Gates of Vienna News Feed 3/16/2020

In an effort to stop the Wuhan Coronavirus, Maryland has joined Illinois and Ohio in ordering all bars and restaurants to close. Meanwhile, Poland’s environment minister has tested positive for the disease. Also, Virgin Atlantic is grounding more than 80% of its fleet and asking employees to take eight weeks of unpaid leave.

In other news, the European Commissioner for Home Affairs told Greece that it must allow all migrants from Turkey to apply for asylum.

To see the headlines and the articles, click “Continue reading” below.

Thanks to JD, Reader from Chicago, SS, Upananda Brahmachari, 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.

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. I 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.

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Multicult: Love It Or Leave It

Tunahan Kuzu is a “Dutch” politician and a co-founder of Denk (a Turkish-interests party) in the Netherlands.

The following video of Mr. Kuzu was recorded in 2018, but there’s no indication that his views have changed since then.

Many thanks to FouseSquawk for the translation, and to Vlad Tepes for the subtitling:

Video transcript:

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Love in the Time of Coronavirus, Round 4

I had to go to the dentist this afternoon in Charlottesville to get a tooth filled. I half-expected the office to call me this morning and reschedule until after the plague crisis, but they didn’t, so I went ahead and kept the appointment.

The dentist’s office took elaborate precautions against the Wuhan Coronavirus. When I arrived they questioned me about whether I was showing any symptoms, and then took my temperature (which was normal). While that was going on, staff members were swabbing down EVERYTHING in the waiting room.

The receptionist had me wait in my car until I was called. And I had to do a special antiseptic mouthwash before I got my tooth filled.

I told the dentist that he should maintain social distance. We had a nice chat about the possibility of using remote-control waldoes for dentistry. Apparently such things already exist: tiny mechanical “hands” that can work far back in the throat, controlled by some kind of joystick device.

The dentist’s assistant told me that Charlottesville had reported its first confirmed coronavirus infection, and that there was one in Harrisonburg, too.

Apparently I was one of the few patients who hadn’t called in and cancelled. They said they’re closing on Thursday because everybody has cancelled. As for next week, they’re waiting to hear what the CDC says.

Just for the heck of it I went to Walmart afterwards. They were out of a lot of stuff, so it’s a good thing I wasn’t there for food or toilet paper. But I noticed they had bread and milk, which surprised me. And plenty of bananas this time! So I bought a few.

Traffic was noticeably light. I was there at what should have been rush hour, but there really wasn’t any. The road home was almost empty.

When I got home, I saw a report that San Francisco has ordered all residents to stay at home 24/7 until April 7. The only exceptions are to go to a medical appointment or a grocery store. Where there will be no toilet paper, of course.

An Open Letter to Cindy Sheehan

This week’s edition of Dymphna’s Greatest Hits takes us back to a topic that after fifteen years has already faded into the mists of history. Cindy Sheehan had her fifteen minutes of fame, and then she moved on to… Well, to whatever people do when their fifteen minutes is up.

For those of you who are too young to remember, or weren’t paying attention at the time: Cindy Sheehan’s son Casey was killed in the Iraq War in 2004. In the summer of 2005 she made headlines as antiwar activist cum grieving mother who held a vigil outside George W. Bush’s ranch in Texas to protest the Iraq war. Later she took part in other “peace” actions, and was associated with Code Pink in some fashion.

Dymphna’s take on Cindy Sheehan was quite different from what was going around in the rest of the right-wing blogosphere in 2005. Since she had lost her own child just two years before, Dymphna had some insight into what another grieving mother might be feeling, and addressed her in that spirit.

It’s now been nine months since Dymphna died. Last summer was a time of horror and devastation for me, against which my psyche has protected me by making me unable to remember a lot of it. I just have flashes, snapshots, brief vignettes from those first awful weeks — enough to recall the utter misery of it. And it’s still here with me, but nowhere near as intense.

However… After living with Dymphna through the time of Shelagh’s death, I can tell you that the death of a child is far worse than the death of a spouse. Dymphna never really came back to her old self afterwards. I encouraged her to start this blog as a way to bring herself out of the worst of it, to mitigate her bottomless sorrow by doing something useful and important that drew on her gifts as a writer.

And here I am, fifteen years later, circling back to revisit that difficult time. Re-reading her essay brought it all back for me.

