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The PS of Finland is harmful

Posted on October 1, 2020 by Migrant Tales

“Immigration from Africa and the Middle East is harmful and becomes more harmful as their numbers grow.”

The quote by Perussuomalaiset (PS) chairperson Jussi Halla-aho in today’s session of parliament is an example of his disdain and hatred of people of color. The reason why he and his party victimize people in such a racist fashion is that migrants have little to no political power in Finland.

But they are actually weak, a facade, similar to baby teeth. A house of cards built on hot air.

One of Finland’s two PS MEPs in Brussels. A Trump supporter even in underwear. Source: Twitter.

It looks like the PS are going to suffer a significant setback on November 3 if US President Donald Trump loses the election.

Parties like the PS have copied and pasted Trump, which partly explains why they pour on their racism in the way they do. Today’s parliamentary session is a prime example.

The PS are the most ungrateful party that I know. They label and kick migrants, especially Muslims and blacks, who in turn give them an opportunistic chance to gain political power.

The copy-cat PS uses the slogan from Brexit, “Take back Finland.” But they should know that we, the good people of Finland who don’t fall for their xenophobic baloney, are going to take back this country.

All of the hatred and lies they spread will not be forgotten.

I, for one, have pledged to fight them and all the other racist and toxic forces until my last breath.

Kotoutuminen #10: Misleading expectations that will keep you (dis)integrated

Posted on September 27, 2020 by Migrant Tales

Many, if not most migrants who have moved to Finland, have heard the following claim: Learn the language, and presto you are integrated.

While learning the language of your new homeland helps, it is only one of many things that will help you adapt to society.

Finland’s integration policy is similar to Sleeping Beauty. It is waiting for a handsome white prince (a super migrant, perhaps?) to kiss and wake her up. When that happens, our problems will vanish and we will live happily ever after. Source: Disney.,

Erna Bödström’s dissertation, “Welcome to Fantasy Finland,” points out a lot of facts why Finland’s official integration process is selective and exclusive.

Apart from painting a rosy picture of white Finnish society where visible migrants are sometimes doing menial work, integration does not promote interaction between white Finns and migrants and visible minorities.

Another observation that Bödström makes is that there is nothing in the integration brochures about racism and how difficult it is to find work.

Bödström sees integration as a process where the newly arrived resident becomes familiar with the social services and entering the labor market.

Some politicians, as we saw during the hysterical reaction of the Oulu sexual assault cases, claimed outright that Finland’s integration program has failed.

Failed?

True.

The integration program is, in many respects, a tool used by the state to show off its exceptionalism and society’s best side. Another role it appears to have is to exclude newcomers and minorities from gaining social and political power.

See also:

  • Kotoutuminen #1: A good synonym for kotoutuminen is too many times the reinforcement of structural racism
  • Kotoutuminen #2: A tool of white fragility to rule you
  • Kotoutuminen #3: To touch or not to touch
  • Kotoutuminen #4: Amalgamate, assimilate is the rule, two-way adaption is a pipedream
  • Kotoutuminen #5: Perpetuating the Ulysses syndrome, a chronic stress disorder of refugees
  • Kotoutuminen #6: The white Finnish teacher and the migrant adult child. Stop infantilizing!
  • Kotoutuminen #7: How do we deal with our prejudices and exceptionalism?
  • Kotoutuminen #8: Let’s do away with “us” and “them”
  • Kotoutuminen #9: Spreading half-truths about integration

*Kotoutiminen is a he Finnish term for integration. It came about in the late-1990s because there was no such term in the Finnish language.

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Two bullying cases in Finland, two standards by the police and society

Posted on September 26, 2020 by Migrant Tales

Who can forget the 10-year-old girl allegedly bullied and physically attacked in a Northern Espoo school by her classmate(s) for wearing a hijab? When the incident occurred, the police quickly denied that racism was a factor in the bullying.

Considering that too often the police months, if not years, to resolve racism cases, in the particular case of the Muslim girl the police stated three days after the incident “that no such motives have come up in the investigation by the police.”

When it comes t racism and discrimination cases, due process in Finland has different actions, priorities, and timelines.

