There are elements of West fights Back in this post: Links 1, January 30, 2020

1. Britain First visits main mosque in area infested with Muslim-sex-slave gangs and asks for help it uncovering them.

2. Question: why did Trudeau give fifty million dollars to Mastercard, a multi Billion dollar concern?

Forget the corporate welfare for Canadian Tire’s electric car chargers or the $12 million Justin Trudeau gave Loblaws to help them buy fridges.

 

We’ve got a new champion for companies pigging out at the taxpayer trough: MasterCard.

That’s right, the Trudeau government is actually giving a handout to a major financial company that makes billions each year.

 

In a little-noticed government news release last week, Industry Minister Navdeep Bains announced a gift of $50 million to MasterCard to help them set up shop in Vancouver.

 

Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer had the best line as opposition parties pressed the government on the handout, he played off of MasterCard’s classic “Priceless” ad campaign.

Answer? 2017: George Soros, Mastercard to partner to aid migrants, refugees

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Billionaire investor George Soros will partner with Mastercard Inc on a venture they said could help migrants, refugees and others struggling within their communities worldwide to improve their economic and social status.

 

The partnership, Humanity Ventures, stems from a pledge Soros made in September to earmark up to $500 million for investments to address challenges facing migrants and refugees.

 

In a joint statement on Thursday, Mastercard and Soros said that despite billions of dollars of humanitarian and development assistance, millions of people remain marginalized, a situation the private sector can help rectify.

“Migrants are often forced into lives of despair in their host communities because they cannot gain access to financial, healthcare and government services,” Soros said.

 

“Our potential investment in this social enterprise, coupled with Mastercard’s ability to create products that serve vulnerable communities, can show how private capital can play a constructive role in solving social problems,” he added.

3. Child care worker in Manchester discusses the plague of muslim sex-slave gang operations

4. His example of selective enforcement is likely exactly correct

5. Criminal proceedings under way in Hungary against 5 migrants detained

Criminal proceedings have been launched against five migrants detained after illegally crossing the Serbia-Hungary border early on Tuesday, a spokeswoman for Csongrád County police said on Wednesday. The suspects entered the country when some 60 migrants made an attempt to break through the southern border fence at Röszke, at 5.20am and 5.30am on Tuesday. The police said on their website that […]

(This is a follow up to this video of the invasion and push back which took place from two borders into Hungary from both Romania and Serbia)

6. Canada: RCMP top brass reaffirms right to own firearms in new report

A recent report by RCMP Commissioner of Firearms Brenda Lucki supports Canadians’ legal right to own firearms.

“Under the existing regime, individuals must apply to the CFO [Chief Firearms Officer] in their province or territory of residence in order to be issued a licence,” reads the RCMP report.   

 

“All applicants are screened to ensure that there are no reasons why, in the interest of public safety, they should not possess a firearm.” 

The report puts a dent in plans by the Liberal government to confiscate firearms from law-abiding citizens and tighten gun control laws. 

 

The Trudeau government has indicated that they will be moving forward with their plans to ban “assault weapons” and allow municipalities to legislate handgun bans. 

According to Public Safety Minister Bill Blair, the government is prepared to bypass debate on the issue in the House of Commons by using an order-in-council to force their ban into law. 

7. Cameroon: Five Killed in Terror Attack by Boko Haram

Boko Haram militants carried out overnight attack in north Cameron killing five people. The militants were hunting for soldiers in a village near Lake Chad.

“Five civilians were killed by Boko Haram in Blaram,” a village in the Blangoua district of Cameroon’s Far North region, a local official said.

Two soldiers were also injured in the assault and a military base set on fire, the officer said, AFP reported.

“Boko Haram fighters attacked the post around 1 am. Fighting erupted between them and the soldiers, but the troops made a strategic retreat because they were outnumbered,” a Blangoua district official said.

The civilians were killed in their homes by attackers searching for soldiers, the official said.

The village of Blaram is located on dry land near Lake Chad.

Based in neighbouring Nigeria, Boko Haram has stepped up attacks from bases hidden in the Lake Chad area, where the borders of Cameroon, Chad, Niger and Nigeria converge.

8. Greece Plans Floating Fence to Stop Migrants

The government in Greece wants to use a floating barrier to help stop migrants from reaching the Greek islands from the nearby coast of Turkey.

The Defense Ministry has invited private contractors to bid on supplying a 2.7-kilometer-long (1.7 miles) floating fence within three months, according to information available on a government procurement website Wednesday. No details were given on when the barrier might be installed.

A resurgence in the number of migrants and refugees arriving by sea to Lesbos and other eastern Greek islands has caused severe overcrowding at refugee camps.

The netted barrier would rise 50 centimeters (20 inches) above water and be designed to hold flashing lights, the submission said. The Defense Ministry estimates the project will cost 500,000 euros ($550,000), which includes four years of maintenance.

9. Ezra discusses the Trudeau Government actions against The Rebel with the lawyer who beat the government last time they pulled this authoritarian crap.

 

Thank you C., M., ML., Richard, Wrath of Khan, EB., Xanthippa, Johnny U., Yucki and all who sent in materials this week. 

Andrew Bostom goes on Sam Sorbo’s renewed Radio program to discuss his book. In this interview he touches on the new Trump deal for the Middle East.

 

About Eeyore

Canadian artist and counter-jihad and freedom of speech activist as well as devout Schrödinger's catholic

4 Replies to “There are elements of West fights Back in this post: Links 1, January 30, 2020”

  1. 2- Reuters is not reporting fairly. Hungary never said all civil society NGOs should be “swept out”. The government said all NGOs had to report their income, including their income from outside the country. It seems this is a standard accounting requirement in western countries, but when Hungary requires the same it is called undemocratic.

    Old George Soros must get terribly homesick for Hungary, sometimes, because going by this Reuters article it still holds a special place in his heart. Maybe he misses those days when he got to drive around town with Nazi officers rooting out Jews. –Best time of his life, he told 60 Minutes of those days some years back.

    Clearly, something in Nazism resonated then, and now, with Soros. Big government coupling with big business in a corrupt and potent weapon against the citizenry proved itself to him. Now he’s tutoring Dear Leader on the finer points of fascism. Moving third-world-grade human capital to destroy western civilisation takes alot of work and money from his Open Society NGOs. By coupling Mastercard with Dystopian taxpayer money (priming with a few Open Society bucks) he makes a perpetual-motion machine that runs by itself. Cute.

    “There,” said Herr Schwartz as he took his final breath, “i must go now.”

  2. Of everything listed, number 2 is the most important in my opinion. This is using taxpayers without their consent to benefit one, and only one, financial credit institution.

    A few years ago, MasterCard was disliked by most merchants for the only reason the company took time to repay the merchants, often months. And MasterCard was shunned while VISA took over. Now, we are seeing a rebound of MasterCard.

    Is MasterCard still holding up merchants’ money? ALSO know as taxpayer money. Because the longer it takes for MasterCard to repay the merchant – in this case the taxpayer – the more they make money through investments and whatever.

    This story is deeply troubling.

  3. 8 A 50cm high fence? That’s a joke, right?

    Maybe it’ll stop rubber boats (doubtfull though), but nothing else. And if it can damage boats (spikes, wire that can choke out a propellor) then it may be illegal too.