Perussuomalaiset perustavat oma ideologiansa valheisiin ja pellonletsomiseen. Riikka Purran uudet väitteet ovat hyvä esimerkki siitä.
Milloin suomen lehdistö alkaa jakamaan Pinokkiota poliitikoille kuten tekee Washington Post?


Perussuomalaiset perustavat oma ideologiansa valheisiin ja pellonletsomiseen. Riikka Purran uudet väitteet ovat hyvä esimerkki siitä.
Milloin suomen lehdistö alkaa jakamaan Pinokkiota poliitikoille kuten tekee Washington Post?


Perussuomalaiset kertovat tänään vastauksessaan hallitustunnustelijalle, että osallistuvat vain hallitukseen, jossa kaikki puolueet sitoutuvat rehellisyyteen ja vaativat ministereiltä totuudessa pysymistä. Vaatimus on sinänsä hyveellinen ja oikea, mutta muuttuu naurettavaksi kun se tulee puolueelta, jonka politiikka kokonaisuudessaan perustuu valehteluun, huijaukseen ja vääristelyyn.
Otetaanpa esimerkiksi yksi viimeisistä näytöksistä. Perussuomalaiset keksivät kuukausi sitten alkaa tehtailla rikosilmoituksia vanhoista TV-huumorin pätkistä ja elokuvista työllistääkseen ”punavihreää poliisia” ja osoittaakseen, kuinka tyhmä on heidän usein tuomiolla kohtaamansa laki kiihottamisesta kansanryhmää vastaan.
Usutusta asiaan nähtiin persupomon seinällä.

Euroopan parlamentistakin osallistuttiin talkoisiin.


Kansalaisille pyrittiin myös osoittamaan, että huijaus- ja kiusantekomielessä tehdyt tutkintapyynnöt olivat peräisin jostain ihan muualta. Perussuomalainen kansanedustaja ja Ylen hallintoneuvoston jäsen Jari Ronkainen kommentoi 22.11. persujulkaisussa:
”Voi tätä loukkaantumisen määrää! Tuntuu siltä, että tiettyjen ihmisten ja ryhmien sietokyky on hävinnyt kokonaan ja hymy yritetään häivyttää ihmisten kasvoilta”.

Jussi Halla-aho pisti vielä paremmaksi ja käytti tekaistujen tutkintapyyntöjen kampanjaa hyväkseen eduskunnan täysistunnossa 27.11.2019 keskustelussa lakialoitteesta, jolla persut yrittävät jälleen muuttaa lakia kiihottamisesta kansanryhmää vastaan:
”Niin poliitikot kuin toimittajat ja oikeusoppineet ovat viime päivinä ihmetelleet kymmeniä vuosia vanhoihin sketsiohjelmiin liittyviä rikostutkintoja. Kuitenkin vielä hetki sitten samat ihmiset olivat sitä mieltä, että kiihottamispykälä on aivan riittävän selkeä. Kuitenkin lakiteksti mahdollistaa juuri tällaiset tulkinnat, jos tulkitsija on riittävän fanaattinen.”
Yle uutisoi 29.11.2019, että poliisi ei, kuten arvata saattoi, aloita esitutkintaa persukampanjan perusteella. Iltalehti kertoi, että ilmoituksia oli tehnyt ainakin yksi persutaustainen mies sekä muita ns. kansallismielisiksi itsensä identifioivia kansalaisia. Toimitukselle kommentteja antamaan kyseisillä isänmaan sankareilla ei ollut uskallusta.
”Kyyninen leikinteko on puolueelle hyvin tyypillinen tapa tehdä politiikkaa”, kommentoi persukampanjasta hyvän jutun kirjoittanut Iltalehden Aleksanteri Pikkarainen. Kyynisyys on kuitenkin lievä ilmaisu, kun puhutaan puolueen johtohahmojen masinoimasta rikosilmoittelukampanjasta, josta sitten valehdellaan eduskunnankin edessä.
Toiset keskittyvät pitämään huolta yhteisistä asioista, kuten poliitikon kuuluu. Haittaisänmaalliset yrittävät kepulikonstein kaivaa kuoppaa demokraattisen järjestelmän alle, säätää omia lakejaan ja häiriköidä siinä, missä vähillä hoksottimillaan pystyvät. Toivotan jaksamista kaikille kunniallisille kansanedustajille ja ministereille!
Perätön rikosilmoitus ei ole rikos. Pitäisikö perättömän poliittisen rikosilmoittelukampanjan olla?
Alkuperäinen kirjoitus voi lukea tästä.
As European politicians fruitlessly figure out how to resolve the ever-worsening refugee situation, Europe’s inaction has tuned refugees into invisible beings whose muffled sounds of suffering turn some of our hearts into stone.
Some Europeans are indifferent to the plight of such people because they believe that they could never become refugees in their lifetimes.
One family of four, a mother and two teenage daughters and an adult son, arrived two weeks ago to the Moria refugee camp on the island of Lesvos in Greece. For many, Lesvos is the first stop of asylum seekers coming to Europe from Turkey.
The situation at the Moria camp could be characterized by overcrowding, lack of hygiene, and too few services to attend the estimated 12,000 asylum seekers effectively at the camp.
“The toilets are a kilometer from their tent, and the journey there is dangerous because it is downhill and slippery when it rains,” said a relative of the family that now lives on Lesvos. “If you get to the toilet, you’ll find long lines with families with ten children waiting for their turn.”



