A Response to the CEOP Report: Final Group of Videos

This is the final of four batches of videos by El Inglés analyzing the “grooming and pimping” report issued last summer by the Child Exploitation and Online Protection Centre (CEOP). Previously: Batch 1, Batch 2, and Batch 3.

For a complete list of El Inglés’ previous essays, see the archive listing at the bottom of this post.

Useful links:

The fourteen videos have been broken out into four separate posts so that no single page will be overloaded with embeds. Below are videos twelve through fourteen.


Part 12



Parts 13 and 14 are below the jump.


Part 13

Part 14



Previous posts by El Inglés:

2007   Nov   28   The Danish Civil War
2008   Apr   24   Surrender, Genocide… or What?
    May   17   Sliding Into Irrelevance
    Jul   5   A Crystal Ball for Britain: Part 1
        6   A Crystal Ball for Britain: Part 2
        8   A Crystal Ball for Britain: Part 3
    Aug   25   Identity, Immigration, and Islam
    Oct   4   The Blackhoods of Antifa
        26   Racists ’R’ Us
    Nov   25   Surrender, Genocide… or What? — An Update
2009   Feb   16   Pick a Tribe, Any Tribe
    Apr   11   Pick A Tribe, Any Tribe — Part II
    May   18   To Push or to Squeeze?
    Nov   2   On the Failure of Law Enforcement — Part 1
    Dec   5   On the Failure of Law Enforcement — Part 2
        7   On the Failure of Law Enforcement — Part 3
2010   Mar   25   The Death of Democracy
        25   Some Fallacies On the Subject of Crime — Part 1
        28   Reflections on the Civil War in Britain
    Apr   1   A Consideration of the Criminal Investigation Process — Part One
        2   A Consideration of the Criminal Investigation Process — Part Two
        5   On Vigilantism — Part One
    Oct   29   Muslim Crime in the UK: Part 1
    Nov   1   Muslim Crime in the UK: Part 2
        4   Muslim Crime in the UK: Part 3
        2   Muslim Crime in the UK: Part 4
2011   Mar   10   Muslim Immigration into the UK: Part One
        11   Muslim Immigration into the UK: Part Two
        12   Muslim Immigration into the UK: Part Three
        13   Muslim Immigration into the UK: Part Four
    May   25   Our Muslim Troubles: Lessons from Northern Ireland — Part One: The Idiot Paradigm
        26   Our Muslim Troubles: Lessons from Northern Ireland — Part Two: The Chocolate Cake Diet
        27   Our Muslim Troubles: Lessons from Northern Ireland — Part Three: An Explosive Situation
        29   Our Muslim Troubles: Lessons from Northern Ireland — Part Four: The Military and the Paramilitaries
        30   Our Muslim Troubles: Lessons from Northern Ireland (complete, pdf format)

A Response to the CEOP Report: Third Group of Videos

This is the third batch of videos by El Inglés analyzing the “grooming and pimping” report issued last summer by the Child Exploitation and Online Protection Centre (CEOP). Previously: Batch 1, Batch 2.

For a complete list of El Inglés’ previous essays, see the archive listing in the last post in this series.

Useful links:

The fourteen videos have been broken out into four separate posts so that no single page will be overloaded with embeds. Below are videos eight through eleven.


Part 8

Part 9



Parts 10 and 11 are below the jump:


Part 10

Part 11



Final post: Parts 12 through 14

A Response to the CEOP Report: Second Group of Videos

This is the second batch of videos by El Inglés analyzing the “grooming and pimping” report issued last summer by the Child Exploitation and Online Protection Centre (CEOP). The first batch of videos is here.

For a complete list of El Inglés’ previous essays, see the archive listing in the last post in this series.

Useful links:

The fourteen videos have been broken out into four separate posts so that no single page will be overloaded with embeds. Below are videos five through seven.


Part 5



Parts 6 and 7 are below the jump:


Part 6

Part 7



Next post: Parts 8 through 11.

A Response to the CEOP Report: First Group of Videos

Regular readers are familiar with the writings of El Inglés, who has contributed numerous articles in the past to Gates of Vienna. For a complete list of his previous essays, see the archive listing in the last post in this series.

El Inglés has now branched out into the medium of video. The occasion of his effort was the publication last year of a report by the Child Exploitation and Online Protection Centre (CEOP) on the epidemic of “grooming and pimping” cases in major British cities.

