Perussuomalaiset (PS) MP James Hirvisaari, who was convicted for ethnic agitation in December, announced on his blog that he has resigned from the extremist Suomen Sisu association. The whole announcement is fishy: Why is Hirvisaari resigning now? Does it make any difference? Who cares.
Hirvisaari’s blog is as eerie as his far right ideology and views of Muslims.
PS MP Juho Eerola, who is in the same far right ideological league as Hirvisaari, resigned in June from Suomen Sisu because he was aiming to become MP Jussi Halla-aho’s successor as chairman of the administration committee.
Halla-aho was forced to resign as chairman of the administration committee when the Supere Court convicted him in June for ethnic agitation and breaching the sanctity of religion.
In his usual far right tone, Hirvisaari writes: ”[I didn’t resign] because there was something wrong with the association, but because it is a youth organization.”
And continues: “I thank Suomen Sisu’s smart young men and women for their inspiring, intelligent, peaceful and authentic love for the fatherland and for their company and great example.”
A Finnish expert on the far right, who spoke to Migrant Tales on condition of anonymity, said that nobody can resign from the association because it’s like leaving the Mafia. Suomen Sisu is neither a registered association nor does it have an official list of members.
“Considering that someone can say out loud publicly that he is resigning from Suomen Sisu doesn’t mean anything at all if [the person’s] ideology remains unchanged,” said the expert on the far right. “Suomen Sisu is no longer an active organization because it has the Perussuomalaiset under its full control and they can do pretty much what they please [in that party].”
One area where Suomen Sisu wields a lot of power over the PS is in the party’s immigration policy.
Charges of ethnic agitation will be brought by deputy state prosecutor Jorma Kalske against Kontiolahti councilman Mika Hiltunen, reports YLE. Hiltunen claimed on his Facebook page in January that refugees and asylum seekers “are social-welfare bums and rapists.”
JusticeDemon asks an interesting question about the case: “… this particular statute [Section 10 of chapter 11 of the Finnish Penal Code] has evidently become Lex Persu. Is it my imagination, or can we say that ALL convictions for this particular offense in the last 5 years have been more or less closely associated with this specific political faction?”‘
Another important question we can ask concerning Hiltunen is why doesn’t the PS sack the councilman? Remember the answer PS chairman Timo Soini gave on HARDtalk when he was asked about sacking MP Teuvo Hakkarainan for calling black people the n-word?
Soini’s answed: “Why should I?”
It’s pretty certain that Soini won’t sack Hiltunen.
Kuuntelin eilen työmatkalla tiistailta lataamaani Jari Sarasvuon radio-ohjelmaa, joka lähetetään Yle Puheen kautta. Sarasvuo on fantastinen radiossa jos hänen kuuntelemiselleen on varata aikaa häiriötön tunti. Taustakuunteluna se toiminee huonommin, sen verran paljon asiaa käsitellään yhden iltapäivätunnin aikana. Vaikka se ei varsinaisesti tämän viikon aihe ollutkaan, viittasi Sarasvuo muutamaan otteeseen viime viikonlopun Helsingin Sanomien juttuun, jossa esiteltiin tutkimusta, jonka keskeisenä kohteena oli orjakaupan vaikutus siitä kärsineisiin maihin. Ensimmäisellä kertaa Sarasvuo puhui ”valkoisen miehen syyllisyydestä”, jota hän oli tuntenut artikkelia lukiessaan ja toisella kertaa hän sanoi, että ”…nää afrikkalaisethan myi toinen toisiaan orjiksi…”, joka oli se hetki jolloin päätin, että laitan lauantai-iltana Hesarille kirjoittamani viestin aiheesta julkiseksi. En siksi, ettei Sarasvuon analyysi Hesarin jutusta ollut täsmälleen oikea vaan siksi, että se oli.
