France: 50 Christian graves and monuments in the cemetery of Clermont-d’Excideuil smeared with Islamic slogans

The inhabitants of Clermont-d’Excideuil in the rural Périgord discovered graffiti on about fifty graves in the village in the early hours of Monday March 11. The inscriptions were similar to tags discovered in recent weeks on calvaries in neighbouring villages.

The village of Clermont-d’Excideuil with its 240 inhabitants in rural Périgord is completely stunned. On Monday morning, March 11, a deputy mayor discovered tags on the 19th March 1962 stele, the war memorial and around 50 graves in the cemetery. The cross on a fountain was also sprayed with graffiti.


On the church door an inscription: “Ramadan”. Inscriptions such as “Allah”, “Dogs gwers” or “The Muslim bear awakens” were painted on the graves. At first glance, these inscriptions resemble the tags that have already been found in recent weeks on calvaries in the neighbouring villages of Saint-Pantaly-d’Excideuil, Cheveix-Cubas and Coulaures. www.francebleu.fr

Clermont-d’Excideuil (24) : la stèle du 19 mars 1962, le monument aux morts et une cinquantaine de tombes du cimetière recouverts de tags à connotation islamiste et anti-française – Fdesouche

France: Explosives and a book containing Salafist propaganda discovered at the home of a couple known to the police during a bomb disposal operation

Screen grab X

The special unit RAID and the bomb disposal squad intervened in a flat in the 8th arrondissement of Lyon shortly after 06:00 a.m. on Sunday morning. During the search of the flat, the investigators found at least one kilogramme of TATP, a very unstable homemade explosive, as well as Salafist writings. One man and one woman were taken into police custody.
According to Europe 1, a man and a woman were arrested in Lyon and taken into police custody. The woman is suspected of having prepared explosives in order to offer them for sale on social networks, in particular Snapchat. The RAID and explosives experts intervened shortly after 06:00 a.m. on Sunday morning in a flat in the 8th arrondissement of the capital of the Gauls.
During the search, at least one kilogramme of TATP, a very unstable homemade explosive, was found, which was immediately destroyed by the explosives experts due to its high risk. In addition, two mobile phones, a forged identity card and a booklet containing Salafist literature were confiscated. Europe 1

Lyon : des explosifs et un livret de littérature salafiste découverts chez un couple, connu des services de police, lors d’une opération de déminage – Fdesouche

Western Financial Censorship Goes Global

Symbolfoto. Wikimedia Commons , JoachimKohler-HB, CC-BY-SA-4.0

In further evidence that the Western financial system is being weaponised to punish those who express dissenting but perfectly lawful views, the left-leaning German coalition government is attempting to rush new laws through the Bundestag targeting bank accounts of people who donate money to groups and causes deemed by the state and its functionaries to be “right wing extremists.”

German Interior Minister Nancy Faeser recently announced a raft of measures she described as “instruments of rule of law to protect our democracy,” but that critics fear will chill free expression while serving the ulterior motive of reigning in the popularity of the right-wing opposition party, Alternative for Germany (AfD), in the run up to this year’s European elections and next year’s German federal election.

One such measure is to freeze the bank accounts of those found to have donated money to any group the government declares to be “far-right.” Faeser was worryingly vague as to how this politically motivated financial censorship will work in practice, how ‘right wing extremism’ will be defined, whether Germany’s left-leaning tripartite coalition government will get to decide on that definition, and what penalties will be directed at those who donate to right-wing parties or organisations. Germany’s domestic intelligence agency, the Office of the Protection of the Constitution (BfV) would handle the specifics, she said:

No one who donates to a right-wing extremist party should remain undetected. … Those who mock the state must deal with a strong state.

The minister also urged the German Bundestag to “pass the law quickly” in order to “combat hate on the internet … remove enemies of the constitution from public service [and] disarm right-wing extremists.” Support for the AfD has surged to over 20% of the electorate, meaning the Party is the strongest opposition to the current German government, a coalition led by the left-wing Social Democratic Party.

A recent survey carried out by the Civey Opinion Research Centre for the liberal newspaper Der Spiegel, indicated that 47% of respondents nationwide said they would find it acceptable if the AfD were involved in governments at the state level in the future, reflecting a growing disconnect between the opinions held by the German public and the country’s political elites.

In several German states the foundation for this new approach has already been laid, with the BfV labelling the AfD a “definitive case of right-wing extremism,” meaning the party is subject to extreme surveillance. Last year, for instance, AfD co-leader Tino Chrupalla revealed that Postbank, a retail banking division of massive financial institution Deutsche Bank, had terminated his account because he is an AfD member.