The analysis here is timely, given the ongoing trial in Liverpool Crown Court of eleven alleged Pakistani groomers, and the events in Heywood a few nights ago.

CEOP has obviously failed to execute its mandate with competence and due diligence. In the following videos El Inglés explains in some detail just exactly how it has failed, and what the likely consequences of its failure will be. Employing his customary meticulousness and attention to statistical detail, he pulls no punches in his examination of the failure of the social contract in the UK.

He says that he will write more on the same topic in this space at a later date, when he has time.

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From the mission statement of CEOP:

The Child Exploitation and Online Protection (CEOP) Centre is dedicated to eradicating the sexual abuse of children. That means we are part of UK policing and very much about tracking and bringing offenders to account either directly or in partnership with local and international forces.

But our approach is truly holistic…

That last sentence does not inspire much confidence in CEOP. A cynical reader might consider “holistic” to be synonymous with “lacking in methodological rigor, suffused with trendy jargon, and extremely politically correct.”

In any case, the CEOP approach has failed.

Its report, “Don’t Leave Victims Out of Mind, Out of Sight”, was released last summer. The press release announcing it is here.

Other useful links:

The fourteen videos are broken out into four separate posts so that no single page will be overloaded with embeds. Below are the first four in the series.


Part 1

Part 2



Parts 3 and 4 are below the jump:


Part 3

Part 4



Next post: Parts 5 through 7.

Gates of Vienna News Feed 2/26/2012

Gates of Vienna News Feed 2/26/2012The creator of a well-known British cartoon character made a little mistake when he went through security before boarding a flight at Gatwick Airport. As a response to seeing a fully-veiled Muslima being passed through screening without showing her face, he joked to a nearby security officer, “If I was wearing this scarf over my face, I wonder what would happen.”

Well, you can imagine what happened next. He was confronted by officials and the police were called and he was detained for an hour for questioning, thoroughly ruining his trip.

In other news, the European Central Bank is printing money easing liquidity again in response to the continuing sluggishness of the economy and in anticipation of a credit crunch.

To see the headlines and the articles, open the full news post.

Thanks to DT-N, Fjordman, HD, Insubria, JP, Kitman, McR, Nick, Nilk, Takuan Seiyo, The Observer, TV, and all the other tipsters who sent these in.

Notice to tipsters: Please don’t submit extensive excerpts from articles that have been posted behind a subscription firewall, or are otherwise under copyright protection.

Commenters are advised to leave their comments at this post (rather than with the news articles) so that they are more easily accessible.

Caveat: Articles in the news feed are posted “as is”. Gates of Vienna cannot vouch for the authenticity or accuracy of the contents of any individual item posted here. We check each entry to make sure it is relatively interesting, not patently offensive, and at least superficially plausible. The link to the original is included with each item’s title. Further research and verification are left to the reader.

Are They Right? Is it Time to Leave?

Time to go!For the last few years — beginning under the Bush administration, but continuing under Commander-in-Chief Barack Hussein Obama — the American military has been increasingly solicitous of and obsequious towards its Afghan “allies” and their thin-skinned Muslim sensibilities. Soldiers are advised in great detail on how to respect Islam. They have been prohibited from taking a leak in the direction of Mecca. They are trained to revere the Koran as if it were their very own holy book.

The recent Koran-burning incident at Bagram shows just how successful this doctrine has been. The name “Hussein” afforded our president no protection: he is being hanged and burned in effigy on the streets of Kabul and Kandahar. Afghan mobs are still rioting and shooting and burning things all over the country.

As reported in last night’s news feed, two American military advisers, a lieutenant-colonel and a major, were shot in the back of the head yesterday by an Afghan. This wasn’t some random attack on the street: the murders were committed in a heavily guarded area of a secure facility in the interior ministry building in Kabul, and the suspected gunman is a police intelligence officer:

AN AFGHAN police intelligence officer is reportedly being sought over the weekend killings of two senior US NATO officers at the Interior Ministry in Kabul amid fears violent protests over the burning of the Koran at a NATO military base would continue.

Abdul Saboor, 25, was the main suspect and had fled the ministry following Saturday’s attack, counter-terrorism officials told the BBC last night.

Saboor had served in several Afghan ministries and had worked at the Interior Ministry for some time, officials said.

He was reportedly responsible for security arrangements and had access to secure radio communication channels used by the ministries.

