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Month: July 2013

Former SMP leader links Immonen’s writing to Nazis

Posted on July 8, 2013 by Migrant Tales

The former chairman (1979-89) of the Rural Party (SMP), Pekka Vennamo, linked Perussuomalaiset (PS) MP Olli Immonen’s recent column to Nazis, according to tabloid Iltalehti. The far right PS MP wrote in his most recent blog entry about how nationalism should play a central role in Finnish politics.

Kuvankaappaus 2013-7-8 kello 10.11.02

Vennamo, who is the son of Veikko Vennamo, the late founder and legendary political figure of the SMP from which the PS emerged in the mid-1990s, doesn’t spare Immonen much sympathy. ”[Using the term] nationalism always brings Nazis first to mind,” he said.

Immonen, who is chairman of the extremist anti-immigration Suomen Sisu association that aims to keep Finland white, didn’t take the former SMP leader’s views lightly. “Pekka Vennamo is a turncoat and an old nut,” he said.

The former party chairman said that SMP was never against immigrants and even less against the EU. “We were warmly in favor of the country joining the EU and being in the euro,” he said.

Despite assurances by PS’ chairman Timo Soini that his party isn’t racist or that it harbors racists, its anti-immigration wing has found a permanent home in the PS.

Foreign Minister Erkki Tuomioja has called Soini’s relationship with the PS’ far right as a pack with the devil.

He writes: “The spirit that Soini opportunistically freed from the bottle by accepting extremist [candidates] of the Suomen Sisu [association] to run for office will soon permanently tarnish the ability of the party to cooperate with other ones and may even soon threaten Soini’s position as party leader.”

PS party secretary shoots herself in the leg on immigration and chauvinism

Posted on July 7, 2013 by Migrant Tales

It’s pretty clear from an interview that new party secretary of the Perussuomalaiset (PS), Riikka Slunga-Poutsalo, gave to newsmagazine Suomen Kuvalehti that she has shot herself so badly in the foot that she’ll never recover. Not only does her murky far right anti-immigration opinions follow her as a shadow, but affirmations like ”I’m a chauvinist” as well. 

Admitting that she is a chauvinist was not a slip of the tongue when she spoke to the media right after she was elected as the PS’ new party secretary. Apart from being strongly anti-immigration and chauvinist, she admits that there are no gray areas on how she see things. “Things are usually simple and I’m generally for or against [something],” she said. “One must have opinions in politics.”

On today’s Helsingin Sanomat, columnist Minna Lindgren writes about Slunga-Poutsalo: “Soini assumes that all of us are deep down inside [Finns are] chauvinists, racists and [see everything] black and white – the issue hinges on on being honest [with oneself].”

She concludes: “I have another picture of the Finn. He isn’t a power-hungry person who runs away from responsibility, not a black-and-white chauvinist or even a racist.”

Chauvinism in a Finnish context is this country’s brand of machoism. When you are a machoist, or chauvinist, you loathe anything that promotes cultural diversity. That is why Finnish machoists, men and women alike, see immigrants, blacks, gays, feminists, Muslims, left-wingers, environmentalists and others as a threat.

Kuvankaappaus 2013-7-7 kello 9.17.39

It’s no surprise that Slunga-Poutsalo will call few if any major shots in the PS since the anti-immigration and anti-EU party is effectively a one-man show run by its chairman and creator, Timo Soini.

The Suomen Kuvalehti journalist, Katri Merikallio, asks Slunga-Poutsalo if she’s in favor of Finland becoming a multicultural or culturally diverse society.

”If I have to decide, I’m against it,” she said telling us something we already knew.

Her response is typical of that of an anti-immigration party. There is strong opposition to immigration and cultural diversity but no workable solutions that take into account immigrants and other minorities.

Why? The answer is simple: There aren’t any. Holding back cultural diversity is like prohibiting people from being gay.

But don’t let her general opposition to cultural diversity fool you. If she had her way, she’d implement the far right Danish People’s Party (DPP) immigration policy to fuel xenophobia and near-halt migration from outside of the European Union.

