The German Welt wrote an article under the title "The authorities must take the children of anti-Semitic parents" , which views the problem as a Gordian knot, and thus would like to solve it in style, with a single hussar cut.

It's an exciting topic, although it's hard to imagine implementing it in the above way, just like how does a 10-12-year-old child become anti-Semitic? An equally important question is what the accusation is based on, what does a child have to do to deserve ? Do you need to scribble on the wall with silly texts? Or shouting nonsense in the school yard?

How can it be proven that everything a German child says and does at school is solely due to parental influence and the result of "anti-Semitic education at home"? Just because the parent may not have any idea about it. It may happen that the opposite happened, and the child does not take what he heard at home to school, but was inspired by what was said and seen at school by his peers from other cultures. This is called the group or herd instinct, which is very decisive in the life of the individual during childhood.

Source: welt.de

For this, of course, we must be aware that there are more Muslim boys than non-Muslims running around in German schoolyards these days, and these young people are often very violent. One of the non-negligible reasons for this is that, like those belonging to the southern race, they biologically mature earlier, so that more than once the native German children "grow on their head", and in the strictest sense of the word, because it is not uncommon for them to emerge as leaders. And the smaller ones - as usual - automatically want to belong to the stronger; they do what they have seen from the greats.

Source: Tagesspiegel

Of course, they could even infest the apartments of suspicious families - as they did in the good old days - and the state could thus prove that anti-Semitic expressions do indeed originate from home, and not from migrant children. And if by chance it turned out that Grandpa Hanzi was really a genuine Obersturmführer, God rest his soul, then they could simply remove the child from the family, period.

But seriously, what kind of solution is this? After all, in the meantime - at the same time - we leave him in his school! Or maybe we will create schools where non-anti-Semitic children are educated separately? It's a difficult question.

Regarding the case

"the Central Council of German Jews, following reports of religious bullying in primary schools, is now calling for anti-Semitic crimes in schools to be included in violence statistics."

Not long after, in response to this, Alexander Dobrindt, a leading CSU politician, stated the following:

"We finally need zero tolerance against Islamism in schoolyards, [and] maximum consequences in the case of religious harassment (mobbing), up to expulsion from school."
(Wir brauchen endlich eine Null-Toleranz-Strategie gegen den Schulhof-Islamismus, maximaler Konsequenz bei Religionsmobbing bis hin zum Schulverweis),

So these kids get ripped off and removed from school. But where?

Supporting the solution, the head of the German Police Union, Rainer Wendt, told the Augsburger Allgemeine:

"If children are brought up as anti-Semites, we should not shy away from removing them from their families."

But - fortunately - this is just a plan. A plan that has not yet been carried out. We do not know whether the reason for its postponement is the pandemic. However, if it were to be implemented, I ask again: where will the affected children deported Maybe to educational institutions? Or in foster care? Into such as were formed in the Soviet Union after the October Revolution? Or to German associations, such as those born during the Third Reich? True, with a different sign. At that time, youth organizations and various school associations were merged into the fresh, crisp National Socialist associations.

But let's think about it! Jew-hating Muslim children, together with their Jew-hating Muslim parents, are constantly arriving in Germany, non-stop, namely from those Arab countries where anti-Semitism and anti-Zionism have long been a serious national problem. That is, where - as A. Dobrin mentioned - the fight between Islamism and Zionism is on the agenda.

Source: deutschlandfunk.de

And lo and behold, according to Willkommenskultur, these families are accepted by the European Union, so it is precisely the good-natured politicians of the West who import anti-Semitism, in large numbers. According to a 2021 German statistic, only in Germany

"about 13.6 million people born abroad with "own migration experience" live as immigrants."

And lo and behold, despite all the negative experiences, even in 2021, 172,370 people who submitted asylum applications (Asylantrag) to the German authorities arrived in Germany. But why do politicians complain that anti-Semitism has flared up again in Western Europe, if they themselves are the importers?

I note that although I am writing primarily about Germany, all of this applies to other EU countries as well. And what is even more important, if we are not sane, it may also apply to Hungary. All of this may attract the attention of those Hungarian opposition, left-liberal voters who will go to the polls in 2022, and who may be more than average affected by the above topic due to their family and/or origin. Yes, I mean Hungarian citizens of Jewish origin, or, if you like, Hungarian Jews, who live in large numbers in our country, especially in the capital.

In the capital, in which the FIDESZ-KDNP lost the local government election in 2019, it is therefore led by the liberal left, and a part of Budapest residents will certainly want to vote again against the national-conservative government of Viktor Orbán. They can, because the Hungarian election is free.

It's a shame that they forget that this imported anti-Semitism, the danger in Europe - as a source of political tension - was pointed out more than once by Viktor Orbán. I ask the skeptics to recall those sentences spoken on Echo TV just three years ago, the relevance of which, instead of diminishing, is increasing:

"Let's learn from the mistakes of others! … We should not make the mistakes that other Western European countries have made.” (Zsolt Bayer's report with Viktor Orbán)

Let's not do this with a shrug, because it's worth listening to the advice! And even though it was not accepted in liberal Western Europe, the juice of which they are now drinking, we here at home should think about it, and in the meantime also about that certain fence, the existence of which many consider unnecessary.

It's worth thinking about: is it really unnecessary? Are you sure it is?

It is only because, among other things, it is thanks to the fence that Islamism and anti-Zionism - as we can see in Western Europe - are not even visible in Hungarian schoolyards.

However, if the national government fails in the 2022 elections, a liberal government dominated by DK will definitely consider the fence unnecessary, since its primary goal will not be to control the flood of migrants. In fact!

Dr. Gábor Túri / Germany

Sources:

Quote from the article: "Nach den Berichten von religiösem Mobbing an Grundschulen foort der Zentralrat der Juden jetzt, antisemitische Straftaten an Schulen in der Gewaltstatistik zu erfassen."

Gewerkschaftschef Rainer Wendt der Augsburger Allgemeine : "Wenn Kinder zu Antisemiten erzogen werden, darf man nicht davor zurückschrecken, sie aus ihren Familien herauszunehmen."

Statistics:

1.) Population with a migration background 2021. Source Federal Statistical Office 2021 (QuelleStatistisches Bundesamt 2021: Bevölkerung mit Migrationshintergrund) "
Rund 13.6 Millionen haben "eigene Migrationserfahrung", sind also im Ausland geboren und eingewandert."
2.) Asylanträge in Deutschland 2021 | An extra