Punctuality as a sign of white supremacism
Being on time is often regarded by both African-Americans and black people in Britain as a weird fetish; a symbol of white supremacism, according to some.
SIMON WEBB
FEB 13
Anybody who has dealings with black people, whether in educational settings such as schools, colleges and universities, or socially, or in the workplace, will be well aware of the fact that punctuality tends to be less strictly observed by those of sub-Saharan African ancestry than is routinely the case with white people or those belonging to other ethnicities. This habitual lateness is not caused because some people are too poor to be able to afford a wristwatch. Nor is it a cultural legacy, as some have suggested, a relic of the days when Africans rose with the sun and went to bed when it got dark, with no artificial division of the day into hours and minutes. It is rather a deliberate strategy, a way of demonstrating power over, contempt for, or disregard of, the ordinary conventions of life in western society. It is, in short, intentional discourtesy weaponised to be used against what is perceived as white,
Make of this what you will
Talked repatriation - can be convicted of high treason
Published 13 February 2024 at 09:41
FOREIGN. German AFD politicians and other participants in a "secret" repatriation meeting face prosecution for "high treason", Junge Freiheit reports. If convicted, they face very long prison sentences.
At the end of November a meeting was held in a villa in Potsdam. In place were high-ranking representatives of the immigration-critical Alternative for Germany party, AFD, and other German profiles.
The meeting participants are said to have discussed, among other things, a return migration program as a solution to Germany's immigrant problem.
The George Soros-funded left-wing media network Correctiv recently revealed what was discussed at the meeting, which led to major far-left demonstrations against the AFD in Germany.
The federal prosecutor's office in Germany has now opened an investigation into whether the participants of the alleged "secret" meeting in Potsdam can be charged with "high treason". This for having conspired against the US-imposed German constitution.
According to the criminal complaint, made by a private person, the participants at the Potsdam meeting have been guilty of high treason. In serious cases, a minimum sentence of ten years' imprisonment is provided here if it can be proven that the accused endangered the existence of Germany "by violence or the threat of violence" or wanted to abolish "the constitutional order".
At the same time, the other parties in Germany continue to work on completely banning the AFD, which according to recent surveys is the country's largest party.