As everyone knows, the DPP were successful for about 10 years in spearheading the most restrictive immigration policy in the EU.

Slunga-Poutsalo, like all of the anti-immigration extremists in the PS, are not only a direct threat to immigrants but to Finland.

Their political views are openly hostile to immigrants and minorities and should be openly challenged.

 

Migrant Tales Literary: Suomi tai Suola, Saltland or Finland (Part II)

Posted on July 7, 2013 by Migrant Tales

By Dana

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Before a storm everything looks great but it will come and it will break and destroy perfectly

Wind will clean all happiness

And trees will cry their best

When a sun can’t make you happy

And when a rain is a curse

When a child is singing  about death

And old men and women can’t rest in their nest

No/one wants them, they are alone

On the beds in hospitals, it is not rare

Oh look they are so sick and tired

Life doesn’t need them any more they are fired

They are crying, but with hidden tears

Death is flying around them with black birds

When children have two dads and moms

They just think about bread, butter and jam

When humans are greedy and cruel

Money is their only goal, they are real fools

When a president is rich and his friends even richer

He has no wisdom, believe me, he needs a teacher

When ministers have fake smiles on their faces

They are afraid of your thoughts, they close your case

When drunks scream in streets, and beer is their jest

Magazine gestures with meaningless pictures, no more no less

Why does the press publish some ugly nude words?

Nobody searches for the truth, where are real roads?

In that time judges can’t open their mouths

and courts cannot stand  for their  false rights

When a president dies like the poor

When a king and queen will fall in a hole

When a dog can see facts about their owners

When a cat will laugh at people in their corners

There won’t be any freedom for you

You will lose all in a moment that is the truth

When salt-land  makes a kingdom of darkness

Big clouds will shower it with blood and sharks

When you close your heart to beauty

You will lose and your life will be bad and dirty

When your life is sad and dirty, means you are a guilty

You deserve no kindness, not even pity

Big round Earth will shake and shake and shake

Moon will laugh at jerk, and berk and jerk

Sigh

There is a storm on the way and nothing can stop it

Nothing can give sweetness to salt

You have zero chances

NOLLA*

* zero

Migrant Tales Literary: Suomi tai Suola, Saltland or Finland (Part I)

Posted on July 6, 2013 by Migrant Tales

By Dana

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

YES, that’s it!

Risk-land and jail-land

What is the opposite of the Nobel Peace Prize? Is there a Nobel Ignoring Prize or such a prize in the world? I mean a Nobel that could be given to people who neglect others?

For sure Finland does not deserve the Nobel  Peace Prize and never will…  that’s very, very clear… i have never felt peace  in my life in Finland but it does deserve a Hate Prize because i’ve got so much hate constantly, right and left.

There is no human right in Finland… oh, okay, there are human rights organizations , well they claim to be but they all play the same music and melody…. La la la la  that’s not my job, la la la la call another place, la la la la i am sorry,…. And on and on and on.

So there is no reason to offer the Nobel Peace Prize to Suomi or Suola.*

Like in their  Parliament there r different groups and sides…A, B, C, kok, mock , pork,

D, E, F  fake, fake this is what u will take.

They are all one body in different shadows.

They all play the same music with the same piano and same notes

Do re mi fa so la si do

Oh do re mi fa suola doors

Dol si la so fa mi re do

Wolves are hungry, racists sing so

And who chose and chooses them?

For sure not the aliens, but Finns.

And what is the Finnish people’s idea about their government?

Wouldn’t it be better if Finland never accepted a united EU?

And it could build some ironic doors on the ground and sky around itself?

With a currency they could call the suola?

Or paras

The best

Hmmm

Is there a best in this world?

Truly what is best? What is better? What is good?

Who knows?

What do you think about this as a human being?

Do you enjoy to being a human?

Have you ever asked yourself who and what i am?

Some of us are not human, even if we looks human with a face and body.

What makes us human?