While we live in such difficult times that refugees and migrants cannot travel freely as they have done since humans left Africa about 40,000 years ago, an uncertain future awaits many today.
Even so, let’s wish this new family the best of luck in Europe and that they will find what so many migrants and refugees have searched before them: a new life.
A group of present and former asylum seekers decided to hold an indefinite demonstration in front of Helsinki’s Finnish Immigration Service’s (Migri) on Thursday for better rights and security in Finland.
Walid Sahib, one of the persons taking part in the demonstration, said that the most important matter is to raise awareness for the plight of undocumented migrants and others in limbo waiting for decisions on their asylum applications.
“There are many [thousands] people with no permission in Finland and [others] waiting for four years for their residence permits,” said Sahib. “It is a very difficult situation.”


In 2016, the right-wing government of Prime Minister Juha Sipilä tightened Finland’s immigration law and did away with residence permits on humanitarian grounds. This change in the law forced the number of undocumented migrants to rise from a few hundred to a few thousand.
Then Social Democrat MP Nasima Razmyar, who is today Helsinki deputy mayor for culture and leisure, voted in 2016 to end residence permits on humanitarian grounds.
Razmyar is herself a former asylum seeker from Afghanistan.
Other migrant rights were eroded by Sipilä’s government as Amnesty International points out below.

I would like to extend my support for these brave migrants for demonstrating for their rights. In today’s hostile environment of Finland, it is an effective way of raising your voice and invite public concern to your cause.
The best present that we can receive on Finland’s Independence Day is an inclusive society that respects everyone irrespective of their background. Mutual respect is the bridge that unites this society.
So set aside your medals, distinctions, and invitations to the President’s Independence Day ball because social equality and respect for diversity is the only medal I would pin on my soul.

Good news! The management of the Jämsä asylum reception center decided today to throw away all the furniture, some mattresses, and buy new ones deal with a bed bug problem that has persisted since before November 2018.
The reception center, located in central Finland about 4 kilometers from the nearest market, is run by Pihlajalinna, a private company that offers social and healthcare services for the public sector.
Pihlajalinna was in the news earlier this year for the negligent care to the elderly at their rest homes.
The decision to do away with the furniture and some mattresses came a day after Migrant Tales published an article Sunday with pictures affecting 30-40 asylum seekers at the reception center.
The Jämsä asylum reception center houses about 120 asylum seekers.

The question that one asylum seeker who has suffered from bed bugs asks is why it has taken such a long time to solve the problem.
“Doing away with the bed bug problem costs [the company],” an asylum seeker who lives at the camp and who spoke on condition of anonymity. “That’s why it has taken such a long time to resolve. The other reason is that the camp management does not care about us.”
Migrant Tales wrote in 2016 about Luona, a private company that ran asylum reception centers and whose aim was to maximize profit.

The Jämsä reception center nurse is a good example of how the camp tries to save money.
“An asylum seeker staying at the camp was dying of cancer,” he said. “The nurse told him to drink a lot of water and take Burana, and that would relieve his pain. A while later, he was diagnosed with cancer and died last year in Jyväskylä.”
The actions of the nurse show ignorance and the lack of understanding of the suffering and trauma of refugees.
“I once visited the nurse and told her that I had problems sleeping [see Ulysses syndrome],” said the asylum seeker. “She asked me why I had such a problem and promised to get me medicine in mid-November. I’m still waiting.”
The person who visited the nurse about insomnia also suffers from panic attacks. The nurse told him just to rest and the problem would go away.
“The nurse promises to get medicine for us, but she always late with the medicine or forgets altogether,” he said. “Apart from keeping expenses as low as possible, people at the camp don’t like the nurse because she always forgets or [allegedly] lies outright.”
Budget cuts by Pihlajalinna can be seen as well in fewer staff workers at night. Before on Fridays, there was a worker at the camp until midnight, but now it is until to 9 pm.
On Saturdays and Sundays, there are employees only between noon and 6 pm.
“For the whole camp, there are only three washing machines that are in the office,” the person said. “They have promised to buy two more washing machines. On weekends, we cannot wash clothes at the camp after 6 pm.”
Red lights should start flashing whenever a person teaching integration 101 to newly arrived migrants states: “These students are my children.”
It is important to note, however, that there are many good and inspiring teachers who do wonders for their students and make them feel welcome.

