Author Topic: Austrian voters support party that wants to bring back Nazi symbols  (Read 1101 times)

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Religious Dick

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September 26, 2008
Austrian voters support party that wants to bring back Nazi symbols
Heinz-Christian Strache,left of the Austrian right-wing Austrian Freedom Party and Filip Dewinter of Belgian right wing party Vlaams Belang, take part in a manifestation to present the organisation of 'Cities against Islamisation' in Antwerp, Thursday 17 January 2008.They carry traffic-style signs depicting mosques with a red line running through.

Bojan Pancevski

He has been denounced as a xenophobe and an extreme nationalist. He has been pictured wearing a military uniform at an alleged far-Right gathering. But when Heinz-Christian Strache appears at an election rally in Austria, thousands of enthusiastic supporters, from teenagers to pensioners, give him a roaring welcome. ?We are the owners of Austria and we will determine who gets in,? Mr Strache, head of the far-right Freedom Party, told a cheering crowd that was chanting his name.

The police film his public appearances because supporters of Mr Strache have, in the past, made the Hitler salute or displayed Nazi insignia, which is illegal in Austria - under a law that Mr Strache is seeking to ban.

The reputation of Austria, which has been tarnished by child abuse scandals, is on the brink of another setback as a new breed of politicians, led by Mr Strache, gain momentum and are expected to capture almost a third of the vote on an anti-foreigner ticket at elections on Sunday.

The growth of extremist tendencies in Austria have caused concern. In 1999 the country incurred sanctions from other members of the EU after a far-right party led by J?rg Haider formed a government coalition. Eight years on, and two years after the controversial coalition was ousted at the last elections, extremist sentiment is still prominent among a large proportion of the population. This time Mr Haider's former prot?g?, Mr Strache, is expected to capture about 20 per cent of the vote, and his new party, Alliance for the Future of Austria, could win more than 8 per cent.

Mr Strache, 39, who overthrew Mr Haider as a leader of the Freedom Party with even more hardline policies against foreigners and the EU, is likely to establish himself as the third-largest political force in the country.

The former dental technician has campaigned successfully with slogans such as ?Homeland instead of Islam? and ?Vienna must not become Istanbul?.

He once wrote: ?We must not allow our own sons to be insulted as ?pigeaters' in our schools and our daughters to be exposed to the greedy stares and gropings of whole hordes of immigrants.?

The controversial campaign has reshaped the agendas of the mainstream parties, the Social Democrats and the conservative People's Party, which have refocused their campaigns on immigration issues and criticism of the EU. The move was an attempt to prevent haemorrhaging votes to Mr Strache after pollsters predicted that their share of the vote could drop to a record low of below 30 per cent each.

The popularity of Mr Strache was not damaged despite photographs being published of him in his youth wearing military uniform at an alleged far-right gathering and also showing Mr Strache raising his hand and stretching three fingers in an apparent covert version of the Hitler salute, used widely in the neo-Nazi scene. Mr Strache said that he was merely signalling for three beers in a pub.

The Jewish and Islamic community have protested against the extreme agendas of the far-right politicians.

Behind the swing towards the far-right is growing dissatisfaction with EU policies and the perceived rise in immigration after the EU expanded eastwards. The country has, however, low unemployment and crime rates and the economy is booming as Austrian companies establish market domination in Eastern European countries.

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/europe/article4828326.ece
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Michael Tee

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Re: Austrian voters support party that wants to bring back Nazi symbols
« Reply #1 on: September 28, 2008, 11:47:16 PM »
Gee, this is a tragedy for an anti-Nazi country like Austria.  I can't understand how a country with such a staunch history of anti-Nazi resistance could give a third of its vote to Neo-Nazis.  Where are the families of all the old Resistance fighters?

Knutey

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Re: Austrian voters support party that wants to bring back Nazi symbols
« Reply #2 on: September 29, 2008, 12:09:01 AM »
Gee, this is a tragedy for an anti-Nazi country like Austria.  I can't understand how a country with such a staunch history of anti-Nazi resistance could give a third of its vote to Neo-Nazis.  Where are the families of all the old Resistance fighters?