For sure it’s not the face and body but a deep matter in us. What is it?

Who knows? Again who knows? Who knows – hands up, no i never seen a hand up.

How many questions are you asking yourself every day?

And how many answers do WE get?

What is your most important question?

Have you ever judged yourself? What happened to you then?

Do you have dreams?

Do u remember them? Have you had the same dreams? What do they mean to u?

Yes, i’ve had the same dreams… in different shapes…. My mama was with me, in a shop and streets…everywhere…we were talking and feeling safe….suddenly i lost her. she parted so fast… i saw her, i could not go behind her, i lost her… that happens all the time in my dreams.

I’ve seen this dream many times in the last months, before mama started a new life…. and now

After she left this earth

Those dreams are gone

I don’t see them anymore

Finish

I could not get the message

It was meaning to convey

mama will go… sigh, oh Mama I  Love You So Much, just wish a touch, come and touch me, now i can’t talk anymore about my mama because i will cry. stop, stop.

But about Suola.

Can anything grow on salt? No wisdom ( that’s why there is no-one in Parliament that talks with wisdom; they are all in union, in union about the same thing, but they play different roles like a TV with different channel, but it is one TV with one system and one voltage and  program) can grow on salt, no morals, no ideas, no creativity, just bitterness.

Finland is a risky country. Come to Finland if you hate yourself and you want to punish yourself… If you have no hope come here too; if you are lazy and tired of running come here.

Before you come here go and buy yourself ironic shoes because you will run here and there.

Do not come here if you are an intelligent foreigner….oh everything will be against you.

Every law and organization will be against you because they need a slave not a brave person who can think.

Do you want to tell me now about your tough experience in Finland?

Or maybe you’re experience is holy – so what?

 1, 2, 3

Tell me more about how free you are

4, 5, 6 living in Finland is a risk.

* Salt 

Julian Abagond: How to tell if a white person is a recovering racist

Posted on July 6, 2013 by Migrant Tales

By Julian Abagond

drug_addict

In America there are only racists and recovering racists. It is like alcoholism. There is no point at which you are rid of it completely – racist thinking is too much a part of American culture. No one completely escapes it, not even people of colour.

Signs that a White American is a recovering racist (the signs for a person of colour are different):

  1. Admits to racism, both in one’s self and in American society. Like with alcoholism, the first step to recovery is to break out of denial.
    • That means not getting upset at being called the r-word.
    • That means giving up the “Anything But Racism” kneejerk reaction.
    • That means not downplaying or excusing white racist words and acts, either now or in history.
    • That means not blaming the victims of racism for inequality.
    • That means calling out racism.
  2. Takes what people of colour say seriously. Assumes that they are just as capable as white people in making observations and coming to conclusions, that they are just as intelligent, that they can think for themselves and know what is in their own best interest. Recovering racists do not necessarily always agree with people of colour – they think for themselves too! – but neither do they assume that people of colour are children who imagine stuff, whine, need to be talked down to – or saved. Recovering racists do not assume that whites always know best, that they are the moral centre.
  3. Sees both whites and people of colour as equally imperfectly human: Sees the good and bad in both, puts themselves in the shoes of others. Just as racists demonize and look down on people of colour, noticing all their faults while dismissing their successes, so they also idealize whites, playing up the good things about them while giving a huge pass to the the bad they do. Both demonization and idealization are racist and unrealistic.
  4. Assumes that the lives, feelings and concerns people of colour are important, just as important as those of white people.
    • That means that white people should not always get their way.
    • That means seeing Asian, Black, Latino, Native and Muslim Americans as Real Americans.
    • That means taking the anger of people of colour seriously rather than trying to police their tone.
    • That means not seeing people of colour as a “drain on society” or a “waste” of (white) taxpayer money.
    • That means pushing for policies to make society more equal – you know, as if everyone’s life mattered, not just those of rich, white men.
  5. Accepts people as they are, not as they “should” be, not “in spite of” what makes them different. They see colour, but they also see that different is just different, not “less than”.
  6. Respects people of colour. Does not tell then what to feel or think or act high-handed. Does not tell them to “Get over it.” Does not put them down for their race, does not call them racial slurs or tell racist jokes. Does not ” href=”http://abagond.wordpress.com/2009/04/08/derailing-for-dummies/”>derail their talk of racism.                           