Chrupalla made the claim during a televised interview on the ARD network. Asked whether he frequently encounters stereotypes about East Germans, Chrupalla dismissed the notion, arguing that they do not play as much of a role these days. However, the AfD chief went on to say that Germans living in the eastern part of the country today find themselves in a situation that feels eerily familiar to the days of the GDR, particularly with respect to the political and economic consequences that one faces for taking a position that deviates from the mainstream narrative.

“My account was cancelled by Postbank because I am an AfD member,” Chrupalla said, adding that this not only demonstrates how the AfD is “excluded and marginalised” from society, but also that people are no longer permitted to express their opinions freely in Germany. And Chrupalla’s de-banking isn’t an isolated incident: in 2020, banking giant ING terminated the accounts of Thuringian AfD chief Björn Höcke and his wife. Two years earlier, AfD MEP Nicolaus Fest’s bank account with Deutsche Bank was also closed without prior notice. In each case, no reason was given for the account closure. Politically motivated financial censorship of this kind is on the rise across the globe.

The relatively recent digitalisation of financial transactions has placed a vast amount of power in the hands of financial services companies like payment processors, banks, online platforms, and credit companies like Visa and Mastercard. For a while, it was a theoretical consideration that these powers might be exercised completely to cut off and shut up groups, organisations, and people. More recently, however, governments are leaning on these companies to act in ways beneficial to state interests.

In 2019, the Russian government froze bank accounts linked to opposition politician Alexei Navalny (as reported by Reuters). Three years later, in February 2022, Canada froze the bank accounts of the ‘Freedom Convoy’ truckers who were protesting against vaccine mandates—with no due process, appeals process, or court order necessary.

Last year, the former head of the right-wing UK Brexit Party, Nigel Farage, revealed that his long-standing account with Coutts bank had been closed, after an internal risk committee determined that his views on Brexit, migration, LGBT rights and Net Zero “did not align” with the bank’s “values.” Former Brexit Party MEP Henrik Overgaard Nielsen was also informed last year that his account with MetroBank would be terminated, while former Brexit Party MEP Baroness Claire Fox recently revealed that she had suffered the same experience, and suspected political motivation.

In the U.S., Representative Jim Jordan’s House Judiciary Committee investigation into federal law enforcement’s “receipt of information about American citizens without legal process” recently discovered that federal investigators asked banks to search and filter customer transactions by using terms like “MAGA” and “Trump,” ostensibly as part of an investigation into the January 6th demonstrations at, and assault on, the U.S. Capitol. Individuals who shopped at stores like Dick’s Sporting Goods or purchased the Bible may also have had their transactions flagged. A source familiar with the Committee’s investigation has since confirmed that the information received by the federal government was used for purposes beyond the January 6th investigation.

In India, after the imposition of numerous legal sanctions and the prosecution of active investigations against leading opponents of Narendra Modi’s government, critics and rights groups have accused India’s ruling BJP party of using law enforcement agencies to freeze the bank accounts of the main opposition party Congress just weeks before the expected announcement of national elections. If one thing is certain, it is that the ever-escalating weaponisation of the financial system won’t stop there.

https://europeanconservative.com/articles/commentary/western-financial-censorship-goes-global/

The day Spain caved

Image: Mr. Tickle

By Silvio Canto, Jr.

Twenty years ago, although it feels like a lot more than that, most of us woke to shocking news from Madrid:

On March 11, 2004, 193 people are killed and nearly 2,000 are injured when 10 bombs explode on four trains in three Madrid-area train stations during a busy morning rush hour. The bombs were later found to have been detonated by mobile phones. The attacks, the deadliest against civilians on European soil since the 1988 Lockerbie airplane bombing, were initially suspected to be the work of the Basque separatist militant group ETA. This was soon proved incorrect as evidence mounted against an extreme Islamist militant group loosely tied to, but thought to be working in the name of, al-Qaida.

Investigators believe that all of the blasts were caused by improvised explosive devices that were packed in backpacks and brought aboard the trains. The terrorists seem to have targeted Madrid’s Atocha Station, at or near which seven of the bombs were detonated. The other bombs were detonated aboard trains near the El Poso del Tio Raimundo and Santa Eugenia stations, most likely because of delays in the trains’ journeys on their way to Atocha. Three other bombs did not detonate as planned and were later found intact.

A few days later, the socialists won the election by connecting the incident to Spanish troops in Iraq.  It was a pathetic exploitation of the tragedy, but it worked.

At the time, many concluded that the terrorists had won a big one in Spain. It was the first time that terrorists changed a government. Thankfully, it turned out to be the last as PM John Howard of Australia and President George W. Bush were reelected later in 2004.