Picture of the bullied child posted on Instagram by her brother.
The posting states: “What do they teach [children] at Finnish homes? That Muslims are terrorists? The little girl [in the picture above] is spending a normal day at school when four boys [classmates] tried to rip off her hijab from her head and kicked her unconscious. We are not talking now about a migrant but about a victim. @iltalehti [tabloid] I want you to write out loud that racism must stop once for all, this girl is an angel!”

The recent case of a white Finnish boy bullied in Vantaa, and whose case has received a lot of public attention, there is a vibrant ongoing debate about bullying at schools. A good letter to the editor was published Saturday by Helsingin Sanomat.

Continue reading “Two bullying cases in Finland, two standards by the police and society”

Rasismi voi johtaa itsemurhaan!

Posted on September 24, 2020 by Migrant Tales

Rasismi ei vain ole ihonvärin erottelua. Rasismi on minulle turhanpäiväistä syrjintää. Syrjiä jotakuta sellaisen asian takia, mihin kukaan ei voinut vaikuttaa. Syrjintä joka voi johtaa itsemurhaan!

Se kun jotakuta kiusataan vain, koska hän on musta. Kun joku ei saa töitä vain ja ainoastaan, koska hän on musta. Kun on vaikea saada asuntoa vain ja ainoastaan, koska hän on musta. Sellainen syrjintä voi johtaa masennukseen tai jopa itsemurhaan. 

Josue Tumayine

 Mustia tapetaan vain ja ainoastaan, koska he ovat mustia! Miksi?! Kukaan ei syntynyt ja päättänyt “oh haluanpa olla musta”. Joten miksi, miksi tuomitset minut sellaisesta, josta en voinut päättää? Minä en ole tehnyt sinulle mitään, en edes tunne sinua etkä sinäkään minua.

Okei joo mustat tekevät rikoksia, Mutta eivätkö muka valkoiset? Kun yksi musta tekee rikosta niin sen on hän, joka sen teki, ei kaikki mustat. Kuten sanotte “kun yksi valkoinen tekee rikoksen, niin sen on yksilöllinen teko. Ei kaikkien valkoisten tarvii siitä kärsiä”. Sama pätee mustiin! 

When the police do not see (or want to see) bias motivation in a hate crime

Posted on September 22, 2020 by Migrant Tales

Last year in Jämsä, an accompanied white Finn threatened an asylum seeker with a knife. Even if the asylum seeker does not speak Finnish well enough, he did make out the following words: vitun pakolainen (f**king asylum seeker) and vitun ulkomaalainen (f**king foreigner).

The police did not mention the last two insults to the asylum seeker in its investigation.

For this reason, the police report to the West Finland prosecutor is only charging two men in the case with an unlawful threat (laiton uhkaus). What happened isn’t a hate crime,* according to the police.

A hate crime is always accompanied by a bias indicator that can be: comments, victim perception, organized hate groups, pattern, intense violence and specific targeting, no other obvious motive, timing, and differences between the crime and the perpetrator(s). Source: Facing Facts.

It would be interesting to ask the police officer in charge of the case why bias motivation was not considered.

Getting justice in a hate crime case is sometimes something better said than done in Finland.

*The Criminal Code of Finland does not recognize the term “hate crime.” Section 5 states that a basis for increasing punishment (564/2015) is if the “offense for a motive based on race, skin color, birth status, national or ethnic origin, religion or belief, sexual orientation or disability or another corresponding grounds.”

Perussuomalaiset on vaarallinen äärioikeistopuolue

Posted on September 22, 2020 by Reija Härkönen

Perussuomalaisten jytkyn jälkeen v. 2011 kerroin blogissani kylmistä väreistä, jotka sain lukiessani Helsingin Sanomien julkaiseman artikkelin Hitlerin varhaisesta kirjeestä. Kolmekymppinen tuleva hirmuhallitsija ilmaisi suhtautumisensa juutalaisiin näin:

“Vastenmielisyyden aiheuttajana on enimmäkseen henkilökohtainen kontakti ja vaikutelma, jonka yksittäinen juutalainen aiheuttaa – ja joka on lähes aina epäsuotuisa”

Juuri samalla tavalla argumentoi tuolloin vasta valittu kansanedustaja, Jussi Halla-aho, mm. kirjoituksessaan “Mistä somalivitsit tulevat.”