Read original story here.

This piece was reprinted by Migrant Tales with permission.

Blog “neighbor” Zuzeeko: Keep up the great work!

Posted on July 5, 2013 by Migrant Tales

Immigrants and minorities should never forget to stand up for each other, especially if anyone of us is being harassed in a racist manner. When I worked as bureau chief in Colombia, one of the most violent countries in the world at the time,  I always felt that I’d never be abandoned by my employer and colleagues if put in harm’s way. 

Migrant Tales’ blog “neighbor,” Zuzeeko, got a racist tweet this morning (see below) that should be condemned.

Why? Because intolerance is a serious social ill that isn’t only costly to society, but stunts its growth and ruins the lives of people by short-changing them of opportunities.

We take intolerance seriously on Migrant Tales and that is why we want to show our solidarity with Zuzeeko.

Kuvankaappaus 2013-7-5 kello 12.01.08

@Zuzeeko tweets that there are four-month waiting lists to enroll in a Finnish language course in Helsinki. @jaskapask responds: “Nothing keeps you from studying [Finnish] on your own you n-word rapist, go back to where you f-word came from!!!”
Kuvankaappaus 2013-7-5 kello 13.52.17Our response to what happened to Zuzeeko.

While there is a lot of unity in the immigrant and minority community of Finland, there are still those who think they can control the debate on our ever-growing cultural diversity. These individuals commonly act in an authoritarian manner, play down racism, and even chastise those who disagree with their point of view. There are Tuomo-setäs in Finland as well.

We have written on a number of blog entries in the past that show the intolerance of immigrants by immigrants is sometimes worse than those of native white Finns.

Sad but true.

 

UK study links hate crime with far right EDL

Posted on July 4, 2013 by Migrant Tales

A study in the UK finds that members of the far right English Defense League (EDL) were linked to a third of the abuses against Muslims last year. Almost two in every three cases of anti-Muslim incidents go unreported in the UK, according to Teesside University’s Centre for Fascist, Anti-Fascist and Post-Fascist Studies. 

Kuvankaappaus 2013-7-4 kello 21.15.44

Read full report here.

Takin onboard the findings of the UK study, we could ask the same question in Finland. Is there a connection in the rise of hate crimes in Finland to the 2011 election victory of the anti-immigration Perussuomalaiset (PS) party?

Contrary to the EDL, the Finnish Defense League is too small to have the same impact as its sister organization in the UK.  The only group with such clout is the PS.

A story reported by Migrant Tales in early 2012 appears to reinforce the latter claim. A story on Kajaani-based daily  Kainuun Sanomat claimed that racist abuse and attacks on the Somali community in Finland started to rise after the PS election victory.

Refugee of the year (2011) Saido Mohammed was quoted as saying: “After the parliamentary election [Somalis that live in] Helsinki have said that they are spat at daily.”

After the 2011 election, traffic on Migrant Tales has soared as well. This is not only an indication that immigrants are concerned about their situation in Finland, it has apparently emboldened racists and those who are opposed to cultural diversity to come out of the closet.

The study in the UK on anti-Muslim sentiment is based on the Tell Mama online helpline, where victims can report about abuse and harassment.

Kuvankaappaus 2013-7-4 kello 21.13.22

Visit Tell Mama online site here.

The report states that there’s been a 150% rise in anti-Muslim hate crime in London from January to May.

Attacks against Muslims have picked up especially after the murder of Lee Rigby in May. This is in contrast to another claim that around half of the mosques and Muslim centers in Britain have been targets of Islamophobic attacks since 9/11, according to The Independent.