So how’s that COIN doctrine doing, fellows? Isn’t it about time to consider a different doctrine for Afghanistan?

Well, no.

A reader named HD sent us a tip about the latest analysis posted in The Stars and Stripes, the official news outlet of the U.S. military. As he says, “I can’t let this one pass… the propaganda arm of the DOD has released the biggest piece of dhimmi garbage I have yet read on the S&S site.”

The article glosses over the murder of the two soldiers, saying only that “two U.S. officers who were shot Saturday by an Afghan worker”. Worker. Not “police intelligence officer”. Nothing to see here. Move along.

The rest of the report is just as bad. Notice that the author is an American journalist, but “Zubair Babakarkhail contributed to this report”. “Babakarkhail” is an exclusively Afghan surname, and Afghanistan is a 100% Muslim nation — except for those vile infidel soldiers and aid workers, of course.

In other words: The Stars and Stripes subbed out the research on the article to a representative of the enemy. Mind you, the U.S. military doesn’t consider Afghan Muslims the enemy, but rather our good friends and allies. However, a significant proportion of Afghanistan’s Muslims consider us their enemy, and we would be better off if our military leaders could acknowledge that and remember it.

Not a chance, though. Here’s what the article says:

Quran Crisis Reveals Lack of Awareness

by Martin Kuz

KABUL — Afghans seethed for a sixth day over the burning of Qurans at a U.S. base, and as the violence persists and the death toll rises, an unanswered question pulses at the heart of the crisis.

How could this happen?

Now, anybody who reads this blog or other Counterjihad sites can tell them how this could happen: Afghanistan is a Muslim country ruled by sharia — we wrote it into their constitution, remember? — and sharia considers the presence of non-believers within Muslim-ruled territory to be an intolerable offense. The only way such infidels may be allowed to live under those circumstances is if they acknowledge the supremacy of Islam, act in the approved subservient fashion, and pay up.

Anytime they violate those rules — well, they might find themselves summarily shot in the back of the head.

But the S&S doesn’t examine the issue from that perspective. The article continues:

The question pertains less to the specific decisions that led soldiers at Bagram Air Field to burn copies of the Quran than to why they even considered doing so, given the book’s sacredness to Muslims.

Davood Moradian, a former adviser to Afghan President Hamid Karzai, offered a pointed explanation.

“It’s the incompetence of ISAF,” he said, referring to the International Security Assistance Force, the U.S.-led coalition battling the Taliban insurgency.

That’s it! It should be obvious: if only the American soldiers weren’t so incompetent, they wouldn’t get shot in the back of the head.

That’s quite true, of course, but not in the way the authors intended.

“They have been here for more than 10 years and they still fail to understand the sensitivities of Afghanistan,” said Moradian, an assistant professor of political science at The American University in Kabul. “For Afghans, [burning the Quran] is an unacceptable, unforgivable incompetence.”

Actually, NATO troops are well aware of this fact. It has been drummed into them, day in and day out, for ten years. But they slipped up, so they must pay, and pay dearly.

Their outrage remained evident Sunday. Seven U.S. military trainers were reported wounded when a protester threw a grenade into a coalition base during a demonstration in the northern province of Kunduz.

One protester was killed when troops fired on the crowd, and Afghan police killed a second demonstrator.

More than 30 people have been killed and hundreds injured across the country since reports emerged Tuesday that soldiers at Bagram Air Field burned several copies of the Muslim holy book.

The death toll includes two U.S. officers who were shot Saturday by an Afghan worker inside the Ministry of Interior building in Kabul. On Thursday, an Afghan soldier shot and killed two U.S. soldiers at a base in Nangarhar province.

Pay attention to this next part, because it is quite true:

As recently as the Persian Gulf War in 1991, U.S. infantry soldiers required little, if any, awareness of another nation’s religious customs. They invaded, they fought, they went home.

The prolonged U.S. presence in Afghanistan and the military’s mission to win the “hearts and minds” of Afghans have created expectations unknown to previous generations of soldiers.

Upon reading these words, a hypothetical reasonable person might reasonably ask, “Does this mean that the whole ‘winning hearts and minds’ policy was actually a mistake? Wouldn’t it be better to return to the old ways?”

But no. That is one question that may no longer be asked. We don’t fight wars, we build nations.

And an enemy is just a friend we haven’t yet flattered, cosseted, placated, and bribed sufficiently.