Unfortunately, Spain’s PM José Luis Rodriguez-Zapatero turned out to be worse than anyone could have imagined.  Spanish troops were removed from Iraq. The terrorists did not leave Spain. That’s PM Rodriguez-Zapatero’s legacy and the low point of his very mediocre career.

Wikimedia Commons , Ramón Peco (desdetasmania), CC-BY-2.0

https://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2024/03/the_day_spain_caved.html

Scotland: SNP sparks fury after quango gives £110,000 of taxpayer money to fund ‘harmful and abusive porn’

Humza Yousaf’s Government has received criticism for taxpayers’ cash funding Leonie Rae Gasson’s Rein project

Humza Yousaf’s SNP-led Government has been accused of giving £110,000 of taxpayers’ cash to fund a quango to create a “harmful and abusive” hardcore porn film.

Creative Scotland, which received Holyrood grants to create a “moving image installation”, will produce content showing performers participating in “non-simulated” intercourse.

Leonie Rae Gasson, the artist behind the scheme, was awarded £23,219 in lottery funding in August 2022.

The pot was given to Gasson for “research and development” for the so-called Rein project.

A nine-minute film has been created using the £23,219, showing three characters “riotously hump, languidly lick, and shake their manes” in an “experiment in teasing each other and the viewer”.

The project received a further £84,555 in lottery cash in January this year for full-scale development of the project.

The film will premiere in August 2025 and is currently seeking more performers.

Concerns about the project led Creative Scotland to say it was “considerably more explicit in its execution” than had been indicated in its application, adding it was “reviewing the award”.

The website promoting the film highlighted how the proposed project will be “an exploration of dyke sexuality” in a “magical, erotic journey through a distinctly Scottish landscape.”

Gasson is based in Glasgow and describes herself as a director who “works across live performance, film and virtual reality”NATIONAL THEATRE SCOTLAND

The film will include “daddies lurking in the woods,” princesses “playfully trying to drown each other” and “bare a**e lovers frolicking in long grass”.

In a further sexualisation of the film, viewers were told “your climax” will be “a secret sex party” where sex acts are “exploding onto the screens”.

The description added: “The relentless pace of the work slows into a warm, spacious scene of aftercare, for the performers on screen, and the audience.”

A casting call was issued for “dyke-identifying performers” aged 18 or over.

Cast members will receive £270 per day, with three being required for the “explicit sex scene”.

It added: “Some roles will involve just snogging, others will involve vanilla sex and others more hardcore acts.

“If you are selected to be in the cast, our intimacy co-ordinators will support you to more clearly identify your detailed needs and boundaries with the sexual aspect of the work.”

Kate Barker, from the LGB Alliance, said: “We see this whole project as offensive. It is harmful and abusive towards women.

“It’s nothing more than porn masquerading as arts and culture.

“We all know that women working in the porn industry are vulnerable and exploited, so this project being given £85,000 public money is unacceptable and appalling.”

Trina Budge, from the For Women Scotland group, claimed the public would be “horrified” to learn taxpayers’ cash is funding a project that is so “offensive and dehumanises women”.

Scottish Conservative deputy leader Meghan Gallacher also expressed her concern, saying: “Given the concerns raised here, Scottish Government Ministers must make clear that robust processes were followed before handing over taxpayers’ money for the show.”

Gasson is based in Glasgow and describes herself as a director who “works across live performance, film and virtual reality” and specialises in “bold, conceptual & visually arresting work from a queer and neurodivergent perspective.”

The Rein project is also being supported by Take Me Somewhere Festival.

A Creative Scotland spokesman said: “We support freedom of expression and artists being able to push the boundaries of radical performance.

“However, the project, Rein, is considerably more explicit in its execution than was indicated in the application received to our Open Fund.

“As such, we are reviewing this award and will be discussing next steps with the applicant and with the other partners in the project.”

https://www.gbnews.com/politics/snp-news-taxpayers-money-porn-creative-scotland

Culture of Death: After Inserting Abortion in the Constitution, France’s Macron Goes All in for Euthanasia and Assisted Suicide in New Legislative Push

Globalist poster boy and former Rothschild banker, French President Emmanuel Macron, has fully embraced the culture of death that is becoming so pervasive in many decadent Western societies.

After he proudly inserted abortion in the French constitution, Macron has run to the other extremity of life to now defend what he terms an ‘end of life’ bill.

The ‘petit Roi’ can hardly be blamed for starting this horrid trend, that in places like Canadistan is leading to a death toll of tens of thousands annually – many of them of people who did NOT have terminal illnesses, since the standards to be eligible for these nefast practices keep getting relaxed.