The interesting question we should ask is why isn’t there a study in Finland that would show the same findings as those in the UK? Is this due to lack of political will or that Finnish society still continues to play down intolerance?

 

Finland never was, is, and will be only “white”

Posted on July 3, 2013 by Migrant Tales

Whenever a far right politician like Perussuomalaiset (PS) MP Olli Immonen, Jussi Halla-aho or James Hirvisaari comment on what is or who has the right to be Finnish, they always get it wrong. Their views, that Finland is only white, is not only wrong but a hostile act towards the tens of thousands of Finns who have foreign parent(s). 

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Finns with multiethnic backgrounds are more than some would want to admit. Why are politicians, especially from the PS, denying these people the right to be accepted and treated as equals in this society? Why doesn’t anyone, like Migrant Tales, speak up courageously for them?

The extreme nationalistic view of these PS politicians is not only harmful to Finland but to the people they label and exclude as equal members of this society. Why? Because they aren’t white.

Politicians, the media and the general public should send a clear message to those who label others in such a pernicious way. This is important because the aim of these anti-immigration politicians is to divide Finland along ethnic lines. Not only do they aim to make life as hard as possible, but destroy their self-esteem as Finns.

Immonen, who is chairman of the extremist Suomen Sisu association that aims to keep Finland white, writes on an Uusi Suomi blog entry: “This national cohesion [of white Finland] shouldn’t be upset by a no boundary utopian ideological world that is based on mass immigration and a multicultural social policy.”

Has anyone ever told Immonen and his pundits that Finland never was, is or will a so-called monocultural country? No country can ever be monocultural. It is a ludicrous claim like stating that all members of Group X are criminals or that Group Y are lazy.

That social construct, which Immonen refers to, was built during the last century thanks to myths born from Finland’s extreme isolation and fear of the outside world.  

Instead of trying to breathe life into an ethnic Frankenstein that never existed, Immonen and his cronies should look at ways to encourage social and national cohesion through a policy of inclusion, acceptance and respect for cultural diversity.

Finland is a rapidly becoming a culturally diverse society and we must learn to live with this fact. Hiding our diversity or brushing it under the rug,  like Immonen aims to do, is harmful to Finland.

No matter how much anti-immigration politicians and political parties may want to opportunistically kick and bitch about the fact that cultural diversity is here to stay, there’s nothing they can do about it.

It’s time to get real and embrace diversity for the sake of Finland’s present and future social cohesion.

Migrants’ Rights Network: How society manufactured ‘them’ and ‘us’, and spread the myth that it couldn’t be anything different

Posted on July 3, 2013 by Migrant Tales

By Don Flynn

Here’s a book which challenges the idea that the division between citizens and migrants is fundamental and couldn’t be any other way. Bridget Anderson argues that ‘them’ and ‘us’ are constituted out of different groups in different ways at all points in history. Progress has always meant overcoming these divisions, and building new forms of solidarity.

Kuvankaappaus 2013-7-3 kello 11.44.18

Read full story here.

Bridget Anderson’s work on immigration (Oxford University Press) is something you turn to if you are looking for approaches which challenge all the conventional prejudices which see it as a business in which those on the outside come across to grab stuff that belongs to those of us who live on the inside.

There is no real ‘outside’ anymore according to Anderson.  The global processes of trade, commerce, financial markets, production supply chains, and the exploitation of labour resources wherever they are available has made everything into one vast ‘inside’.  The real issue at stake is whether you are a relatively privileged insider who operates with the notion that you have a superior claim to all the good things that are lying around, or one of those who can be safely told to stand a long way back and keep their hands off.

Liberal lefties and outright conservatives are inclined to go along with notional divisions into ‘them’ and ‘us’ on the grounds that it supports a competitive economic system which facilitates rapid growth.  There might be some injustice involved in telling Bangladeshi clothing workers that they can’t expect to fully participate in the enjoyment of the wealth they have helped create with their labour, but we can at least encourage them with the hope that some of it might trickle down to their children or grandchildren.