“There is a lack of cultural understanding with the U.S. soldiers that should have been addressed by now,” said Waliullah Rahmani, executive director of the Kabul Center for Strategic Studies, a nonpartisan think tank. “With their constant rotations — the new units coming in every year — knowledge does not get passed on.”

As a result, Rahmani added, “Most of the soldiers here don’t know the Afghans or that they are a mostly religious people whose interpretation of the world is a religious one. They don’t understand that the reaction to the Quran burning is a natural Afghan reaction that comes from religious motivations.”

This is nonsense. How could the soldiers possibly not know that?

It has been drummed into them virtually every day during their training. Every time their president opens his mouth on television he talks about it. It’s written up in all the manuals. They witness their officers bowing and scraping to Islam at every opportunity, issuing groveling apologies at the slightest perceived offense.

How could they not know?

Muslims revere the Quran as the literal word of God spoken through the angel Gabriel to the prophet Muhammad.

“For [Christians], the Bible is a book and treated as such,” said Martine van Bijlert, co-director of the Kabul-based Afghanistan Analysts Network. “For Muslims, destroying the Quran is worse than civilian casualties.”

Some Christians do revere the Bible. Maybe not in the same fashion as Muslims revere their own book. But it offends them deeply if someone burns it or defaces it or spits on it.

Yet taking to the streets and burning things and shooting people is not the customary Christian response to such incidents.

In contrast, that sort of behavior — and far worse reactions, such as stoning, beheading, impaling, and burning people alive — is de rigueur in all Muslim-majority countries at a mere rumor of an insult to Islam. It’s even prevalent in some countries that don’t have a Muslim majority, such as France and Britain.

So what will the NATO response be? You guessed it: more training.

Allen’s call for additional training suggests a realization that U.S. soldiers have yet to grasp the meaning of the Quran to Muslims.

“There has been a complete failure by ISAF to engage the clergy in Afghanistan,” said Moradian, of American University. “They have had years to work with the religious community here but there has been almost no progress.”

Fury over the burning of the holy texts has mushroomed despite Afghans acknowledging the soldiers might have acted out of ignorance rather than malice.

“Even if they did not mean it, what is the good of burning the Quran?” asked Ahmad Silam, 43, who runs a small shop in Kabul where he sells audio recordings of the Quran on CD and tape. He keeps his copy of the Quran, bound in black leather, on a corner shelf behind the front counter. “It is the word of God to us. It is wrong to destroy it.”

The last paragraph in the article is one with which I most heartily concur:

“We want to stop having such insults in our country because this is not the first or second time that [foreign troops] have disrespected us. It is time for them to leave.”

I can’t wait. From his mouth to Allah’s ears. Please.

Let’s Condemn Reports of Sharia

A regular reader in New York sends this interesting little piece of news from the White House Press Office:

Get a load of the first sentence of this White House statement:

“The United States condemns in the strongest possible terms reports that Iranian authorities’ reaffirmed a death sentence for Iranian Pastor Youcef Nadarkhani for the sole reason of his refusal to recant his Christian faith.”

I hope it is merely sloppy writing that makes this condemnation so Islamic: Neither the death sentence nor its reaffirmation is condemned. These actions are okay. What is condemned is the reporting.

Such news should not be publicized, says the unnamed Press Secretary.

A Gift Horse to Ride On


Hobby horse

Winter Fundraiser 2012, Day Seven



Here we are at the closing day for our first quarterly fund-raiser of 2012. If the trend in this one is indicative of the whole year, we will be okay. No, not just okay — we’ll be FINE! Both of us are by turns relieved, happy, and encouraged. Let them push up the electric rates by 40% in May [their five-year contract with a supplier runs out then and our electric co-op has been warning everyone]. I’m ready now, thanks to y’all.

Ever since the beginning of the end of our “rich” cycle, I had the sense that something would show up allowing us to continue Gates of Vienna. I presumed it would be another telecommute job, but that didn’t happen. No, I didn’t know what or when or who would permit us to continue, but there was — still is — a sense of being on the right path, even as it has been transformed from a “path” into a much larger thoroughfare. Meanwhile, I’m just as certain we’ll darn well know when this busy road begins to narrow and eventually trails off into the underbrush. Obviously it will be time to pick up another strand of our lives and do something else. But again, at this point, I haven’t any more idea what that would look like than I could have foreseen the transmogrification of Gates of Vienna. That still amazes me.