“Vitseissä esiintyy laiska ja seksihullu neekeri…”

“Keskeistä on, että “rasistinen vitsi” toimii (eli naurattaa) vain, jos kuulijoilla on jokin oletus puheena olevan ryhmän keskimääräisistä ominaisuuksista, ja jos tämä oletus on suurin piirtein jaettu. Oletukset ovat yleistäviä ja liioiteltuja, kyllä, mutta eivät ne tyhjän päällä lepää.”

Kirjoitus päättyy: “Mitä enemmän kosketusta tulee, sitä enemmän kerrotaan vitsejä. Mitä kielteisempiä nämä kosketukset ovat, sitä ilkeämpiä ovat myös vitsit.”

Useimmat Halla-ahon tuolloiset blogikirjoitukset, nykyiset twiitit ja Facebook-merkinnät toimivat samalla kaavalla: niljakasta vihjailua kuvitellusta vihollisesta. Halla-aho syöttää laumansa susille jatkuvasti pieniä haukkapaloja, ilmaisee inhonsa tiettyä poliittista ryhmää, aatetta tai henkilöä kohtaan.

Continue reading “Perussuomalaiset on vaarallinen äärioikeistopuolue”

Keyse Abdifatah Maalesh’s parents are unhappy with the involuntary manslaughter sentence. Plan to appeal.

Posted on September 20, 2020 by Migrant Tales

THIS STORY WAS UPDATED

It’s been close to five months after Keyse Abdifatah Maalesh, 18, lost his life at the Kannelmäki train station of Helsinki on April 26 when he was stabbed by a white Finn. Over two weeks ago on September 7, the suspect was handed a five-year prison sentence for involuntary manslaughter.

Ilhan Jama is the mother of the deceased Keyse. She said that she and her husband are not happy with the sentence, which she believes was a hate crime.

Keyse Abdifatah Maalesh was stabbed and killed on April 26 at the Kanneläki train station of Helsinki. The police did not consider the death a hate crime.

“The prosecutor tried to get a hate crime pinned on the suspect,” she said. “The person [who stabbed my son] alleged that he was scared by my son’s presence, or that a dark-skinned person was walking towards him down the stairs.”

Jama considers the excuse for stabbing her son quite incredible. She said that the stabber and his friend were both intoxicated, according to Jama.

Continue reading “Keyse Abdifatah Maalesh’s parents are unhappy with the involuntary manslaughter sentence. Plan to appeal.”

Helsingin Sanomat’s late editorial response to the threat of political violence sowed by the PS

Posted on September 18, 2020 by Migrant Tales

THE STORY WAS UPDATED

Helsingin Sanomat finally published an editorial about the Pekka Kataja case and the threat of far-right violence to our political system. While the editorial was long overdue due to the importance of the topic, why did it take Finland’s largest daily a week to form an opinion on its editorial page?

The fact that a former member of Finland’s largest opposition party, the Perussuomalaiset (PS)*, is an attempted murder suspect and a far-right activist raises a lot of questions and concerns.

While the editorial raised some critical points, one wonders why it took so long for Helsingin Sanomat to take a stand on its editorial page. Why is the editorial behind a paywall? Isn’t this a topic of national interest?

Isn’t the topic important in today’s context? Isn’t the rise of a radical right party with numerous bedfellows with the far-right, neo-Nazi-spirited groups like the Soldiers of Odin and Kansallismielisten liitoutuma as threat?

If Finland’s democratic institutions suffered in the future a blow like those under Hungary’s Viktor Orbán, would Helsingin Sanomat take a week to form an opinion?

There is a reason why the Finnish media and the political establishment too often drags its heels when it comes to Islamophobia and the spread of far-right ideology.

One factor is the lack of leadership and naivety of our media and politicians. They have been the fuel why parties like the PS have grown during the past decade.