Today (10), Macron, for the first time, came out of the closet and declared that he backed new ‘end-of-life’ legislation.

He said the new legislation would allow what he called ‘help to die’ and determined that his government is to put forward a draft bill to parliament as early as May.

France will join equally deranged policies by neighbors Switzerland, Belgium, and the Netherlands, who have all adopted laws that allow medically assisted dying ‘in some cases.’

Disappearing Legacy: The Struggle of Turkey’s Greek Orthodox Community

Imagine a vibrant community of over 1.4 million people dwindling to a mere 1,500, mostly elderly. This is the harsh reality facing the Greek Orthodox minority in Turkey. Decades of systematic pressure, discrimination, and violence have pushed this historic group to the brink of extinction.

A Story of Decline:

The decline began with the 1923 Lausanne Treaty. This forced population exchange between Greece and Turkey uprooted a large portion of the Greek Orthodox community. However, the story doesn’t end there.

Successive Turkish governments continued to exert pressure, both open and covert, on the remaining Greeks. Violence, forced labour, seizure of assets, and restrictions on professions became their reality. This relentless pressure forced many to flee the country.

The targeting went even further. Measures like the Varlık Vergisi wealth tax and the conscription of non-Muslim men for labour projects specifically hindered the economic and educational opportunities of the Greek Orthodox.

The tragic 1955 Istanbul riots served as another major blow. Fueled by rumours of an attack on Turkey’s founding father’s birthplace in Greece, these riots resulted in more expulsions and violence directed against the Greek Orthodox.

The Remaining Struggles:

While some confiscated properties have been returned, the core issue – the dwindling population – remains. The Ecumenical Patriarchate, the global leader of Orthodox Christians, faces ongoing challenges:

  • Limited Recognition: Turkey refuses to acknowledge the Patriarchate’s worldwide authority and restricts its activities.
  • Nationalist Pressure: Nationalist and neo-nationalist groups actively target the Patriarchate and the remaining Greek Orthodox through lawsuits, disinformation campaigns, and even threats of violence.
An Uncertain Future:

The political landscape in Turkey, particularly the alliance between the government and nationalist groups, offers little hope for an easing of pressure. The proposal to allow younger generations from the expatriated community to return offers a potential lifeline, but Turkey has yet to embrace it

Read More (Abdullah Bozkurt/Stockholm, nordicmonitor.com).

Disappearing Legacy: The Struggle of Turkey’s Greek Orthodox Community – Greek City Times

’11M’ Brings Home the Human Cost of Terrorism – On the 20th anniversary of the Madrid bombings

Twenty years ago on March 11, at the height of the morning rush hour, four commuter trains in Madrid, Spain were wracked by ten nearly simultaneous bomb explosions in the most devastating European terror attack since the Pan Am bombing over Lockerbie, Scotland in 1988. The blasts wounded over 2,000 people and took a total of 193 lives (the last victim passed away a full ten years later after being in a coma since the attack). In Spain, the catastrophe is known simply by the abbreviated date “11M”, much like “9/11” in America.

In a 90-minute documentary called 11M: Terror in Madrid, now playing on Netflix, survivors and insiders recount not only the horror of that day, but also the political crisis it sparked and the hunt for the perpetrators, who were initially but wrongly assumed to be members of ETA or Euskadi Ta Askatasuna (“Basque Homeland and Liberty”), the Basque separatist movement that killed 829 people (including 340 civilians) and wounded more than 22,000 in terrorist actions between 1968 and 2010.

The film begins with a small group of friends and relatives reminiscing and commiserating over the loss of someone they knew who died in the blasts nearly twenty years before. They are still brought to tears by the memories. Then we are introduced to some of the survivors themselves – among them an electrician, a photojournalist, a cancer researcher, a taxi driver, a dance teacher, a train operator – who had no idea that morning that ordinary life was about to become irrevocably changed. “Up until March 10, 2004, I was a normal person,” says one woman to the camera. “I had a job. I think I was happy.” A man says, “My life was just like any other guy who was 19 or 20.” Another man remembers, “There was nothing that made me feel that day would be different from any other day.” But one elderly woman recalls about her departing son, “As he was walking down the hallway, I had this feeling. I thought, ‘Don’t leave.’”

Then the trains began exploding. The survivors on camera remember loud blasts, darkness, smoke – and “things no one should see,” as one woman recalls, fighting back emotion. The train operator actually saw the second blast in his rear-view mirror. “That image,” he states. “I have it… it’s impossible to forget,” he manages to get out, his eyes wet with tears. Some of the survivors recount realizing that they had lost their legs in the blasts. One woman said there was a boy next to her who was dead. “He was very young.” First responders, who to this day remain traumatized by what they faced, didn’t know where to begin dealing with the magnitude of the calamity.