Bangladeshis working at the end of the long subcontracted chains that extend outwards from the high streets and the shopping malls of the developed world are probably going to be sceptical about the terms of this deal, but from the standpoint of the politicians who govern the lands of mature capitalism, they don’t really figure (or at least short of the mishap of watching their broken and twisted bodies dragged out from the rubble of the collapsed buildings they were condemned to work).

Social justice

From the standpoint of the national political elites, the genie that really has to be kept bottled up is the concern about the sense of social justice that exists amongst the citizen-consumers of their own lands, who might be troubled if they ever grasped to its fullest and truest extent the fact that their wealth and security has depended on cruel exploitation of those further down the line.

Anderson’s new book, Us and Them?  The Dangerous Politics of Immigration Control, is a polemic that aims to upset the ideological applecart that supports the notion that we owe greater duties of solidarity to those who have gone through all the bureaucratic procedures of modern, mass society and duly certified as being part of ‘us’ and thereupon relegating what is due to ‘them’ to the sort of activity associated with wearing red noses and singing along with Bono once a year.

Her very substantial contribution is to lay bare the social and economic processes which made us into ‘us’ in the first place.  “The history of the world is unavoidably a history of mobility” she tells us.  Peasant farmers are ‘liberated’ from the social relations which bound them to the land today just as they were 600 years ago in Britain when the Tudor magnates fashioned capitalism from out of their landed assets.  In doing so they opened up vagrancy, marginality, criminality and insecurity as the routes which led, over time, to the production of a vast population of property-less wageearners who would service the profit-hunting needs of business.  Out of these fires the first ‘us’ was forged.

However, emerging capitalism society presented 17th century England with a startling new crisis when it was discovered that the cultural mores of feudalism were no longer sufficient to secure the class solidarity needed between the greater and lesser castes of property owners who now existed.  Power had to be shared, and that meant an expanded role for the Parliament which kings and queens had once suffered to exist only to obtain a degree of consensus over the extortion of taxation from the population.  Parliament, rather than the monarch, was judged to be sovereign, and that meant that the few percent which was entitled to participate in elections now needed to adopt new frames of thinking to support the developing sense of obligation and duty they had to one another.  That frame was called ‘nationalism’ – the idea that membership of the same nation was the precondition for the trust and fellowship needed to order and secure society.

Rise of national solidarity

Anderson weaves the story of immigration into these historical segments, explaining that the genesis of our modern system of passports lay in the control the Tudor state wished to assert over the movement of its own subjects, rather than in dealings with foreigners.  Under Parliament, as the Atlantic world was forged out of empire-building and the displacement of rival powers, the space for being one of ‘us’ was extended to those who were still two centuries away from having the vote, but whose loyalty and identification with the imperial mission needed to be obtained to provided the manpower for the ships of the Royal Navy and the foot soldiers of the chartered companies.

As modern stated became more bureaucratic to the notion of ‘us’ became embedded in the paperwork and filing systems which were needed to govern growing, potentially unruly populations.  Anderson explores this in the context of the development of nationality law and, more recently, points-based systems of immigration control.  To legitimise the complexity of the emerging system, with all its costs and infringements of personal liberty, a sense if the threat posed by the hoards of uncivilised others had to be ramped up.  With the constant fear of having to deal with ‘them’, it seems that citizens have been made willing to carry the increasingly heavy burden of a security state which is less capable of providing welfare to its people, but which, at a minimum, can still be relied upon to keep ‘us’ safe.

Anyone reading this book should be prepared to encounter a tumult of ideas and insights which can be overwhelming at times, as Anderson is carried forward by the floodtide of her own logic.  It is a long way from being a finished work.  Its 180-odd pages are the sketch of a theory and approach to immigration which moves us far beyond the idea that this has to have the story that ‘them’ and ‘us’ are fixed categories that arise from the fundamental nature of things. But much more is there to be said about, for example, the logic of the welfare state, with its need to determine who merits the benefit of the services it provides, further structures and conditions our sense of ‘them’ and ‘us’.

