What
will Germany look like in 2050? The outspoken deputy head of the German
police union (DPolG), Manuel Ostermann, published an excerpt from his
book on X about what he sees as the perils of mass immigration. His post
described Arab clans dominating big cities in 2050, Sharia law, child
marriage, grooming gangs, and a host of other ills.
Now, the European
Union has censored his post from being seen across the entire continent
in a major escalation against a public official, one who is considered
one of the leading voices of tens of thousands of German police
officers, and a voice frequently appearing in major German news outlets,
including Welt and Bild.
Here is the original text, published by Remix News in English, which was translated before his post was censored. For those looking for the post, they are now greeted with this text.
Likely, the post was removed under the Digital Services Act, a powerful tool used to suppress speech on Europe’s web.
However, Ostermann’s prediction is a perfectly valid exercise of
speech in any free and democratic society. Even if his predictions are
wrong, or even if some do not turn out to be true, Germany and other EU
nations still guarantee a constitutional right to such speech.
Furthermore, there is much evidence to support his conclusions, at least in part. “By the way, this text comes from my book ‘Germany is no longer
safe.’ I’m pleased that it’s being debated, because that’s how reality,
unfortunately, can look quite rapidly in Germany,” he wrote in a post
that is still visible.
Will the EU also ban his book? If they are willing to censor sections
of a book, they are also willing to censor entire books. It is
certainly a dark turn of events that Europe is actively censoring a
police official and union deputy leader amid an ongoing public debate
about immigration and its effect on European nations.
Ostermann’s post was not created in a vacuum. He has a bird’s eye
view in his role as a police officer of the chaos wrought by Germany’s
open borders ideology. While his warning is stark, it is fair to make
predictions based on current events and data.
Let’s address some of the facts.
Arab clans dominate the big cities
“Imagine Germany in 2050. Arab clans dominate the big cities.
Gangs fight each other in the fight for sovereignty in organized crime.
People who don’t belong to the “right side” are murdered on the street.
Even the police hardly dare to go to certain areas known as no-go areas
anymore. Drug deaths hit an all-time high,” wrote Ostermann.
What exactly is the issue with the censors here?
Clan crime is a major problem within German cities, and it is almost
entirely derived from Muslim countries, including Lebanon, Turkey, and
even Syria. There are similar problems in neighboring countries,
including Moroccans and Chechens operating in France and the
Netherlands, and warring over the country’s drug trade.
Germany’s only public media networks routinely run articles and
documentaries on the country’s growing clans and their power. In fact, a recent slickly produced ZDF documentary
details how these clans have infiltrated the government and police
forces to the point that fellow police officers cannot even trust each
other.
“Kriminelle Clans in Deutschland”
shows that criminal networks not only exercise control in some areas of
large cities, but have also established their influence nationwide,
right up to state institutions. Accumulating huge wealth illegally, they
have built a tight network that includes law enforcement professionals.
“It is a murderous and extremely criminal milieu that goes on there.
And now on so many levels that we no longer know whether we can really
stop it at all. Were raids betrayed, investigations manipulated and
employees bought off by the authorities? There is even despair in
certain police stations,” states the narrator. As Germany’s foreign population grows, so does clan crime, or at least the potential for such crime.
Just this year, 100 Lebanese clan members battled on the streets. Here is what Remix News wrote:
“There was a bloodbath on the streets of Germany after two extended
Lebanese family groups fought in a battle that reportedly involved 100
people in the city of Heiligenhaus. The two groups battled using
machetes, knives, and other weapons, leading to a mass police operation
that resulted in at least five serious injuries, including one that is
life-threatening. Police made several arrests.”
Incredible violence, attacks on police, and corruption at the highest
levels are already the case to a large degree in a number of European
cities. In Marseilles, killings have hit a record high and foreign gangs
dominate the city’s drug trade.
In the Netherlands, even the royal family has been threatened by the power wielded by foreign criminals.
Regarding the potential for drug overdose deaths, the situation could go many different ways, but drug overdose deaths in the EU are hovering near a peak. With the flood of synthetic opioids coming into Europe, the situation could worsen.
Is there any guarantee that Germany can escape such developments?
Certainly not. Osterman presents a valid prediction based on trend
lines, and certainly, there are no grounds to censor his prediction.
Sharia law and women’s rights
“In some districts, only Sharia law is recognized as valid law.“
Already, Austrian courts are recognizing Sharia law
as valid so long as it does not contradict fundamental rights and
higher state laws. However, this may be only a stepping-stone ruling.
In Germany itself, there is a small but vocal minority of Muslims who are openly protesting in favor of a German caliphate in cities like Hamburg.
However, this is not the most concerning development. Instead, in a major study conducted by the Criminological Research Institute (KFN), it showed that nearly half of young Muslims in Germany believe a theocracy is the best form of government.
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