AfD conservatives won in the east in Germany’s elections on Sunday. – screengrab
The conservative Christian Democrat Union (CDU) political party won the national elections with 29.0 percent of the vote.
The Populist-Pro-Germany AfD roared into second place with 19.5 percent of the vote.
It is likely that the CDU will join with the failed Social Democrats (SPD) to form a government. The SPD is currently in power and is destroying the country.
It would make more sense for CDU to join with the AfD to rule Germany but that is not how it works in the globalist Western Europe.
Olaf Scholz admitted defeat in Germany where the elections were decided by 7:10 PM. The sore loser decried the AfD’s major gains in Sunday’s election.
The AfD had its strongest showing in decades.
AfD leader Alice Weidel told supporters she would reach out to the CDU to form a government.
Bishop of Llandaff Church in Wales School.(Photo: Google)
Dismissing a Catholic teacher who expressed views critical of Sharia law during a diversity training day was lawful, a tribunal has ruled.
Ben Dybowski was dismissed from his post at The Bishop of Llandaff Church in Wales High School, following the training day in March 2023.
During the event, Dybowski criticised Sharia law and said that he was in favour of traditional marriage and against abortion, arguing that life begins at conception.
Dybowski asked if his views were considered discriminatory and was told by the diversity trainer that expressing such views could indeed by regarded as discriminatory, although he was free to hold them privately.
Following the event and complaints from other members of staff, Dybowski was called into a meeting with the headteacher. During the meeting Dybowski confirmed that he also shared his views on social media and was warned that such posts could contravene the Anglican school’s social media guidelines and risk harming members of the school community.
The tribunal heard that Dybowski often discussed his views with staff and students at the school.
In the end the tribunal concluded that while Dybowski’s views on marriage and abortion were protected by equality legislation, speaking badly of Sharia was his opinion and therefore not protected, meaning the school was entitled to dismiss him.
Judge Samantha Moore, presiding over the case, said, “The claimant has a right to hold his beliefs and to manifest them, but he is under the same prohibitions as the rest of society to not discriminate or harass others.”
“[The school] was entitled to want to exercise a degree of control over how beliefs were manifested within the school environment in accordance with the school’s values given the potential power imbalance between teachers and pupils and in the context of potentially vulnerable pupils.”
A trans-identified male from South Africa is standing trial for the murder of a security guard at the asylum shelter he had been staying at. Hilton Henrico G., who was identified as a “woman” by German press, had a history of violent assault leading up to the attack and had been in Germany illegally at the time as his asylum application had been rejected years ago.
Hilton, 38, was first apprehended in May of 2024 after fleeing the scene of a brutal stabbing at a refugee accommodation on Geschwister-Scholl-Straße in Potsdam. Due to strict privacy laws, Hilton’s full name has not been released by police.
While the motive for the crime is currently unclear, the prosecution has detailed that Hilton had a clear “intent to kill,” noting his repeat, targeted stabs to the victim’s heart. According to Tagesspiegel, despite rapid assistance at the scene, the security guard, who was a Syrian migrant himself, died of his injuries before making it to hospital.
A notice advertising a gathering in honor of Anwar, the security guard stabbed by Hilton.
As previously reported by Reduxx, Hilton fled the crime scene, triggering an extensive manhunt by the Brandenburg West Police Directorate. The area around the asylum shelter was cordoned off, and police searched the nearby Sanssouci Park with the assistance of tracking dogs.
In a bizarre twist, just three hours after the manhunt began, Hilton himself contacted police to file a report that he had been misgendered at a supermarket in the neighboring district of Schöneberg. Due to a lack of communication between police dispatches, the officers who responded to the misgendering incident were unaware that Hilton was on the run for murder, and took his statement on the alleged “hate crime.”
After reporting the “transphobic incident,” Hilton was allowed to leave and continue about his day.
A trans-identified male has been charged after allegedly stabbing a Syrian national to death at a refugee shelter in Potsdam, Germany.
The man fled, but was arrested after calling the police to report he had been misgendered.https://t.co/6uObRNpaZ7
Later on that day, the authorities in Potsdam learned of the complaint regarding the “transphobic incident,” which provided them with clues about the area where the Hilton might be located, ultimately leading to his arrest.
The deadly attack in May of 2024 was not the first incident linking Hilton to violence. As early as February of 2023, more than a year before the crime, he allegedly attacked another person with a knife in a housing facility in Potsdam, injuring them in the arm. This incident, which is also part of the current legal proceedings, was classified as dangerous bodily harm. Hilton was reportedly already known to authorities as a potential risk at that time.
Investigations by the Potsdamer Neueste Nachrichten (PNN) further revealed that Hilton had attracted attention in several refugee shelters due to threats and “psychological abnormalities.” Fellow residents and staff reported repeated conflicts, which led to him being transferred between facilities multiple times.