The rise of a party that spreads racism wholesale against groups like Muslims spreads ethnonationslist jibberish, has ties with anti-democratic and far-right groups is a threat exists because it appeals to a certain group of voters.

While the Helsingin Sanomat editorial correctly states that some threats like racism, hatred as well as political violence threaten to close the door on future government talks, I would not be too sure.

Finland’s treatment of the PS and its racism and nationalism resembles a small village. We all know and trust each other because we are all white.


Helsingin Sanomat’s staff celebrating the daily’s 130th anniversary in November 2019. Do you see any minorities? Only one person in the picture has a so-called foreign-sounding name. Source: Helsingin Sanomat.

A good start to change matters is to have more minority representation on Helsingin Sanomat the editorial board. It is highly revealing that Finland’s largest-circulating daily has few if any minorities on its editorial board considering that about 16% of Helsinki residents speak another mother tongue than Finnish or Swedish.

Bedfellows Perussuomalaiset and the far-right: I’m surprised that you are still surprised

Posted on September 15, 2020 by Migrant Tales

THIS STORY WAS UPDATED

Playing dumb or dead to the threat of far-right groups is a political statement or reveals you are either lazy, naive, or white..

While it is a positive matter that the Finnish media is shedding light on two long-time bedfellows: the Perussuomalaiset (PS)* and far-right groups, even so, the question we should ask is why now if this was common knowledge for a long time?

One reason could be our propensity to play dumb or silent to the growing threat of far-right groups.

Isn’t it shameful and a slap in the face to all of our noble social welfare advancements that the biggest opposition party, the PS, is a xenophobic radical-right party?

Who cares?

A lot of people in Finland who don’t want this country to be driven by xenophobia to the lap of a Finnish Viktor Orbán are rightfully worried.

Tero Ala-Tuuhonen, the attempted murder suspect who tried to kill Pekka Kataja, is posing with some far-right Kansallismielisten liitouma activists. The circled persons all have ties to the PS. Source: Twitter

Kansallismielisten liitouma was originally founded by the Soldiers of Odin, a far-right vigilante groups that the police and many politicians supported in the face of a record number of asylum seekers to Finland in 2015.

Yes, I am surprised that you may be surprised by this fact that the PS and far-right groups are bedfellows.

Those who claim that we should ignore the racist narrative of parties like the PS and their far-right buddies are leaving our country’s future to chance.

We cannot allow this to happen.

With your help we’ll stop it and nip it off the bud.

Now you see Riikka Purra, Ville Tavio and Sebastian Tynkkynen, now you don’t

Posted on September 13, 2020 by Migrant Tales

Tero Ala-Tuuhonen is not a nice guy. Indeed, it depends on your perspective. If you sympathize with Nazis and all the far-right BS, then he is your man.

Despite his background, there is a long list of Perussuomalaiset (PS)* politicians who like him. Is it the uniform he is wearing in the picture below, or is it his far-right rhetoric that resonates with Finland’s largest opposition party?

Ala-Tuuhonen reminiscing the good old Nazi days.
Ala-Tuuhonen states on his Facebook page that “all lives matter.” Is this a joke? Wearing an SS uniform and attempting with Teemu Torssonen to murder Pekka Kataja of the PS? Source: Facebook.
Source: Kskisuomalainen

You will find some surprises if you go through Ala-Tuuhonen’s Facebook friends. You will find a lot of PS politicians.

According to the Jyväskylä-based daily Keskisuomalainen, some of Ala-Tuuhonen’s Facebook friends include PS MP’s like Juha Mäenpää, Riikka Purra, Ville Tavio, Sebastian Tynkkynen and Ano Turtiainen, a former PS MP suspended indefinitely.

Ala-Tuuhonen’s Facebook friends changed on Sunday. You will no longer find PS vice president Purra and PS parliamentary group leader Tavio and MP Tynkkynen on the attempted murder suspect’s list of friends.

No worries, I found two other PS MPs. Sakari Puisto and Veijo Niemi, as well as many PS municipal politicians and supporters.

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Recent Posts

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