That's another way to do it

Feb 10, 2016 00:28

While some are disseminating booklets telling refugees "Bad boy. Don't do that!", folks in Russia have decided enough is enough, and have taken the law in their own hands:

Refugees Find Out Russia Isn’t Norway

"The refugees groped and fondled the Russian women much like they do all through Europe. The refugees tried to flee the scene after a ( Read more... )

russia, violence, immigration

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Comments 71

This is not danieldemarko February 9 2016, 07:33:40 UTC
legal. They must share theirs wives. A friend in need is a friend indeed.

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RE: This is not dreamville_bg February 9 2016, 07:40:11 UTC
It is legal, but if you ask a refugee, it probably shouldn't be.

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luvdovz February 9 2016, 11:00:03 UTC
C'mon, integrate this.

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ddstory February 9 2016, 11:18:58 UTC
Well, Russia is not exactly Europe, is it. If they try to pull the same thing they're doing in places like Köln, they're probably going to end up being shot.

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underlankers February 9 2016, 23:32:56 UTC
It's also deliberately destroying Syrian cities and hospitals and vital infrastructure that would actually support civilian life in Syria. So to be crude here, this is a case of praising the fox for eating up the hens in the henhouse.

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ddstory February 10 2016, 07:18:36 UTC
All right Rubio, you're repeating the same thing to everyone now?

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underlankers February 10 2016, 14:39:49 UTC
Nope, simply finding it amusing people are cheering the Russians for acting like this when they're the actual cause of a significant portion of the problem. You don't get cheered for reacting like a bunch of thugs when the situation that led to that is your own damn fault. A person who puts out a fire they started as arson isn't a hero..

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dexeron February 9 2016, 17:30:22 UTC
And, of course, this is exactly what the salafists want. Anything that increases the distrust between the local population and the refugees only gives them more fodder for their recruiting propaganda.

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dreamville_bg February 9 2016, 18:31:17 UTC
Indeed. Building trust is a two-way game. If one side rapes the other's women, that definitely isn't helping.

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dexeron February 9 2016, 18:54:52 UTC
And, of course, neither does punishing the vast majority of refugees for the actions of a tiny minority.

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dreamville_bg February 9 2016, 19:55:39 UTC
Having the guts to apply one's own law and punish the actual perpetrators would be a good start, as opposed to beating around the bush and attempting to twist one's own stated "values and principles" (tm) for the sake of appearing "tolerant" at any cost.

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mahnmut February 9 2016, 18:51:06 UTC
Meanwhile in Rome...

He went there to talk about "the victories of American democracy around the world"? WTF is this supposed to mean?

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underlankers February 9 2016, 23:31:58 UTC
Well, if people are fine with Russia intentionally destroying the infrastructure of Syria as a deliberate military strategy, I'm not sure how fostering ISIS is all on the United States.

And we are talking a country barbaric enough to try seismologists for an earthquake.

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mahnmut February 10 2016, 07:17:41 UTC
how fostering ISIS is all on the United States

Strawman.

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underlankers February 10 2016, 14:40:19 UTC
Not really, you'd be impressed with how many Americans are incapable of entertaining the notion something, somewhere can happen without any US influence at all. :)

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