Hilton arrived in Germany from South Africa in 2018, applying under an asylum claim that was rejected by May of 2021. Despite appealing the rejection, the Administrative Court in Cottbus upheld the decision and declared him “subject to enforceable deportation.” Matthias Vogt, a court spokesperson, told BILD: “Since May 2021, [Hilton] has been immediately deportable as we denied his urgent request against the rejection of his asylum application.”
The responsibility for facilitating Hilton’s deportation lay with the Potsdam Foreigners’ Office, supported by the Central Foreigners’ Authority (ZABH) in Eisenhüttenstadt. The ZABH is now accusing the city of Potsdam of failing to report Hilton’s location to them so they could ensure he was detained and deported.
The incident has now resulted in tension between the different authorities, all of whom are accusing one another of being responsible for the failures that resulted in Hilton being able to avoid deportation and commit the stabbing.
Hilton’s case has also sparked a broader political debate, with politicians accusing the German government of having “egregious administrative failure” and “a lack of political will to enforce the law at times.”
The trial at the Potsdam Regional Court is expected to last several weeks and aims to shed light on the circumstances of the crime as well as the failings of local authorities. Hilton faces a sentence ranging from at least five years to life imprisonment, though he denies ever having committed the crime.
Despite the fact that Hilton has not changed his legal sex, several media outlets, such as B.Z. Berlin and Tagesspiegel, have referred to him as a “woman” standing trial for manslaughter.
Fresh off the previous Muslim terrorist attacks in Europe where some victims are still hospitalized and a 2-year-old girl and her mother recently passed away after the Munich car attack, they’re at it again.
An Algerian Muslim refugee terrorist went on a stabbing spree at a market in France while shouting “Allahu Akbar” or “Allah is greater than your religion”. The Muslim terrorist managed to kill a 69-year-old man and stab several police officers.
The Muslim refugee had come to France as a refugee in 2014, was arrested for promoting terrorism after the Hamas attacks of Oct 7, and efforts were made to deport him back to Algeria.
While President Macron stated that “it is without any doubt an act of Islamist terrorism”, Prime Minister Bayrou claimed that “fanaticism has struck again.”
The perpetrator of today’s terrorist attack in Mulhouse, France, has been identified as 37-year-old Algerian national Brahim Abdessemed.
He stabbed one person to death while shouting ‘Allahu Akbar’.
Over in Germany, a Syrian Muslim refugee stabbed a Spanish tourist near the Holocaust memorial in Berlin. The terrorist refugee had arrived as an ‘unaccompanied minor’ and was granted asylum.
The Syrian refugee told police he had spent weeks planning to kill Jews. He was carrying a Koran.
Europe urgently needs mass deportation of the army of fake refugees who entered the continent during the Syrian Civil War. The alternative is endless violence.
In an increasingly turbulent German political landscape, Alice Weidel has emerged as a key figure in Alternative for Germany (AfD). The AfD has transitioned from marginality to one of the country’s leading political forces. Her pragmatic leadership has managed to transform an initially Eurosceptic formation into a political machine with a firm stance against immigration and globalization, understood as a force that erodes national identities. If the polls are correct, AfD could become the second-largest political force in Germany, a country that has become the new frontline in the populist revolt against the legacy parties of the Left and Right.
In its early days, AfD was predominantly liberal in economic matters and Eurosceptic in its stance, but over time, Weidel, an economist by profession with a doctorate in international development, oversaw its evolution toward a more identitarian and nationalist stance. Aware that public discontent with political elites was growing, she reinforced the party’s discourse against uncontrolled immigration and European bureaucracy. In her rhetoric, she stresses that Germany needs to regain its sovereignty and strengthen its borders, a position that resonates with broad swathes of the electorate.
Despite her party’s advocacy of traditional values, Weidel has defied labels by being openly lesbian and living with Sri Lankan film producer Sarah Bossard, raising two sons together. This apparent contradiction has served as an argument for her critics but also proves that AfD is more heterogeneous than its detractors would admit. As her parliamentary deputy, Beatrix von Storch has pointed out, Weidel’s case demonstrates that the party is “tolerant” within its fundamental principles.
Since assuming leadership in 2017, Weidel has played a crucial role in consolidating AfD. Unlike other party leaders, she has opted for a normalization strategy without abandoning the toughness of her message. While in the beginning she attempted to distance herself from more radical figures like Björn Höcke (head of AfD’s Der Flüget faction, which the German Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution declared a suspected right-wing extremist organization), over time, she has embraced unity within the party as key to electoral success.
In her speeches, Weidel emphasizes the need for remigration, that is the return of illegal immigrants to their countries of origin, a proposal enthusiastically received by a voter base tired of the lack of security and what they perceive as a crisis of uncontrolled mass migration.