An Open Letter to Cindy Sheehan

by Dymphna
Originally published August 20, 2005

I had to look up your name since I have avoided your story as much as possible. Not out of a lack of compassion for your sorrow, but rather because of my own fragility and the sorrow I carry for my own dead daughter.

Here’s what I know about your story — and when you think about it, to have learned this much despite not having a TV and making an effort to avoid learning about your odyssey, it’s amazing I know as much as I do.

Your son Casey was a soldier and he died in Iraq. At first, you were able to maintain in the face of this catastrophic loss. I believe you even met with the President at one point? See — even I, with no access to regular media and a real wish to avoid your story, even I know these things. Or maybe what I “know” is some garbled version of what has been going on for you in your public grief.

This is a guess — an educated guess from one mother of a dead child to another — but I think things began to unravel as time went on and the reality of Casey’s complete and total and lifelong and irrevocable absence hit your consciousness like a fist sinks into a gut. And the bunched knuckles kept coming back to deliver blow after unending blow.

One picture I happened upon in the grocery store showed you on your knees. I presume it was taken in Crawford since someone who didn’t know me well wanted to discuss your story and said you’d gone to President Bush’s ranch. I remember turning away from your face as you knelt there. Yours was a sorrowful visage, a broken face like the reflection from a fractured mirror. My heart twisted for you even though I barely glanced at the picture.

Your grief has served to polarize others. Some say you’re being used, some dismiss you as “crazy” — and tell me, what mother of a dead child isn’t crazy? You’ve been cheated of your son; you walk through the valley of the shadow of death and no one comes to greet you. There will never, ever again be a laughing bear hug from this son grown tall and handsome.

When a husband or wife dies, we call the surviving partner the widow or widower. Why do you think it is that there is no one word to describe our condition, Cindy? Mother-of-a-dead-child is the best we can do? The lack of a name gives you some inkling how much our culture avoids the knowledge of this sorrow. If we named it we’d have some power over it. But the condition you and I share is unnamed because since time immemorial parents have dreaded this loss. It is the worst. There is nothing else that can be done to us. A motherless child is a pitiful creature and carries a life-long emptiness he or she tries to fill with other grown-ups. A childless mother is a crazy person and nothing can fill the hole, not if she had a baby a year for the rest of her life.

Do you have other children? I have three. And when people ask me, pleasantly, “how many children do you have?” I look at them blankly. It is all I can do to not to run screaming from the room.

Here is where I liken my experience to what is happening to you: after Shelagh’s sudden death, after the Rescue Squad carried her off and I watched them disappear down the drive, after the Medical Examiner returned her body to us, there was lots to do. The first morning I awoke I heard her say distinctly, laughing, “Mom, welcome to the first day of the rest of your life without me.” I think she was trying to make it easier in her Shelagh way.

There was so much to do. Her children needed clothing for the funeral, there were burial arrangements to make, a minister to call, family visitation to be arranged, a burial service to be created. So many, many people to notify. Elderly grandparents and a large contingent of Irish relatives to talk to and arrange for flights. As the days passed, I thought to myself “I can do this. I can just keep having this whole thing to organize and plan and I’ll be okay. As long as I never have to bury her, I’ll be fine.” Yes, this is crazy thinking. Even then, I vaguely knew that.

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Gates of Vienna News Feed 3/15/2020

The governments of Illinois and Ohio have ordered all bars and restaurants to close in order to curtail the spread of the Wuhan Coronavirus. Also, New York has ordered all public schools to close until at least April 20. Meanwhile, Extinction Rebellion has cancelled a planned demonstration in London due to fears of the coronavirus.

In other news, during tonight’s Democrat debate, Joe Biden promised to choose a woman as his running mate.

To see the headlines and the articles, click “Continue reading” below.

Thanks to AF, Reader from Chicago, Red Mike, SS, 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.

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. I 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.

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A Member of the Bundestag Calls for a Law Guaranteeing Funding for Antifa

I’ve often said that violent Antifa groups in various European countries have at least the tacit support of the governments in those countries. Well, now it’s official, at least in Germany: the support is public and out there in the open. And not only that, we now know that the German government has actually been funding these Antifa groups for years. This fact was mentioned in passing on the floor of the Bundestag by a member of the Green Party who was calling for a new law to guarantee funding for the Antifas.