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Palaute artikkelista “Tutkija: Orjuus teki Afrikasta köyhän, ei siirtomaatalous”
Luin verkkopalvelustanne kirjoituksen ”Tutkija: Orjuus teki Afrikasta köyhän, ei siirtomaatalous” (16.2.2013) ja haluaisin kiinnittää huomiota sen puutteisiin. Tiedeartikkelissa, jota tässä on referoitu, ei puhuta siirtomaataloudesta millään merkittävällä tavalla ja mielestäni sen vetäminen mukaan teidän kirjoitukseenne on harhaanjohtavaa. Itse ihmettelen suuresti alkuperäisten kirjoittajien luottamusta heidän löytämänsä datan yksioikoisuudesta ja siitä, että historian muilla muuttujilla ei olisi ollut sen suurempaa merkitystä asioiden kanssa. Erityisesti näin, kun kyseessä olevien alueiden historia on ollut monien vastoinkäymisten ja usein myös hirmutekojen värittämä, mutta vaikka itse olenkin skeptinen heidän lopputulemiensa suhteen, ei minulla ole mitään sitä vastaan, että heidän tutkimustaan jaetaan laajemmalle suomalaiselle lukijakunnalle. En kuitenkaan koe, että jo artikkelin otsikossa mainittu siirtomaakauden vastuun minimointi edustaa sitä, mitä tutkijat ovat tutkineet ja mielestäni kirjoituksen sävy – joka on tietysti tulkinnanvarainen – johtaa siihen lopputulokseen, että siirtomaa-aika on nyt päästetty pannasta ja orjakauppiaitakin olivat pääasiassa afrikkalaiset itse. Sekään ei ole mielestäni alkuperäisen tiedeartikkelin hengessä ja on harmillista, että kaltaisenne merkittävä julkaisu lähtee asiaa näin harhaanjohtavasti kuvaamaan.
Terveisin, Mikko Kapanen
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En ole kuullut asiasta mitään viestin lähettämisen jälkeen; en oikein mitään odotakaan, mutta asia on kuitenkin mielestäni oleellinen erityisesti nykyisen kansalaiskeskustelun tason huomioon ottaen. Ymmärrän, että tutkimusta voi tulkita sen jälkeen kun se on julkaistu, mutta on aika harmillista, että näin spekulatiivisen tutkimuksen perusteella kirjoitetaan lehtijuttu, johon otetaan ulottuvuuksia, joita tutkimuksessa ei ole käsitelty ja sitten myydään sisältö näillä lisukkeillä. Myymisellä tarkoitan sitä verkossa tapahtuvaa klikkausta, jonka lehti itselleen haluaa ja otsikot ovat tässä tietysti keskeisessä osassa. Mielestäni siinä vapaalla tulkinnalla annetaan ammuksia niille, jotka jo valmiiksi mielellään vetoavat kovaan ääneen ties mihin etnisten eturyhmien pohdiskeluihin. Toisaalta, ihmisiähän me toimittajatkin vain olemme ja samalla tavalla, kun vaikka paperimiehet lähestymme maailmaa omien jo ennalta olemassa olevien ajatusmallien kautta.
Nykyään vaikuttaa muutenkin muodikkaalta tehdä muka-radikaaleja kannanottoja. Yhdysvalloissa tätä aikaa kutsutaan, pääsääntöisesti kai Obaman presidenttiyden johdosta, termillä ”post-racial”, mikä on tietenkin ihan täyttä höpöhöpöä, mutta vaikuttaa myös siltä, että osa suomalaisista kokee heidän itsensä elävän jonkinlaista rasismin jälkeistä tai yläpuolista aikaa. Enkä muuten puhu tässä Sarasvuosta – en ensinkään – mutta näyttää siltä, että monet kokevat itse tietävänsä, että eivät ole oman arvionsa mukaan rasisteja ja siksi heillä on oikeus sanoa asioita melko huolimattomasti ja provosoivasti. Saatan olla väärässä, mutta intuitiivisesti itse yhdistän tämän Hesarin jutun tähän ilmiöön.