In this fundraiser, we’ve skirted around the edges of Frugal — it’s the new “in” thing, now that many are busted flat and finding the party’s moved on somewhere else. Surely there can be fewer things more bitter than paying for things one no longer wants or can afford to keep up. But so many people have turned it around and made a virtue out of not having; suddenly it’s less painful. Just as pinched, perhaps, but changing the frame changes the whole scene. I’ve seen a few people do that.

Sewing machine #2For us, having to buy something presents a problem. I mean, we’re not used to big purchases anymore. As one small example, I’ve been trying to find a reasonably priced bottom sheet for our bed because I have all these top sheets. The bottoms wear out because of the inordinate amount of time I spend there. And they don’t even mend well. However, the darn things only seem to come in sets — two sheets, two pillow cases — and those sets are waaay too much money. So I have all these flat sheets…and I’ve been thinking: people used to use flat sheets for top and bottom. So why not do the same thing? Simply go back to the ways they do it in hospitals. No contoured sheets there & Problem Solved.

A bigger example is trying to find a laptop of some sort that I could use while lying/sitting on the couch or bed. I’ve been thinking about this for a long time because my current laptop is too big and too heavy for that, though it’s a wonderfully serviceable computer. However, it doesn’t make a good bedmate.

A generous donor earmarked a large sum “for Dymphna”. Something to make my life easier, he said. Voilà! The money part of my equation was solved. But the nuts-and-bolts of an actual netbook, notebook — whatever — something light and easy to use, that’s been harder. Too many choices! I’ve been all over the map with this. Looking at ultra lights (oh my heavens) or, at the other extreme, penny-pinching ideas about buying a used model of, say, a netbook. Or notebook. Our friend, Wally Ballou, has been giving helpful advice. Like not spending it all on the computer but putting some into peripherals. Is that the word, “peripherals”? And avoiding the headaches of used electronics.

Tip jarI have become like Calvin when he found that catalogue full of cool stuff he didn’t know about but now can’t live without. I sympathize, Calvin. I mean, backlit keyboards! Who knew?? But WB says a little gooseneck attachable lamp works just as well. I have a feeling he’s right. My experience with “extras” is that they’re just something else that could break and I usually end up not using them.

In that vein, most of you are aware that we used part of our fundraising money in 2010 to buy a gas cooking range so that we’d have some other form of heat when the electricity failed. [In a wooded, rural area, the lines go down more frequently than they do elsewhere]. It was hard to find a gas cooker that didn’t use electricity to fire up the thing. Duh. But after some searching, we came across the bottom rung of the gas cooker options. And wonderfully for us, there were no added attractions and no electric anything. I don’t need another clock in the kitchen, or any of the doodads you find on modern stoves. As for the self-cleaning feature in our old electric range, I stopped using it when I found out how much it costs to get that sucker up to 800 degrees. And you still had to hand-wash the oven racks. Besides, if you didn’t pre-clean the oven, the burn-off was pretty intense. No, the only thing I miss is the glass door that lets you see how things are going inside the oven. But I don’t miss it enough to pay for it.

So that’s where I am now with this new computer purchase. After flying all over the place like a kid in a candy shop, I’m beginning to eliminate. All I want is to be able to write in bed or on the couch, with my legs not bent in this chair. Oh, and to read a few other blogs. Think of it as resting and writing. I’ve tried writing the first draft by hand and coming to the computer to finish, but something gets lost in the translation and the incomplete essays pile up in my document folder. It is painful not to be able to finish tasks, and demoralizing not to contribute more to Gates of Vienna.

I’ve found that you can’t eliminate some items, even if you know you’ll never ever use those gadgets. Like the webcams built into all of them — they removed the “no thank you” ability from that feature. However, I did find a way to eliminate Power Point (heh). And I can get varieties without DVD players. No way can I listen to music and write. No multi-tasking with ADD, thankyouverymuch. A recipe for chaos.

As we wind up the Bleg, I’ve discovered, through the process of doing it, that the whole Frugal thing is a subject to be returned to again in the future. People’s comments have given me food for thought. I’ll close with Laine again, since he touched on something I’ve pondered for years:

Socialists often assume that the world is a zero-sum game, that every good enjoyed by anyone is necessarily the result of someone else not enjoying it, and that therefore simply depriving one person of the enjoyment of a good necessarily benefits someone else who then will be able to enjoy it.