The following video is a report by a German vlogger whose channel is called “Home Team”. Many thanks to MissPiggy for the translation, and to Vlad Tepes for the subtitling:

Video transcript:

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Mullah Krekar Bids the Fjords Farewell

Mullah Krekar is a “Norwegian” holy man, kind of the pope of the tundra. Except a pope normally gets to wear better threads. He is a Kurd, and his original name was Najmeddine Faraj Ahmad. He moved from Iraq to Norway in 1991, and has been enriching the culture of Norway ever since. He even did a brief stint in a Norwegian prison. The Norwegian government has never been able to deport him, presumably because to do so would violate his human rights.

Last July the beloved Mullah of the Fjords was convicted in absentia in an Italian court for terrorism offenses. The Norwegian government agreed to extradite him, and now, at last, after all these years Mr. Krekar will be leaving the fjords and taking up his new residence at the epicenter of the coronavirus outbreak in Europe.

Many thanks to FouseSquawk for translating this article from the Swedish daily Nyheter Idag:

Coronavirus can’t save the Islamist Krekar — Will be deported from Norway to Italy

Norway— The notorious Iraqi Islamist and suspected terrorist leader Mullah Krekar will be deported to Italy and brought before the court. That has been decided by the Norwegian government. In a final attempt to avoid Italian justice, Krekar wanted through his lawyer to stop deportation on the grounds of the coronavirus outbreak in Italy. The attempt failed.

Mullah Krekar was arrested in 2015 in Norway at the request of Italian police, as part of a coordinated effort against an Islamist terrorist network with connections to ISIS. Since then, in legal rounds, Italy has wanted to have Krekar extradited to bring him to trial.

Mullah Krekar had a deportation decision hanging over him, but appealed it. On Friday the final decision was handed down after years of appeals and lawsuits.

This is a final decision. A final extradition decision should, in principle, be carried out as soon as possible. This is the usual way Norwegian and Italian police ensure that extradition decisions are carried out, says Justice Minister Monica Maeland at a press conference.

Maeland noted that Norway will wait till the coronavirus situation in Italy is under control before the deportation of the Islamist Krekar is carried out.

Mullah Krekar’s defense attorney, Brynjar Meling, was disappointed. He had earlier argued that Krekar belongs to a group that would be especially hard hit by the coronavirus.

“This is a shameful day in Norway. A shameful day for the Norwegian security police, courts, Justice Department, and the government, and a confirmation there is no guarantee of justice in Norway,” Meling told NRK.

Earlier Meling had said that they will also appeal this decision to the European Court at Strasbourg.

For the previous exploits of the renowned interfaith leader, see the Mullah Krekar archives.

Love in the Time of Coronavirus, Round 3

Based on media reports, America is in a state of hysteria over the Wuhan Coronavirus. I haven’t experienced any of it personally, however, perhaps because this is the remote hinterland of the Virginia Piedmont, where the hysteria has yet to penetrate. Intuition tells me the amount of hysteria over the disease is directly proportional to the population of a city or town, and I live in a completely rural area, far from even a small town.

I went to a St. Patrick’s Day Party last night. Two of the ladies who hosted it are in their eighties, and it was attended mostly by geezers, with just a couple of younger fellows in the crowd. There was no hugging this time, and less hand-shaking than usual. I shook a couple of hands when offered; I’m not worried about such things. Perhaps I should be, but I’m not.

Any elbow-bumping at the party was done ironically or in jest. But I did see some “Namaste” gestures among the guests.

There was some discussion about the Great Plague, especially the cancellation of church services and Friday’s ukase from Governor Ralph “Coonman” Northam ordering the closure of public schools for two weeks. But there was plenty of normal talk, too — local politics and events, family news, the telling of jokes and old stories, etc. No sign of hysteria. The two women in their eighties — who have COPD — are aware that they’re in a high-risk group. But they don’t seem to be worrying about the coronavirus any more than I am.

After I had collected my plates and containers (I had brought finger food) and was saying my good-byes, I told them that I would let them know if I came down with the coronavirus. They said they would greatly appreciate that…

Germany Shuts the Stable Door

The situation in Germany vis-à-vis the Wuhan Coronavirus is evolving rapidly. MissPiggy has translated two articles with the latest news.

The first report is significant, because it wasn’t all that long ago that Chancellor Angela Merkel said that the borders of Germany would not be closed.

