Radio Renaissance - Jared Taylor - ‘Germany for the Germans!’ Aired: 2024-09-05 Duration: 10:55 === Bjorn Hock and Nazi Phrases (04:18) === [00:00:00] There was an election in Germany over the weekend that terrified our rulers. [00:00:04] This headline from CNN sets the tone. [00:00:07] AFD, that's the alternative for Germany, becomes first far-right party to win German state elections since 1945. [00:00:16] Hmm, 1945. [00:00:19] The article goes on. [00:00:20] The AFD became the first far-right party to win a state election in Germany since the Nazi era. [00:00:27] Yikes. There were elections in two states. [00:00:31] The AFD came in first in Thuringia and second in Saxony. [00:00:36] In another worrying development for Germany's mainstream, the fledgling Sarah-Wagenknecht alliance, BSW, a far-left party that has questioned the country's support for Ukraine and shares some of the AFD's anti-immigration streak, [00:00:52] came third in both states, despite only being founded earlier this year. [00:00:58] More about this remarkable woman, Sarah Wagenknecht, later. [00:01:02] She is as confusing to our rulers as she is terrifying. [00:01:07] CNN goes on to warn that scary people are gaining strength all over Germany. [00:01:13] What's so awful about the AFD? [00:01:15] Only one thing. [00:01:16] It believes Germany should be for Germans, and that it doesn't have a moral obligation to let in millions of foreigners. [00:01:24] The AFD is also tired of being expected constantly to apologize for a regime that ended 79 years ago. [00:01:33] The media are especially horrified by Bjorn Hock, the leader of the AFD in Thuringia, where the party came in first. [00:01:42] German court finds AFD's Hock over second use of Nazi slogan. [00:01:48] Did he say, Ein Volk? [00:01:50] Ein Reich? [00:01:51] Ein Schürer? [00:01:52] Or maybe... [00:01:53] Deutschland über alles? [00:01:55] No. Last year he said, alles für Deutschland, or everything for Germany, which was a Nazi brown shirt slogan, sometimes engraved on knife blades. [00:02:07] However, a lot of other groups on the right and the left have used it well before and after the Nazis. [00:02:15] Mr. Hock said he didn't know about the Nazi connection. [00:02:19] In Germany, it's against the law to use certain phrases or to make the Nazis salute. [00:02:24] So I suppose it was naughty of Mr. Hawk two months later to tease a friendly crowd by saying, Alles fur? [00:02:33] When the audience completed the forbidden phrase, he was found guilty and fine. [00:02:39] In May, we got this. [00:02:42] Germany struck with outrage after racist chants on a jet-set holiday island. [00:02:48] If you listen carefully, you can hear Deutschland den Deutschen, Germany for the Germans, and Auslander raus, foreigners out. [00:02:59] Out! Out! [00:03:10] Out! Out! [00:03:10] Those phrases are not yet illegal, merely scandalous. [00:03:15] What was especially horrifying was that this was at the super chic The president of Germany, [00:03:32] Frank Walter Steinmeier, was appalled. [00:03:35] It's not just the disenfranchised who are becoming radicalized, but that radicalization is also coming from the heart of society. [00:03:44] So now you can understand. [00:03:46] Why CNN imagines swastikas flying over the Bundestag. [00:03:51] In the Thuringian Parliament, as you can see in the Seats 1 line, the AFD came in first with 32 seats, a gain of 10. The CDU, or Christian Democratic Union. === Germans Want Their Country Back (06:51) === [00:04:04] A soft conservative party came in second with 23 seats, and the brand new leftist extremist immigration-controlled BSW of Sarah Wagenknecht came out of nowhere to pick up 15 seats. [00:04:18] The losers are down below, and you can see the numbers for seat change. [00:04:24] The hard left left party lost a catastrophic 17 seats. [00:04:29] The Social Democrats, a soft left party, lost two. [00:04:33] And the goofy liberal Greens lost all five of their seats. [00:04:37] All the winning parties there in the top row are conservative, at least on some issues. [00:04:42] And all the losers were lefties. [00:04:46] Normally, the AFD, with the largest number of seats, would head up a coalition government for the state. [00:04:51] And since it takes 45 for a majority, it could reach that number, either with the CDU's 23 seats or the BSW's 15. That's unlikely. [00:05:03] You see, democracy is wonderful, except when people don't vote the way they're supposed to. [00:05:08] And so the other parties have promised to treat the AFD like a leper colony. [00:05:14] German Chancellor condemns first state election success for far-right parties since World War II. [00:05:20] Olaf Scholz warned the other parties not to join a coalition with the AFD. [00:05:26] Our country cannot and must not get used to this, he said. [00:05:31] The