It was getting past this fallacy, the belief in scarcity rather than abundance that turned me toward conservative economic philosophy. Bastiat, Hazlitt, et al. I have the Baron to thank for that, and also Wally B. again. Both made me see that kamikaze progressive thinking — otherwise known as bleeding heart liberals’(would the Brits say “bloody socialists”?) ruination — was a serious mistake. Eventually going to work in Social Services, wrestling with the problems inherent in three-generation families on welfare was the final turn in my road to understanding why giveaways don’t work…

We’ll come back to this subject of Frugality sometime — from another direction, perhaps. I am grateful to the creative minds that saw through the scarcity tactics of statist thinking to the generativity of the free market. That recognition of abundance is indeed liberating.

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So, on this last day of our fundraiser, we had lots of people dropping by. The Baron keeps track of the places:

Stateside: California, Iowa, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Oklahoma, and Texas

Near Abroad: Canada

Far Abroad: Australia, Ireland, and the UK

Ireland! Me ancestral home!

I keep track of the thank you notes — and I wish I ‘d found a notebook in time to start them whilst lying on the couch. Soon, though…soon.



The tip jar in the text above is just for decoration. To donate, click the tin cup on our sidebar, or the donate button. If you prefer a monthly subscription, click the “subscribe” button.

Gates of Vienna News Feed 2/25/2012

Gates of Vienna News Feed 2/25/2012Two NATO officers were shot dead in the interior ministry building in Kabul, the capital of Afghanistan. The shooting is thought to be related to Afghan anger over the Koran-burning incident, and the two victims were Americans.

In other fallout from the Koran-burning incident in Afghanistan, an angry mob of Muslims desecrated Allied WWII graves in a military cemetery in Benghazi, Libya.

To see the headlines and the articles, open the full news post.

Thanks to BF, Fjordman, Insubria, JL, Nick, Paul Green, Steen, and all the other tipsters who sent these in.

Notice to tipsters: Please don’t submit extensive excerpts from articles that have been posted behind a subscription firewall, or are otherwise under copyright protection.

Commenters are advised to leave their comments at this post (rather than with the news articles) so that they are more easily accessible.

Caveat: Articles in the news feed are posted “as is”. Gates of Vienna cannot vouch for the authenticity or accuracy of the contents of any individual item posted here. We check each entry to make sure it is relatively interesting, not patently offensive, and at least superficially plausible. The link to the original is included with each item’s title. Further research and verification are left to the reader.

Is Justice Too Much to Ask For?

The video below is also from today’s EDL demonstration in Hyde, near Manchester. Tony Curtis has a few words to say, and then introduces a young local fellow named Jamie, who gives an impassioned speech on the damage that is being done to his community by violent Muslim gangs:

Building up to a Massive Summer for the EDL

The English Defence League staged a demonstration today in Hyde, an eastern suburb of Manchester in the North of England. They came to town to protest the severe beating earlier this month of two young white boys by a Muslim gang. (For background on this incident, see this brief account from Casuals United, and a longer article from The Daily Mail.)

Needless to say, recent events at Liverpool Crown Court and in Rochdale also loomed large in the topics of speeches at the event. Here’s what EDL leader Tommy Robinson had to say (WARNING: Tommy uses some salty language here and there in his speech):

Suffer the Little Children

We reported yesterday on the Canadian man who was arrested, strip-searched, handcuffed, and thrown into a cell for a while because his four-year-old daughter drew a picture of her father holding a gun.

Ezra Levant launched into a magnificent rant on the topic last night on his SUN TV program. He pointed out the vile tactic of using a small child to destroy her father’s authority and undermine the institution of the family. In this he found a similarity to the Soviet practice of encouraging children to snitch on their ideologically impure parents.

Many thanks to Vlad Tepes for uploading this video:



Vlad has his own take on the topic:

Does Canada have two laws, one for Muslims and one for the rest of us like England does?

[…]

Below, is a drawing done at a Muslim school by a young student that not only was a gun, but was incitement to genocide, to the destruction of an entire nation for Islam and not only were the police not called, but despite the national attention this received when a reporter saw it, no search of the family home was done, no arrest or strip search of the parents.