Authorities immediately launched an investigation. The understandable assumption was that ETA, a constant domestic terror threat in Spain, was behind the bombings, perhaps to impact the country’s general elections only three days away. But ETA was quickly ruled out, and that is when things took a suspicious turn.

The official government line, disseminated by the state-run media, continued to insist that ETA was the culprit, even as the investigation pointed in a different direction – al Qaeda. When the jihadist group published a letter taking credit for the bombings, and ETA itself condemned the attack and disavowed responsibility, this was potentially a politically damaging revelation for Spanish president José Aznar and his Popular Party. Aznar was one of the first and few European leaders to support the war in Iraq, something most Spaniards opposed. Right on the cusp of a national election, he and his administration feared that if the Madrid train bombings could be linked to Spain’s involvement in Iraq, the election was lost.

From there, the film explores the political ramifications of the Madrid bombings, the details behind the preparation and execution of the coordinated attacks, and the subsequent trial of those involved. 11M is instructive for its insight into the political maneuvering and power plays of a government that lied to its own people in the wake of the worst terror attack in Spanish history. It is also compelling in its explanation of the growth of an al Qaeda presence in Spain, its connection to the 9/11 attacks, and the official narrative to downplay the extent of al Qaeda’s international network.

More importantly, the film is a reminder that terrorism is asymmetric warfare waged intentionally on innocents, not conventional war in which non-combatants are merely the tragic collateral of attacks against military targets. It is a reminder that it is too easy for statistics like “193 dead and 2,000 injured” to turn victims into numbers and to distance us from the human cost of evil. The higher the numbers, the more incomprehensible and impersonal that cost becomes. “The death of one man is a tragedy,” Stalin reportedly observed. “The death of millions is a statistic.”

11M is a disturbing testament to the reality that behind every one of those 193 deaths and 2,000+ casualties in Madrid was and is an individual whose life was cut short, ruined, or in some way altered forever, and that each one of those individual tragedies rippled outward to wound the lives of innumerable friends and relatives of the victims. The same is true for the nearly 1200 innocents killed and more than 3400 wounded in the Hamas butchery in Israel on October 7, 2023, or the nearly 3,000 killed and many thousands injured in the 9/11 terrorism, or the victims of any other cowardly terrorist action. The impact of such bottomless evil extends far beyond the quantifiable into incalculable misery and trauma – as it is intended to.

When we are reminded, as in this film, that these abstract numbers represent flesh-and-blood, individual fathers and mothers, sons and daughters, friends and neighbors, and that each one of those sits at the center of his or her own small community of relatives and friends, our common humanity surges to the surface, and we feel the call to stand with them, or for them, against the architects of evil.

Some of the survivors and first responders interviewed in the film recall, for example, how amazed and grateful they were to the many “ordinary” citizens who instinctively rose to the occasion in the moment: helping the wounded, comforting the dying, and assisting in the search through the wreckage.

And the very night of the Madrid bombings, the Barcelona professional soccer team played against the Scottish team Celtic in Glasgow. In a touching gesture of solidarity, the stadium full of Celtic fans paid tribute to and offered genuinely emotional condolences to their Spanish counterparts during what was meant to be a minute of silence by uniting to sing, “You’ll Never Walk Alone.” Terrorism is meant to divide and, well, terrorize, but it also can unite and rouse our courage and determination.

11M is a well-told documentary, well worth watching as a real-life political conspiracy, a terrorism investigation, and a human drama. It reminds us that we cannot afford to let those who would exacerbate and exploit our political and social divisions win by destroying our common humanity.

https://www.frontpagemag.com/11m-brings-home-the-human-cost-of-terrorism/

Portugal election: centre-right ahead with far-right Chega potentially key

Screenshot FB

Exit polls suggest a coalition of Portuguese centre-right parties is on course to narrowly defeat the incumbent socialists but fall well short of a majority in Sunday’s closely-fought snap general election, with the far-right Chega party looking set to double its share of the vote and finish third.

Three polls, published shortly after voting ended at 8pm local time, suggest the Democratic Alliance – an electoral platform made up of the large Social Democratic party (PSD) and two smaller conservative parties – is set to finish ahead of the Socialist party (PS).

Chega is projected to come in third with a massively increased share of the vote, raising the prospect that it could act as a king-maker in the formation a new, centre-right administration.

Portugal election: centre-right ahead with far-right Chega potentially key, exit polls say – live updates (theguardian.com)