AFD is damaging Germany. [00:05:33] It's weakening the economy, dividing society, and ruining our country's reputation. [00:05:39] Many Germans think it's wrong to leave the AFD out in the cold. [00:05:46] The far-right AfD may have emerged as the biggest winner in two regional elections, but will likely end up in opposition. [00:05:53] All mainstream parties have pledged to uphold a firewall against entering a coalition with the anti-migration party in both Thuringia and Saxony. [00:06:03] But although a clear majority didn't cast their vote for the AfD and don't want to see it govern, some say it has a mandate to form a coalition. [00:06:12] In certain matters, you just have to come together in the interest of democracy. [00:06:19] The share of votes is simply too big. [00:06:27] At some point, you have to ensure that people see their choices being reflected. [00:06:36] I think they should be given the chance to work together with everyone. [00:06:40] Only then can you say whether they're up to it or not. [00:06:44] The AFD got a boost from a horrible crime. [00:06:47] Just a week before the vote, a Syrian Muslim knifed three people to death and badly wounded eight others. [00:06:54] This was in the city of Solingen, which was celebrating its 650th anniversary with a festival of diversity, no less. [00:07:04] The killer is Isa al-H. [00:07:07] We're not told his last name because that might hurt his feelings. [00:07:12] ISIS says he had sworn allegiance to their group. [00:07:15] Here is a makeshift memorial to the victims. [00:07:18] The question in red, Varum, means why? [00:07:22] The AFD says it's because Germany has let in way too many foreigners, and more and more voters agree. [00:07:29] As this article in the European Conservative explains, Issa al-H was a failed asylum seeker. [00:07:37] Who got a deportation order last year but stuck around anyway. [00:07:41] No surprise. [00:07:42] Of the nearly 250,000 people in Germany slated for deportation last year, only around 16,000 were actually deported. [00:07:51] Germany doesn't send back Syrian or Afghan criminals because those countries are considered too dangerous. [00:08:00] There's therefore been outrage over the fact that thousands of Afghan citizens who have claimed asylum in Germany have flown back to their home country for a holiday. [00:08:09] And so, perfectly timed to try to demonstrate that the government is already taking action on Friday, August 30th, just before the election. [00:08:19] It carried out the first deportation of Afghans back to their home country since August of 2021. [00:08:27] As Jungen Freyheit reported, the German government gave all 28 of the Afghan criminals, mostly rapists, including a child rapist, the equivalent of $1,100 walking around money. [00:08:41] The article noted that this is three times the average annual income in Afghanistan. [00:08:47] So the word will get out, apply for asylum in Germany, rape a few women, spend a couple of years in a comfy German prison, and come home a rich man. [00:08:57] And that's why those horrible people on the very swish island of Silt were singing Auslanderraus, foreigners out. [00:09:07] The AFD says don't let them in in the first place. [00:09:11] Even the federal police concede that non-Germans are statistically six times more likely to resort to knives in an attack than German citizens. [00:09:20] And in sexual crimes, it is seven times more likely. [00:09:24] So, what is Interior Minister Nancy Fazer going to do? [00:09:29] Certainly not Auslander Raus. [00:09:32] Germany announces tougher knife laws after a deadly Sonnenberg attack. [00:09:38] Knives will be banned at sporting events, on long-distance trains, and at public gatherings like the one in Sonnenberg. [00:09:46] Are there going to be metal detectors everywhere? [00:09:48] Germany becomes a police state because it won't keep Auslander. [00:09:54] But Interior Minister Nancy did attend a wreath-laying ceremony for the people Issa al-H carved up. [00:10:02] She's in the back row on crutches, so she's doing her job. [00:10:06] You will recall that Angela Merkel led in 1.3 million Muslims. [00:10:11] The sign over on the right says, Merkel, help! [00:10:15] And now, nearly one quarter of the population of Germany has what is euphemistically called a migration background. [00:10:23] They have a dismal record of poverty, unemployment, rape, and murder. [00:10:29] Here's another memorial to Germans killed by a Muslim immigrant. [00:10:33] And to the horror of CNN, Germans want their country back. [00:10:38] They deserve it. [00:10:40] I was going to tell you about the fascinating Sarah Wagenknecht, but I've run out of time. [00:10:47] Besides, she and what she represents deserve a video of their own. [00:10:51] In the meantime, Deutschland den Deutschen.