Those free thinking Austrians are everywhere- Look out Amerika!

I read a travel book that said Austria would be beautiful without all those fucken Austrians. Gotta look up the title for when I am asked for a source.

Amianthus

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Re: Austrian voters support party that wants to bring back Nazi symbols
« Reply #3 on: September 29, 2008, 09:35:03 AM »
Gee, this is a tragedy for an anti-Nazi country like Austria.  I can't understand how a country with such a staunch history of anti-Nazi resistance could give a third of its vote to Neo-Nazis.  Where are the families of all the old Resistance fighters?

A bit behind the times, aren't you? Strache's party got 18% of the vote. Compared to the far right party in Canada, which got a majority of the vote last time, no?
Do not anticipate trouble, or worry about what may never happen. Keep in the sunlight. (Benjamin Franklin)

Michael Tee

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Re: Austrian voters support party that wants to bring back Nazi symbols
« Reply #4 on: September 29, 2008, 09:42:33 AM »
<<Compared to the far right party in Canada, which got a majority of the vote last time, no?>>

If you're referring to the Reform Party, I don't know what percentage of the vote it got here, but it's in a coalition government with another party, so it couldn't have gotten a majority of the Parliamentary seats.  In any event they don't wear Nazi uniforms and give thinly-disguised Hitler salutes and they don't have anti-immigrant logos or slogans.

Plane

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Re: Austrian voters support party that wants to bring back Nazi symbols
« Reply #5 on: September 30, 2008, 06:02:00 AM »
All of Europe is nuts in one way or another.

I never went to Austria but I saw a lot of them on the beach at Torrmelinos on the Mediterainian coast of Spain , in the altogether I saw a lot of them indeed.


Really, if they were not strange they would not be foreign.


This is the complete explanation of them finding us strange too.


Religious Dick

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Re: Austrian voters support party that wants to bring back Nazi symbols
« Reply #6 on: September 30, 2008, 07:07:54 AM »
All of Europe is nuts in one way or another.

I never went to Austria but I saw a lot of them on the beach at Torrmelinos on the Mediterainian coast of Spain , in the altogether I saw a lot of them indeed.


Really, if they were not strange they would not be foreign.


This is the complete explanation of them finding us strange too.



I don't think there's anything nuts about the Austrians. I think you'll be seeing a lot more of these kinds of parties in other western nations eventually, including this one.

What you're seeing is the natural result of the interests of the government and governing elites becoming divorced from the interests of the people. When legitimate political interests refuse to address the concerns of the citizenry, illegitimate interests will fill the vacuum. Watch for more of these kinds of parties to rise. Coming soon to a nation near you.
I speak of civil, social man under law, and no other.
-Sir Edmund Burke

Xavier_Onassis

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Re: Austrian voters support party that wants to bring back Nazi symbols
« Reply #7 on: September 30, 2008, 10:29:30 AM »
All of Europe is nuts in one way or another.


Really, if they were not strange they would not be foreign.


This is the complete explanation of them finding us strange too.
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
I bet all Asians, South Americans, Mexicans and Central Americans, Africans, and Australians seem nuts to you as well.
When everyone seems to be crazy to you, I imagine you can guess what the diagnosis is.

I really don't see that we will have any neo-Nazi parties of consequence here. Jesse Ventura and Ron Paul are pretty much as weird a politician as we are likely to elect.
"Time flies like an arrow; fruit flies like a banana."

Plane

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Re: Austrian voters support party that wants to bring back Nazi symbols
« Reply #8 on: September 30, 2008, 04:08:12 PM »
All of Europe is nuts in one way or another.


Really, if they were not strange they would not be foreign.


This is the complete explanation of them finding us strange too.
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
I bet all Asians, South Americans, Mexicans and Central Americans, Africans, and Australians seem nuts to you as well.
When everyone seems to be crazy to you, I imagine you can guess what the diagnosis is.

I really don't see that we will have any neo-Nazi parties of consequence here. Jesse Ventura and Ron Paul are pretty much as weird a politician as we are likely to elect.

Oh yes !
Africans are really very complex and inscrutable , but they were mostly freindly , which to me counts most.