Weidel has also found a powerful ally in the person of X owner, billionaire U.S. entrepreneur Elon Musk. Surprisingly for many, Musk has been a vocal supporter of AfD for quite some time now, openly expressing his conviction that “only the AfD can save Germany.” In January, Musk had a much publicized, and much criticized, conversation with Weidel, broadcast live on X, which has amassed over 16 million views since.
Throughout the campaign, Weidel has been insistent on the need to strengthen border control and implement mass deportations. Reality supports her message. Just yesterday, Friday, February 21, a Spanish tourist was seriously wounded in a stabbing attack at the Holocaust memorial in Berlin, located not far from the Brandenburg Gate. The suspect has been revealed to be a 19-year-old asylum seeker from Syria.
According to the latest surveys, support for the party now surpasses 20%, positioning it as a real alternative to traditional parties. However, the cordon sanitaire imposed on the AfD by the establishment parties makes Weidel becoming chancellor of Germany anytime soon unlikely. Nevertheless, her impact on German politics is undeniable. With a discourse appealing to the working class, business owners concerned about tax burdens, and citizens across the socio-economic spectrum dissatisfied with the country’s general direction, she has transformed AfD from a marginal actor into a pillar of the new Germany.
Alice Weidel has proven to be a shrewd politician, capable of navigating the complexities of her party and the German political scene. Her leadership has not only strengthened AfD but has also forced other parties to rethink their strategies. Her unquestionable influence is proof of how German politics is changing, willing to discuss and confront issues, such as the negative impact of mass immigration, that earlier were classified as taboo.
Friedrich Merz, darling of the USAID media. A victory by his CDU may mean that things will remain the same in decadent Germany.
In the classic novel The Leopard (Italian Il Gattopardo) writer and minor Sicilian Prince Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa chronicles life and society during the unification of Italy. Lampedusa left us this memorable quote: ‘If we want things to stay as they are, things will have to change’.
This seems to apply to Sunday’s German election.
After the collapse of dysfunctional and deeply unpopular coalition led by Olaf Scholz, a snap election was called, against the background or the surging of the right-wingers from AfD party.
But voters wanting to reshape the country’s political landscape are set to become frustrated by the usual dirty tricks by the German liberal-Globalist political establishment.
MSM proclaims that the man to become the next German chancellor is Friedrich Merz, leader of the ‘center-right’ Christian Democratic Union party – a Globalist political player if there ever was one.
“Despite their swelling popularity, all the mainstream German parties, including Merz’s CDU, have categorically ruled out forming a coalition with the AfD — which President Trump’s advisor Elon Musk has backed in the elections — citing the party’s links to far-right extremism. That exclusion means it is virtually certain that the AfD will not be part of the next government.”
Merz says he will revitalize Germany’s stagnating economy, lower taxes and tighten immigration policies. Talk is cheap.
Besides shilling for Big-pharma, Merz is also an ardent Ukraine fan – another Globalist obligatory trait – so we know he will try to get the war going.
The operation was halted by undercover anti-terror police before any dates were set for the attacks MET POLICE
A terrorist jailed for plotting the London Stock Exchange bombing has been re-released from prison by the Parole Board in a snub to the Justice Secretary.
Shah Rahman was one of four al Qaeda-inspired extremists who pleaded guilty in 2012 to preparing for acts of terrrism.
A list of targets was discovered at the home of one of the men with names and addresses of then-London mayor Boris Johnson, the US embassy, the stock exchange and two rabbis.
The operation was halted by undercover anti-terror police before any dates were set for the attacks.
Rahman was sentenced to 12 years in prison and five years on an extended licence.
He was first released in 2017, however was imprisoned again in March 2022 for another eight months after police discovered a secret bank account, breaching the terms of his release.
An initial review of his sentence in February 2023 confirmed that Rahman should stay in prison.
However, a second review in January of this year by the Parole Board decided that he should no longer be imprisoned as it was “no longer necessary for the protection of the public”.
The board said: “The panel determined that there were no heightened concerns of an extremist risk and that Mr Rahman met the legal test for release.”
A report explained that the man had completed psychology sessions after his return to prison, focusing on his breach of licence and to help him better understand his faith.
It added: “Rahman had said that he became radicalised by events in Iraq and Afghanistan, that he lacked a proper understanding of Islam and that he had been influenced by extremists.”
According to the summary, professionals acknowledged his progress and concluded that a plan with “extensive monitoring” along with 30 licence conditions would be “robust enough” to allow Rahman back into the community.
Conditions imposed state he must live at a designated address, submit to curfews and GPS tagging, and comply with conditions to manage extremist offenders including allowing police to search him.
The document also noted that there were concerns about him on his return to custody however he had not been subject to security attention and there were no concerns recorded after October 2024.
However, it also mentioned that a representative for the Justice Secretary, Shabana Mahmood, argued against his release.
