Minister has apparently still not recovered from the last election defeat in Hesse. She has gone into hiding and is on vacation while the political class in Berlin's internal security is literally blowing up in their faces and the multicultural illusions and lies of integration are bursting like soap bubbles. It is another exclamation mark of the failure of a minister who has always put ideology and career selfishness above the tasks and requirements of her office.

But even Faeser has now come out of the shadows with a legislative package for “easier deportations”. It certainly sounds bitter to the citizens who have been forced to accept the loss of security in public spaces as a result of uncontrolled mass immigration for years that only an outbreak of Muslim hatred of Jews triggers a political debate about measures to limit migration.

Everyday hostility towards Germans and the explosion in violent and sexual crimes have so far failed to persuade any government to rethink its approach. Nevertheless, the debate is overdue and necessary. Muslim hatred of Jews and imported anti-German hostility come from the same sources: the contempt for our culture and way of life, for our country and its people, to which a misguided policy of unrestricted mass immigration has left us at the mercy.

Dealing with this existential challenge tolerates no delay, no further talk and no stalling alibi actions. The flow of migrants across the Mediterranean is increasing inexorably, and the business of people smugglers with immigrants from the Near and Middle East is in full swing. For Germany it will be a question of fate whether the warning shot will be heard this time and whether public pressure will be maintained until the excited words are followed by effective action.

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