This article first appeared in New English Review.
Another knife attack on a European train
A few days ago, German Interior Minister Horst Seehofer told
the media that Germany was one of the safest countries in the world. On
Saturday, November 6, he was eating his words as he was forced to make the
standard statement of shock when a 27-year-old Syrian refugee stabbed
three passengers on a train from Regensburg to Nuremberg. Thus far, none have
died.
As things stand now, the attacker is In a PSYCHIATRIC HOSPITAL
due to indications he is mentally ill. That is the standard line in Germany and
other Western European countries. German police have stated that there is no
indication of an Islamic-inspired terrorist attack. Pending his psychiatric evaluation,
the man is charged with attempted murder.
Meanwhile, out-going German Chancellor, Angela Merkel, when
asked about the refugee issue in her country, told interviewers that “We have
done it”. This is a reference to her remark when the invasion began in earnest
in 2015, (“Wir schaffen dass”-We can do this). The phrase has become a punch
line for her critics.
Meanwhile, the president of Belarus, Alexander Lukashenko,
continues to send thousands of Middle Eastern migrants across his borders into
Poland, Lithuania, and Latvia. As I wrote, hundreds of migrants are storming
the Belarus-Poland border trying to break into the latter country, from where
the next stop with be Germany. Poland, along with her East European neighbors,
is doing all it can to stop them.
Eastern European members of the EU are not willing to accept
migrants from predominantly Muslim countries. Having recently broken free from
the clutches of the old Soviet Union and communism, and seeing the mayhem and
carnage in Western Europe, they are unwilling to see their countries
re-occupied by other destructive forces. For this, they have earned the ire of
their fellow EU members in Western Europe who want to impose sanctions for
those countries who will not “accept their fair share.”
Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte has gone even further. He
wants Hungary expelled from the EU over that country’s recent decision to ban
teaching of the LGBTQ agenda to schoolchildren. In response, Dutch opposition
leader, Geert Wilders, has asked in which country are gays safer from attack,
Hungary or the Netherlands? The answer is obvious. The Netherlands,
historically famous for being a refuge for homosexuals, Jews, and other
marginalized groups, is no longer safe for gays and Jews due to the presence of
so many recently-arrived Muslims, who bring with them a centuries-old,
religious-based hostility to both groups.
Meanwhile, the flood of migrants from the Middle East,
Afghanistan, and Africa continues unabated. The boats continue to land in
Lampedusa, the Italian island off the coast of Sicily, the Spanish border enclaves
at Ceuta and Melilla are periodically stormed, and the Western European
governments and their masters in Brussels (EU) just wring their hands. And with
each attack, each innocent victim stabbed, raped, run over, murdered, one
thinks to oneself: “Will the Western Europeans now finally wake up?” Thus far,
there are no signs that they will.
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