Angela Merkel reminds me more of Hilary Clinton each time I read about her or watch her videos. She is powerful, despotic, with an iron will to seize what she wills and burns with a rage when her motives or consequences are questioned. Personally, I think Ms. Merkel does a better job at concealing her feelings on account of sociocultural reasons, but this minor outburst on television shows that Ms. Merkel’s feels about stopping the refugee flow the same way that Hilary Clinton feels when someone asks her about Benghazi.
Who or what is motivating Ms. Merkel? It is a sense of misplaced compassion and even, love of these people who hate her, a kind of emotional captivity which controls her reason on immigration policy? Has she received instructions from a higher authority and, in the words of the Nuremberg defense, “just following orders?”
Maybe we will know the whole truth someday. For now, all that becomes clearer is that Ms. Merkel is a tyrant intent on foisting cultural and ethnic genocide against her own people while masquerading as a legitimate ‘leader.”
Via the UK Daily Mail:
The German chancellor appeared on TV in the country last night and was pressed hard on the issue of the migration crisis and how it is affecting Europe.
It came on the same day a new poll was released with only 11 per cent of respondents in Germany saying they didn’t want a cap on migrants coming into the country.
And despite being questioned on her stance on not limiting the number of refugees, she said it was the only way to solve the crisis.
Speaking to ARD Television’s Anne Will, she said: ‘My damn duty and obligation consists of finding a collective way for this Europe (to address the crisis).’
And later on in her appearance, when the German leader was confronted about angry mobs opposing refugees arriving in their towns, she said that the country’ constitution’s most sacred principle was that ‘human dignity is inviolable.’
She added: ‘These are citizens who are doing somthing that I deeply reject.’
Her appearance came as a nationwide poll also suggested that 38 per cent of Germans agreed that a cap should be set on the number of asylum seekers at 200,000 a year.
Meanwhile 21 per cent of respondents said Germany should take in no migrants.
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