Siirtomaa-aika oli millä tahansa mittarilla katsottuna melkoista rosvousta. Sen tuntuu moni hahmottavan, mutta kyllä Franz Fanon -vainaalla olisi Suomessakin sarkaa näiden kokemusten psykologisten vaikutusten selittämisessä. Alueet, joista tutkimuksessa puhutaan, ovat käyneet läpi paljon myös orjakauppa-ajan jälkeen, ja vaikka tutkimus osoittaa korrelaatioita, jää se hataraksi lopullisen syy- ja seuraussuhteen todistamisessa. Varmaa on kuitenkin se, ettei tutkimus siirtomaa-ajasta kerro. Voit tarkastaa asian jos et usko minua.
Lopuksi vielä Al Jazeeran dokumenttiohjelma siirtomaa-ajan ja kylmän sodan vaikutuksista Afrikan mantereellla. Se on mielenkiintoinen kokonaisuus vaikka unohtaakin Arabi-maailman osuuden Afrikan historiassa. Jostainhan se Islamkin on maanosaan tullut, mutta se on aiheena toinen.
Perussuomalaiset (PS) chairman, Timo Soini, claimed on BBC’s HARDtalk that his party doesn’t have a strand of racism because there were only “one or two [racist] outbursts” in the past. Only one or two?! Try a long and disgraceful list of racist outbursts, criminal convictions and shameful denials Mr. Soini.
The HARDtalk interview with Stephen Sackur doesn’t leave us without doubt: Soini and the PS are a breeding ground for intolerance and racism.
The PS chairman has made similar denials in the past: In December 2011 he said there are only “one, two or three” racists in the party. In April 2011, he claimed to journalists with a poker face there were no racists in the PS.
How can Soini claim the above and get away with it in Finland? For how long can he continue to play the good-cop role of the PS?
The rise of the PS doesn’t say anything pretty about ourselves as a society. Some factors that helped the PS to become one of Finland’s largest parties were the complacency of other political parties and of ours as well to the anti-EU, anti-immigration and anti-Islam party as a social phenomenon.
Another reason why Soini can get away with his ludicrous claims and denials is because most of us don’t want to believe them. How can a small and noble country that defended itself against the former Soviet Union in the Winter War, house so much prejudice, racism and hatred to become a political force?
Here’s a sobering fact: If we don’t challenge the cancer of intolerance presently taking root in Finland, it will end up consuming us. Remaining silent about this social ill is giving it the green light to continue spreading in our society.
The HARDtalk interview reinforced what Migrant Tales has been saying all along: Intolerance in general, our approval of prejudice and of the PS in particular, are poisoning Finland.
Finally Perussuomalaiset (PS) chairman, Timo Soini, has met his match Wednesday on the BBC’s HARDtalk. The Finnish media should take notes on how BBC journalist Stephen Sackur doesn’t let Soini off the hook when it comes to racism. In a short part of the interview, Saucker reveals Soini and the PS for what they are: a sham and a party that treats racism with kid gloves.
The last time that Soini got thrown a good question was not by Finnish journalists but by high school students in Järvenpää during the presidential election.
My favorite question by Sackur to Soini: “Is there a strand of racism inside your party?”
Soini: “No. I’m a Catholic Christian by definition, I cannot be a racist.”
Sackur: “I’m not sure that would convince everyone listening to this interview. Is there a strand of racism inside your party?”
Soini: “No I don’t hate anybody, nobody is hated by the Finns Party…Of course there are one or two outbursts but we have 19% out of people voting for us…If there are some individuals or even some MPs you cannot personally be in charge.”
Sackur: “You’re a leader. That’s your job. ”
Soini: “That is my job I’m not a kindergarten [teacher]…”
Sackur: “You have 39 MPs and you are saying it’s simply impossible to ensure that none come up with a racist statement?”
And a little later on Saucker brings up PS MP Teuvo Hakkarainen and his use of the n-word in Finland which is “completely unacceptable and racist.”
Soini: “I said [to Hakkarainen] don’t use that kind of [racist] language.”
Sackur: “Why didn’t you fire him?”
Soini: “Why should I?”
Saucker: “Because if people use that sort of completely derogatory word towards people of a different race it suggests that they are racist.”
Soini: “Yes, but he hasn’t said he’s a racist and I don’t believe he is a racist.”