But for those who see their students as “children,” even if their students are grown-up adults, exposes their cultural arrogance, and racism.
If it were up to these types of teachers to “integrate” and turn these migrants into active members of society, the result is preparing them to become second- and third-class members of society.
Another serious problem is that there are few if any bodies that directly actively evaluate the teacher and his or her prejudices. Usually, white people are doing this type of evaluation if any.
I believe that a teacher aims to offer the best education possible to the students. If I were giving a talk to such teachers, the first thing I’d tell them is to stop underestimating and treating them like children.
I would turn to bodies like the European Network Against Racism to offer anti-racism and cultural diversity courses.
In the meantime, let’s stop infantilizing migrants!
See also:
*Kotoutiminen is the Finnish term for integration.
Pihlajalinna, a private company that offers social and healthcare services in Finland for the public sector, was in the news earlier this year concerning the negligent care of its clients in elderly homes. The company also runs an asylum reception center in Jämsä, which has a bed bug (lude in Finnish) problem.
Bed bugs (Cimex lectularius) are insects that feed on human blood. Their bites can cause several health problems like skin rashes.
According to an asylum seeker at the reception center, 30-40 people are suffering from bed bugs. The problem started before November 2018.
“The company that is supposed to fumigate the bed bugs has been here over 20 times, and we still have the problem,” said a resident, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he is an asylum seeker. “It’s always the same story: they fumigate, but the problem persists.”
The asylum seeker alleges that Pihlajalinna tries to save money to maximize profit, and this explains why the bed bug problem persists at the reception center.




This is a developing story that will be updated.
After Migrant Tales broke the story of Finnish Immigration Service (Migri) asked a divorced Moroccan to leave Finland with a heart condition. Youssef Hemdani’s case has received a lot of support from Morocco and Finland.
“Thank you for your support,” said his brother, Laghdof Hemdari.
Apart from getting a lot of attention on social media, Hemdani has received visits and concern from the Moroccan ambassador to Finland, Mohamed Achgalou, and from Social Democrat MP Hussein al-Taee as well as from Left Alliance Helsinki city councilor, Suldaan Said Ahmed.
There are plans as well to appeal to the district cout Migri’s decision.

Hemdani’s heart condition is serious. The 32-year-old suffers from an enlarged heart and cardiac insufficiency, according to a medical report.

Laghdof Hemdari said that so far, there is no pledge from the hospital that his brother will be operated as promised before Migri decided to revoke his residence permit.
“There is no treatment for my brother’s condition in Morocco,” he said. “He isn’t well. Some days he’s better and other days are worse. Sometimes he cannot eat because he feels the food chokes him.”
THIS STORY WAS UPDATED
Finland will wake up too late when incompetent populist parties, their politicians and policies lead us to the doorsteps of hell just like what happened in Germany after 1933.
Even if Finland ranks second in the World Press Freedom Index after Norway, how high does it score when it writes about populism, radical-right nationalism, policies that fuel social exclusion, and racism?
The fact that Finland’s largest daily, Helsingin Sanomat, has not written an editorial denouncing racism and how damaging populism is to the country, tell us of the extent of our denial.
Why have no dailies investigated how Finland’s geopolitical isolation during the Cold War helps the country to fall prey to populist and racist parties like the Perussuomalaiset (PS)*?
Since almost everyone, especially most of the Finnish mainstream media, is fascinated with opinion polls these days, it’s clear that dailies like Helsingin Sanomat will give parties like the PS space and the benefit of the doubt.
A media that turns a blind eye to a threat like the PS is leaving our future to chance. Fortunately, Finland does have – even if only a few – solid columnists like Yrjö Rautio, who offers well-rounded analyses of the PS in his columns.
A recent interview Saturday in Helsingin Sanomat of PS chairperson Jussi Halla-aho is a good example of uncritical journalism. Halla-aho built his political career by inciting hatred on groups like Muslims with Islamophobia, homophobia, and racism to name only a few.
In 2012, he was convicted of ethnic agitation and for breaching the sanctity of religion.
You can read some of his most racist quotes in English here.

It is unfortunate for our democracy that the Finnish media doesn’t do more to hold parties like the PS accountable for what they say and do.
A tweet by @TuomoKondie gives us a ten-point list of some questions that Helsingin Sanomat and other media could ask Halla-aho:
Here is something that every journalist in Finland should take into account when writing about the PS:
The Perussuomalaiset is not a normal party. It isn’t normal because it built its base on racism, far-right extremism, and neo-liberal economic and social models. It has an utter disrespect for our Nordic values. One of these is Section 6 of the Constitution that states: “No one shall, without an acceptable reason, be treated differently from other persons on the ground of sex, age, origin, language, religion, conviction, opinion, health, disability or other reason that concerns his or her person.”
Below are more examples and disappointments of how uncritically the Finnish media writes about the PS.
Too few of them put the PS in the hot seat and why they spread and support social discrimination, exclusion, racism, and scapegoat near-constantly migrants for all of the country’s problems.
