Andrew Anglin

Daily Stormer

February 16, 2016

Meanwhile, on the Greece-FYROM border…

As Greece has now made it abundantly clear that they will work as the Mule of Merkel, allowing limitless hajis to enter their base, Hungarian PM Viktor Orban is calling for Greece to be sealed off, and once again allowed to become a part of Turkey.

AP:

So where should the next impenetrable razor-wire border fence in Europe be built? Hungary’s right-wing Prime Minister Viktor Orban thinks he knows the best place – on Macedonia’s and Bulgaria’s borders with Greece – smack along the main immigration route from the Middle East to Western Europe. He says it’s necessary because “Greece can’t defend Europe from the south” against the large numbers of refugees pouring in, mainly from Syria and Iraq. The plan is especially controversial because it effectively means eliminating Greece from the Schengen zone, Europe’s 26-nation passport-free travel region that is considered one of the European Union’s most cherished achievements.

Not sure why that’s the controversial part – Schengen is already totally destroyed, all countries are building fences, several – including Germany itself – have border controls.

It seems to me the controversial part would be the obvious implication that this plan would effectively cause millions of Moslems to stay permanently in Greece. Greece only has a population of 11 million Greeks, so in a very short time you’d have an Islamic Greece.

Or maybe the idea is that if they know they can’t get to Germany, they’ll go back to Turkey?

Orban’s plan featured prominently Monday at a meeting in Prague of leaders from four nations in an informal gathering known as the Visegrad group: Hungary, Poland, the Czech Republic and Slovakia. The Visegrad group, formed 25 years ago to further the nations’ European integration, is marking that anniversary Monday. Still, it has only recently found a common purpose in its unified opposition to accepting any significant number of migrants. This determination has emboldened the group, one of the new mini-blocs emerging lately in Europe due to the continent’s chaotic, inadequate response to its largest migration crisis since World War II. The Visegrad group is also becoming a force that threatens the plans of German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who wants to resettle newcomers across the continent while also slowing down the influx. “The plan to build a new “European defense line” along the border of Bulgaria and Macedonia with Greece is a major foreign policy initiative for the Visegrad Four and an attempt to re-establish itself as a notable political force within the EU,” said Vit Dostal, an analyst with the Association for International Affairs, a Prague-based think tank.

“Re-establish”? When were Hungary, Poland, the Czech Republic and Slovakia a “notable political force”?

Definitely they shall soon become more notable. With at least two million more Moslems coming in this year, Germany is going to stop functioning completely.

If these four former communist nations are able to keep the hordes out, they will become the de facto pinnacle of human civilization.

At Monday’s meeting, leaders from the four nations were joined by Macedonian President Gjorge Ivanov and Bulgarian Prime Minister Boiko Borisov so they can push for the reinforcements along Greece’s northern border. Macedonia began putting up a first fence in November, and is now constructing a second, parallel, fence. After the meeting in Prague, Orban said his country is ready to help “those countries that are ready to create a second defensive line south of Hungary.” He also said Hungary fully supports Bulgarian membership in the Schengen zone because “it is capable of fully protecting its borders.” He also called for opening “sensible talks” on Macedonia’s EU membership. Ivanov said Macedonia was ready for any scenario, but added Greece should be part of any plan. Borisov said Bulgaria “is very interested in participating in the protection of the EU’s external border.” “If it were up only to us Central Europeans, that region would have been closed off long ago,” Orban said before at a news conference recently with Poland’s prime minister. “Not for the first time in history we see that Europe is defenseless from the south … that is where we must ensure the safety of the continent.”

Yeah, Central Europe definitely has a better memory of the last time millions of Moslems flooded Europe.

Poland has indicated a willingness to send dozens of police to Macedonia to secure the border, something to be decided at Monday’s meeting. “If the EU is not active, the Visegrad Four have to be,” Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico said recently. “We have to find effective ways of protecting the border.”

“Visegrad Four” sounds like a superhero team. Like the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.

And Merkel looks and acts a lot like Krang.

The leaders will try to hash out a unified position ahead of an important EU meeting Thursday and Friday in Brussels that will take up both migration and Britain’s efforts to renegotiate a looser union with the EU. The Visegrad countries have also recently united against British attempts to limit the welfare rights of European workers, something that would affect the hundreds of thousands of their citizens who now live and work in Britain. Hours before the Prague meeting, the European Commission unveiled a further 10 million euros ($11.3 million) in finances to help Macedonia improve its borders and migration management, but insisted the money not be used to build fences. “We don’t think that closing borders is the response. We prefer managing borders,” said commission spokesman Margaritis Schinas. “The European response to the refugee crisis will be done with Greece, not against Greece.”

What is the difference between a managed open border and an unmanaged open border?

This term doesn’t make sense to me.

Anti-migrant messages resonate with the ex-communist EU member states, countries that have benefited greatly from EU subsidies and freedom of movement for their own citizens but which now balk at requests to accept even small numbers of refugees. The Visegrad nations maintain it is impossible to integrate Muslims into their societies, often describing them as security threats. So far the Poles, Czechs and Slovaks have only accepted small numbers of refugees, primarily Christians from Syria. Many officials in the West are frustrated with what they see as xenophobia and hypocrisy, given that huge numbers of Poles, Hungarians and other Eastern Europeans have received refuge and economic opportunity in the West for decades.

Well. I think if these were refugees from the UK, they wouldn’t have an issue taking them in. Meaning it isn’t hypocritical. It is “xenophobic,” but it is natural to have a phobia of alien terrorists and gang-rapists.

Dariusz Kalan, an analyst at the Polish Institute of International Affairs, said he doesn’t believe that the Visegrad group on its own can destroy European unity but says Orban’s vision is winning adherents across the continent in far-right movements and even among mainstream political parties. “It’s hard to ignore Orban,” Kalan said. “People in Western Europe are starting to adopt the language of Orban. None are equally tough and yet the language is still quite similar.”

Yeah.

It turns out people don’t like gang-rape. They don’t like being looted. They don’t like gibbering monkeys crawling around everywhere like gigantic cockroaches, threatening them.

We were told this asylum situation was going to be like the Jew Paul Simon’s song “Mother and Child Reunion.”

It isn’t like that.