From the German-language version of RT:

Germany closes borders with Austria, France and Switzerland

Germany has decided to close its borders with Austria, France and Switzerland as of Monday, as reported by the Bild newspaper. This was decided at a telephone conference between Angela Merkel and the prime ministers of the southern states.

The federal government has decided to close Germany’s borders with Austria, France, and Switzerland starting Monday at eight o’clock. This was reported today by the newspaper Bild am Sonntag. The decision is said to have been made during a telephone conference between Chancellor Angela Merkel and Interior Minister Horst Seehofer and the Premiers of Baden-Wuerttemberg, Bavaria and Saarland.

Despite the closing of the border, the free movement of goods is to be maintained. Commuters should also be able to cross the border.

The drastic measure was not triggered solely by the attempt to prevent the corona pandemic from spreading further, but apparently also to limit hamster-like [i.e. hoarders] purchases by foreigners in regions close to the border, which are said to have already caused supply problems.

Now the federal police, together with the respective state police, are to implement these measures.

The second article from inSüdthüringen.de concerns an outbreak of the coronavirus at a “refugee” facility in Thuringia, and the difficulties it is causing for the local municipality:

Suhl — After the illness of a resident with Covid-19 and the quarantine imposed on Saturday night for all 533 residents of the country’s first reception facility (EAE) in Suhler-Friedberg, Thuringia, the migration minister, Dirk Adams (B90/Greens) and the president of the Thuringian State Administration Office, Frank Roßner visited the facility (outside the fence) on Saturday afternoon to assess the situation.

The site of the first reception facility has been guarded by a large police force since Saturday morning. According to Wolfgang Nicolai, head of the Suhl State Police Inspectorate, they were summoned from all over the state. “As expected, there were initial problems,” says Nicolai.

Several residents had to be prevented from leaving the facility — but without the use of physical force, which could also be used in an emergency under the Infection Protection Act. In the facility itself, the situation is tense.

Among other things, there is said to have already been a call for a hunger strike because of the “confinement” and several residents were prevented from going to the dining room. “At the moment the situation is calm, but we are prepared for the situation when this may not remain the case in the next few days and possibly weeks,” Nicolai said. The country has pledged its support to deal with the situation in the form of the deployment of supra-regional forces.

As residents of the EAE told our newspaper, they feel abandoned. The infected man is believed to be an Afghan who entered via Sweden and Hamburg and did not arrive at the EAE until Friday morning. During the day, his condition deteriorated sharply; he looked bad, coughed heavily and had a fever. In the evening the ambulance service arrived and examined him, a young man said.

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Gates of Vienna News Feed 3/14/2020

France and Israel have ordered shops, restaurants, and entertainment facilities to close in an effort to curtail the spread of the Wuhan Coronavirus. Meanwhile, Virginia Governor Ralph “Coonman” Northam announced the state’s first death from the disease. Also, the wife of the Spanish prime minister has tested positive for the coronavirus, but Donald Trump has tested negative, much to the chagrin of Democrats.

In other news, Greek authorities have deployed large fans at the border with Turkey to blow tear gas back on the mob of migrants attempting to breach the fence.

To see the headlines and the articles, click “Continue reading” below.

Thanks to Insubria, JD, Reader from Chicago, SS, Upananda Brahmachari, 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.

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. I 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.

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Jimmie Åkesson: We Must Make Sure It Isn’t 2015 All Over Again

Jimmie Åkesson is the leader of the Sweden Democrats (Sverigedemokraterna). As reported here a couple of days ago, he recently visited the Turkish side of the border between Greece and Turkey to hand out leaflets to migrants telling them that Sweden is full, and that they should not try to go there.

The video below is an audio-only interview with Mr. Åkesson. Many thanks to Kronans Martell (Ullis News) for the translation, and to Vlad Tepes for the subtitling:

Video transcript:

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A Few Bricks Shy of a Load

The following video features Alexander Gauland, the co-leader of the AfD (Alternative für Deutschland, Alternative for Germany). Mr. Gauland’s remarks were made in the Bundestag last year, but they’re still relevant (and amusing).

The German idiom “a few shingles loose” is roughly equivalent to “a few screws loose” in English.

Many thanks to MissPiggy for the translation, and to Vlad Tepes for the subtitling:

Video transcript:

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