This book challenges us to follow up by filling  in and deepening the record of our own experiences of how modernity has fated us to live our lives as ‘us’ and ‘them’.  What a gain it will be as we move to fill in all the blank spaces in this story, offering the hope that we can act and build on other principles of human solidarity as we understand more, and strengthen the hope that we will move beyond the confines of the divisive template that history has imposed on us all.

Read original story here.

This piece was reprinted by Migrant Tales with permission.

PS’ Slunga-Poutsalo is “extremely concerned” about Finnish immigration policy

Posted on July 2, 2013 by Migrant Tales

In a short interview on A-Studio Monday, the new party secretary of the Perussuomalaiset (PS) reinforced her anti-immigration stance. “I’m not annoyed by anything concerning immigration,” said PS secretary Riikka Slunga-Poutsalo, “but extremely concerned about the immigration policy we pursue in Finland.” 

Kuvankaappaus 2013-7-2 kello 11.29.35

Don’t be fooled, the PS’ new party secretary, Riikka SLunga-Poutsalo, is in the same anti-immigration extremist camp like Jussi Halla-aho and James Hirvisaari.

It’s unfortunate that the YLE journalist didn’t press her on what she meant by “extremely concerned about immigration policy.”

If he did, Slunga-Poutsalo’s far right anti-immigration colors would have stood a better chance of being exposed. As everyone knows, immigration policy is used by anti-immigration pundits to drive home their xenophobic views.

Compared with other European countries never mind neighboring Sweden, Finland is a non-destination for refugees never mind immigrants. Claiming that you are “extremely concerned” about immigration policy is fear-mongering.

But what worries Slunga-Poutsalo so much about our immigration policy anyway? The answer is easy:  She doesn’t want Africans, Muslims and non-EU citizens moving to Finland because that means greater cultural diversity.

Her view of what kinds of immigrants should move to Finland is in line with the far right Danish People’s Party and their Euro MP Morten Messerschmidt, who spoke at their party congress on June 29-30:

“I think we need three sets of rules of immigration. One for Europeans, who will be regulated by EU-law. One for people from the rest of the Western World, including parts of East Asia, South America, etc. And then a third set of rules for the third world, who in general do not really offer anything we can benefit from…”

Slunga-Poutsalo sounded on A-Talk like PS MP Olli Immonen, especially when she spoke of her fear of ghettos.

In all truth, she doesn’t care about the plight of immigrants in Finland never mind if their children live in so-called ghettos. What she’s worried about is Finland’s ever-growing cultural diversity.

In the language of anti-immigration groups, “ghetto” is a byword for too many immigrants concentrated in one area. Would we call a white neighborhood a ghetto? What about Little China or Little Scandinavia?

I seriously doubt that immigrants, especially Africans and Muslims, will ever get any sympathy from Slunga-Poutsalo. They should therefore  treat all of her comments with a generous pinch of salt and tweezers. Her track record on immigration can be clearly seen from the Nuiva Manifesto, which she signed together with other PS anti-immigration extremists. Her mandate is clear: undermine and harm immigrants and visible minorities as much as possible.

How will Slunga-Poutsalo do this? By driving home the point that immigration is a threat to Finland.

One comment she made did reveal her true anti-immigration colors. She said that convicted immigrants should be deported. That is a favorite position of far right anti-immigration groups who constantly criticize immigration policy.

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  1. Absolutely Socking: Racist Finnish Facebook group against human rights gets flooded with socks on Musta Barbaari’s mother and sister charged by the police in “ethnic profiling” case
  2. Ilkka Nuotio on Pekka Myrskylä: “Tilastot kertovat toista kuin poliittinen keskustelu”
  3. Genrih Soinkara on The war in Ukraine and the Russian-Finnish border crisis are showing Finland’s ugly side
  4. Ahti Tolvanen on Comment by Ahti Tolvanen on the Helsinki +50 conference
  5. Angel Barrientos on Angel Barrientos is one of the kind beacons of Finland’s Chilean community

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