Sackur: “So if you use that kind of language, inflammatory language, then deny you’re a racist, that’s ok.”
Soini: “That’s not ok . You should be improving in your behavior.”
Perussuomalaiset (PS) chairman, Timo Soini, said on BBC’s HARDTalk that the five-year ordeal that lead to a Supreme Court ruling against PS MP Jussi Halla-aho for inciting ethnic hatred was enough punishment, according to YLE. Soini had promised previously to sack any member of the party if they were sentenced by a court for hate speech.
“He’s been in purgatory for five years,” Soini said of Halla-aho. “In my opinion it’s hard-enough punishment.”
Certainly Soini doesn’t want to get rid of Halla-aho because that would be costly for the party. Since the PS MP was voted to parliament thanks to hate speech, he can now move to phase two: put into action his plans, which include spreading suspicion and making life as difficult as possible for immigrants in Finland.
The BBC asked if Soini believed he had passed the peak of his popularity.
”Everything is possible,” he said. “I’ve been in parliament for ten years. In that respect, I’m a pretty tough guy because I do what I believe in.”
According to YLE, Soini was asked about the Slovak National Party, which belongs, like the PS, to the xenophobic and right-wing populist Europe of Freedom & Democracy group in the European Parliament. It’s leader, Jan Slota, stated that “The Hungarians are a cancer in the body of the Slovak nation” and that the only homosexual he’d accept is one in the closet.
In Soini’s usual style, he didn’t answer the question. He said that when the party won the election in 2011, the Swedish media had called the PS leader “the plague.”
“How does that stand for Swedish values?” he said.
The HARDTalk show can only be viewed in the U.K.
On the BBC website, it introduces Soini in the following manner: writes: “Europe’s prolonged economic crisis has prompted a populist backlash against the powers that be. In Finland, the EU’s prosperous northern outpost, the big beneficiary has been Timo Soini, leader of the Eurosceptic, nationalist party long known as the True Finns. He wants to see the Eurozone dismantled, immigration curbed, traditional values restored. Critics have labelled the party xenophobic – is this the angry politics of European disintegration?”
Here’s another interview that Soini gave to CNBC on Finland’s membership in the European Union.
It is surprising that a country like Finland, which claims to be a Nordic democracy, we see so much opposition to gays not only from anti-immigration parties like the Perussuomalaiset (PS), but from other ones as well like the National Coalition Party.
PS MP Mika Niikko, a fierce opponent of gay rights, echoed on Helsingin Sanomat what other PS politicians think about homosexuality.
”I made a question that if homosexuality was as normal as people want us to understand, why must this fact be hidden from the employer…” he said.
For some reason, Niikko believes that employers should know their worker’s sexual preference.
It’s nothing surprising that an anti-immigration party like the PS houses anti-gay sentiment as we have seen from MP James Hirvisaari and MP Pentti Oinonen, who refused to go to the annual December 6 independence day reception because there were gay couples.
Even if Christian Democrat (KD) Interior Minister P’ivi Räsänen may appear to voice the greatest objection in government to gays rights and marriage by claiming on a TV show that homosexuality to be a sin, she’s not alone.
One of the conditions for the KD to be in government was that gay marriage would not be brought up or promoted.
MP Anne Holmlund of the National Coalition Party and former interior minister appears to be against gay rights as well. She has reportedly sabotaged a petition as chairman of the legal committee to debate and legalize gay marriage.
It’s important to note that these types of MPs and their parties that oppose gay marriage are a reflection of the general intolerance that is raising its head and gripping Finland. Approving gay marriage would not only benefit such couples but have a positive effect on all minorities.
Advancing tolerance is good for ALL minorities. Promoting or maintaining intolerance is a bad matter for minorities.
MPs that opposes gay marriage are most likely to oppose the rights of immigrants and are most likely against cultural diversity.
I read a fascinating story on YLE in English about a former undocumented immigrant in Finland, Edgar Ortega of Mexico. He’s a true survivor. Ortega would clean construction sites, distribute pizza adverts and engage in other work before he got a residence permit.
