How Would You Feel as a Foreigner? Wouldn’t You Want to Murder People with a Knife, Too? By Richard Miller (London)
Following the knife massacre in Würzburg Germany, the Würzburg mayor Christian Schuchardt sent out a letter to residents which tried to explain why such a person would kill three women and injure five others, because, well, “how would you feel today as a foreigner in our city?” Yes, that makes perfect sense; feeling out of place must always be a good reason to go on a knife rampage. Unless you are white. Then, even making an unarmed peaceful protest “justifies” the Deep State thugs shooting you in the neck, as an example, a sacrifice to the glob commo regime, as Ashli Babbitt in the US was. It is just like the story covered at this blog the other day about a BLM guy getting a suspended sentence after smashing the glass window into a (white?) toddler’s face, because everyone was a bit stressed. Did that work for white people getting out for walks during Covid lockdowns here? The UK system smashed the metaphorical glass windows in their faces too.
“After the massacre in Würzburg last Friday, in which a Somali man used a knife to kill three women in a shop and seriously injure five others, including an eleven-year-old girl, Würzburg’s mayor Christian Schuchardt (Christian Social Union, CSU) caused a scandal with a letter he sent out to all city residents.
Instead of concerning himself with the victims and expressing condolences to them, he only dedicated a few words to them at the beginning of the letter. Mayor Schuchardt instead dealt extensively with preventing a possible pre-conviction of the perpetrator, who came to Germany in 2015, and drew questionable parallels.
Schuchardt: “Moral demands” on society
He wrote: “Even we Germans were not condemned across the board after the Second World War. Neither does this now apply to Somalis or refugees in general. This stereotyped thinking must come to an end.”
The question with which he ended the paragraph, however, raises the most questions: “This is my moral demand, my wish to society, which I know cannot be fulfilled. Because how would you feel today as a foreigner in our city?”
Whether he wants to justify or relativise something about the crime with this question, in which, among others, a 49-year-old mother also died defending her 11-year-old daughter, who was seriously injured, remains unanswered.
Mayor sees no connection to religious fanaticism
The massacre, which is now classified by several experts as being Islamically motivated (eXXpress reported), has nothing to do with religion or the like. The mayor went on to say that “the crimes of individuals can never be traced back to ethnic groups, religions or nationalities. Enlightenment, working against it in this direction must all the more be the subject of our social endeavors. ”
“I cried”
He also stated that he had cried last night. Also for the victims, as he wrote at the beginning of the letter. But in the third paragraph of his letter he also wrote that he “cried for the city. He also stated that he had cried last night. Also, for the victims, as he wrote at the beginning of the letter. But in the third paragraph of his letter he also wrote that he “cried for the city. Because this equation is so obvious. Refugees, immigrants, religious warriors and terrorists – massacres. And yet- not everything that is obvious is true.” The police would work on solving the crime, but it is “already blamed despite ongoing investigations.”
The mayor also wrote that “Individual crimes can never be traced back to ethnic group, religion or nationality. Enlightenment, working against it in this direction must all the more be the subject of our social endeavors.”
Integration Council is more concerned with the image of the Somali community
The integration council of the city of Würzburg also published a confusing statement. Condolences were only expressed in a subordinate clause to the victims and their relatives. Most of the broadcast dealt with the possible “effects on the life of the Somali community.”
“According to the Foreigners and Integration Council, the Somali community is now deeply insecure. They feared effects on their own lives, it was said. Therefore, work should now be done to ensure that the act does not turn into blanket accusations.”
The Integration Advisory Council considered it particularly important that one now had to prevent politically conservative or right-wing parties from benefiting from this massacre. “It is also important to prevent what has happened from being politically instrumentalized by anti-immigrant forces.”
Catholic rural youth in Bavaria tweeted “take a stand against hatred on the Internet”
The tweet from the Bavarian Catholic rural youth seems particularly absurd. This posted in response to the knife murders that one now has to “step up a signal against hate speech on the net.”
Germany is on politically correct life support, waiting for the end, just like most of the West.
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