So there you have it. Canada also has two sets of laws. One for the docile, law abiding Canadian people where if your single digit aged daughter draws a gun-toon with crayons, you lose all your rights before the law, and I mean real rights, not fake ones like ‘not being offended’ but ones that protect you from a fascist state that can arrest you, search you and your property and humiliate you in any way they see fit without warrant at any time.

Making Every Penny Count


Jalopy

Winter Fundraiser 2012, Day Six



We began our quarterly fundraisers out of financial necessity about three years ago. It was a scary prospect, jumping into the void like that — how could we possibly raise enough cash through blogging to get by on? Yet there were no other easily available alternatives, since Dymphna’s medical condition requires that I remain close to home.

Rather than take on a new ad provider and fight for the traffic necessary to bring in the per-page-impression revenue, we polled our readers and followed their preference instead: we asked those who find our work worthwhile to contribute as the spirit moved them, and in return we would post no ads at our site. Since then, with our readers’ permission, we have added a modest Amazon book ad for one of our friends and allies. But that’s it.

The response from readers was — and still is — an inspiration. How is it that so many people are willing to contribute money to people they don’t know, just to help keep a website going? Yet they do — we have eked out a living so far, helped along by a bit of book editing on my part, and more recently some new programming gigs.

The process reminds me of a fantasy I entertained when I was teenager. I was looking ahead to adulthood, and the prospect of holding a regular job did not appeal to me. Humdrum, boring, tedious — who wants to work for a living?

Tip jarSuppose I could offer some product or service that every American wanted, and would be willing to pay a penny for. Why, I’d be a millionaire! If it was something really desirable, people might be willing to pay a dime apiece, and then I’d be fabulously rich.

All I had to do was think of something that everyone wanted, arrange to produce it, and then collect a penny or a nickel or a dime for it. What could be simpler?

Try as I might, however, I couldn’t come up with any ideas, and instead I had to enter the humdrum workaday world like everyone else. Until, that is, I decided to give up most of my income and become an artist instead…

There’s no doubt that some people manage to accomplish something similar to what my teenage self dreamed of. Take Martha Stewart, for example. She thought of something — a lot of somethings — that millions of Americans wanted, promoted her products shrewdly, and made a fortune.

Let’s hear it for self-promotion, branding, and careful marketing! Not something I can do, unfortunately, but a skill to be admired in others.

Strangely enough, though, something similar has worked itself out here at Gates of Vienna. Nothing to make anybody rich, but enough to pay the bills and keep the internet connection going, and even send me to Europe occasionally to consult with friends and allies in the Counterjihad.

A widow’s mite from one person, a modest amount from another, a subscription from a third — the pennies are there, and they add up. Every penny counts.

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As you have probably gathered from the increased frequency and length of my posts over the last week or so, my programming contract is now winding down. The future may open up other opportunities, but for the time being we are tap-tapping on the tip jar again.

Many thanks to everyone who has helped keep the old jalopy going. Your generosity flowed in yesterday from the following places:

Stateside: Illinois, Kentucky, Minnesota, Texas, and Virginia

Near Abroad: Canada

Far Abroad: Australia, Israel, Luxembourg, Slovenia, and the UK

I think that may be the first ever donation from Slovenia. What new locales will pop up tomorrow?



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Gates of Vienna News Feed 2/24/2012

Gates of Vienna News Feed 2/24/2012The European Commission says it expects the Dutch economy to shrink by 0.9% this year. The EC also predicts that the current recession in the Eurozone will continue throughout 2012.

In other news, German soldiers were forced to abandon a military base in Afghanistan due to unrest in the wake of the Koran-burning incident. The Germans were planning on closing the base anyway, but they had to evacuate early as demonstrations continued in the area.

To see the headlines and the articles, open the full news post.

Thanks to DS, Fjordman, Gaia, HB, Insubria, JP, KGS, Kitman, LAW Wells, McR, Nick, Paul Green, Srdja Trifkovic, Steen, The Observer, and all the other tipsters who sent these in.

Notice to tipsters: Please don’t submit extensive excerpts from articles that have been posted behind a subscription firewall, or are otherwise under copyright protection.

Commenters are advised to leave their comments at this post (rather than with the news articles) so that they are more easily accessible.

Caveat: Articles in the news feed are posted “as is”. Gates of Vienna cannot vouch for the authenticity or accuracy of the contents of any individual item posted here. We check each entry to make sure it is relatively interesting, not patently offensive, and at least superficially plausible. The link to the original is included with each item’s title. Further research and verification are left to the reader.