According to our information, a passerby was targeted by several stab wounds. Other people, including a city agent in charge of parking, as well as two municipal police officers, were also injured
At least one person has died after a man armed with a knife attacked several passers-by in the middle of a market in Mulhouse.
One victim is said to have died after sustaining multiple stab wounds. A parking warden, and two police officers, were also injured, according to initial reports.
Police are said to have arrested the knifeman, who they identified as a 37-year-old male. He reportedly shouted “Allahu Akbar” while carrying out the rampage, Le Parisien reports. He is said to have launched the attack after refusing to sign court documents at the police station in Mulhouse, France.
The increase in sexual violence in the European Union in recent years has generated an intense debate about the role of mass immigration in such crimes. While some political and media actors have tried to minimize the correlation, official data and multiple reports reveal a different reality. The impact of mass immigration, mostly from regions with value systems and cultural norms that radically differ from the European ones, has challenged security and social cohesion in many cities on the continent.
According to the European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights, approximately one in ten women in the EU have experienced some form of sexual violence since the age of fifteen. However, the steady rise in these crimes in recent years cannot be attributed exclusively to increased awareness and reporting.
In Spain, reports of sexual violence have increased in parallel with the increase in immigration. In 2021, 15,845 complaints were registered for sexual offenses, 8% more than the previous year. According to reports from the Ministry of Interior, some 15% of the perpetrators were foreigners, with Morocco and Romania among the most represented nationalities, with 25% and 15% respectively. Despite the rhetoric of the Ministry of Equality in Spain and billions of euros invested in “gender equality,” 2024 ended with a record 5,258 assaults and rapes and 47 women murdered.
Belgium and Germany are two other countries particularly affected by this phenomenon. In 2021, Belgium recorded 5,000 reports of sexual violence, with 20% of perpetrators of foreign origin. Germany, one of the countries hardest hit by the 2015 migration crisis, reported 11,500 rape cases in 2022, with an alarming 40% of perpetrators of Syrian, Afghan or Iraqi origin.
In the UK, the crisis of sexual assault by migrant gangs has been particularly shocking. The Rotherham scandal, where at least 1,400 girls were abused by organized groups of Pakistani, Kurdish, and Kosovar origin between 1997 and 2013, exposed the inaction of the authorities for fear of being accused of racism. In 2022, 70,000 rape complaints were recorded (191 complaints per day), 25% more than in 2021.
In 2022, Sweden, Iceland and France were the three countries with the highest number of rape cases per 100,000 inhabitants, Sweden with 200.34, Iceland with 165.32, and France with 126.08. The safest countries were Greece, North Macedonia, Lithuania, Albania, and Hungary, with about six cases or less.
These data show a reality that cannot be hidden and must be confronted with a non-ideological approach. Growing public concern about the rise in sexual crimes has strengthened support for right-wing parties, which have seen a marked increase in the polls.
Parties such as the Alternative for Germany (AfD), the Freedom Party of Austria (FPÖ), and VOX in Spain have faced the reality head-on, including by promoting the idea of ‘remigration’—the return of failed asylum seekers and non-assimilated migrants to their countries of origin as a measure to reduce crime and preserve social cohesion.
In countries such as France and Belgium, where immigration has reached historic levels, security concerns have become a central issue in election campaigns. Even Emmanuel Macron has called for toughening France’s immigration policy, if only as a political tactic to halt a slide in the polls against Marine Le Pen’s skyrocketing Rassemblement National.
The question is how long mainstream parties will be able to uphold their firewalls and cordon sanitaires against the political forces willing to tackle the actual reality voters live in.
The suspect has finally been identified as a 19 year-old Syrian national asylum seeker named Wassim al M. His residence in Leipzig has already been raided. He is to be presented to a judge shortly . According to Stern, the suspect was not motivated by Islamist ideology, but rather anti-semitism. In the past two years alone, Germany has experienced several deadly attacks involving asylum seekers. Notable incidents include:
The Solingen Stabbings (August 24, 2024): In Solingen, North Rhine-Westphalia, where 26-year-old Syrian asylum seeker Issa al Hassan fatally stabbed two individuals and injured several others. Al Hassan, born in Deir ez-Zor, Syria, in 1998, had his asylum application denied in February 2023 but remained in Germany due to administrative delays. Authorities later linked him to radical Islamist ideologies.
Aschaffenburg Knife Attack (January 2025): In Aschaffenburg, Bavaria, an Afghan asylum seeker attacked pedestrians with a knife, resulting in multiple fatalities and injuries. The exact number of casualties and the suspect’s identity have not been fully disclosed.
Then there are the 29 arrests of asylum seekers for various foiled plots in the same time period to carry out attacks in Germany as ISIS has significantly ramped up calls for such attacks on social media and their dark web chat rooms.
German parliamentary elections are tomorrow where this issue will be on the ballot.