Ortega made 4-5 euros an hour as an undocumented immigrant, according to him.
“Yes, it was difficult,” he was quoted as saying on YLE in English. “When I got married and went for interviews with the police, I was asked many, many questions over several days. It was a little bit like a psychological test.”
He works today for Veolia bus company in Espoo.
If many matters are distorted in the ongoing debate on immigration, immigrants and our ever-growing cultural diversity, there are some politicians and journalists who blame these newcomers for taking jobs and lowering salaries.
It should be remembered, however, that immigrants want to get paid the same wages and have the same rights as other workers. They may work for lower prices like Ortega, but this is due to the employer who is exploiting them.
Unions in this country should take steps to educate and protect immigrant workers in Finland so they won’t be exploited by greedy companies.
It’s a positive matter that YLE uses on the story the term undocumented as opposed to illegal immigrant.
There’s been a big debate in the United States about which term is correct.
On a New York Times article on the growing Hispanic population of California, Scott Baugh, Republican chairman of Orange County, doesn’t use the term illegal immigrant.
“To constantly refer to undocumented immigrants as illegals is very hostile and self-righteous,” he said. “Let’s point out that while crossing the border without documents is illegal, a federal misdemeanor, being in this country as an immigrant isn’t a criminal act.”
The Republican Party has paid a high price with voters in California because it has been identified with anti-immigration legislation. Orange County is the most conservative county in California.
The first undocumented immigrant I ever met in Finland was in the 1980s. He was working for one of Helsinki’s first Mexican restaurants, Mexicana. The cook from Mexico complained about the low pay, long hours and that he had to sleep in the kitchen.
According to the police, there are between 2,000 and 4,000 undocumented immigrants residing in Finland.
Who are those modern-day eugenicists breathing life back into this disgraced pseudo-science whose aim was to create a master white race by wiping out other ones? If we look at Europe and the Nordic region today, we can find many politicians with the same nineteenth-century agenda but in a different context.
Some may rightfully argue that eugenics is long dead. True, but what hasn’t died is racism that manifests itself in new forms.
Suomalaisuuden liitto, or the Association of Finnish Culture and Identity, is one of many eugenicist-spirited associations in Finland that want to keep Finland white.
They are present as well in anti-immigration right-wing populist parties like the Danish People’s Party, Sweden Democrats and Progress Party of Norway. While these types of modern-day eugenicists can be found throughout Europe in parties like Golden Dawn of Greece, Hungary’s Jobbik and the National Front of France, their message is the same: We must keep our country white.
What these anti-immigration and xenophobic groups haven’t told us yet is how they plan to keep their countries’ white. Is it only a matter of time when they’ll begin drafting legislation to deport Muslims and other visible minorities to where they came from? Think of the consequences to our democracy and way of life if we permit this type of hatred to get the better of us.
When I moved to Finland permanently in December 1978, the first matter that surprised me was prejudice. It seemed that the only contact some Finns had with blacks was through Archie Bunker’s TV series. Finns were not only prejudiced to outsiders but placed labels on themselves as well.
If Finns housed such views of themselves, one can only imagine how they saw non-Finns like blacks and Southern Europeans.
The same idea, that we are being invaded by criminals, was evident in Finland’s immigration policy. Finland got its first Aliens Act in 1983, about 66 years after independence. Immigrants had no rights before the Act and could be held indefinitely and deported by the police without a fair trial.
The answer to how some Finns saw foreigners can be found in popular culture and in Irwin Mutakuono ja lakupelle (Mudfaces and n-clowns). The lyrics were written by Veikko Salmi.
Another racist hit by Irwin Goodman was Marcello Macaroni. The song was sung as well by Esa Pakarinen, a Finnish movie star.
If you check out former song on YouTube, it has over 1.2 million hits.
In Saami mythology there’s a large-but-not-too-bright monster called Staalo, which was made from a log, lichen and a few incantations. If we look at the recent rise of intolerance in Finland and Europe, social media has breathed life back to many Staalo-like political Frankensteins.
Staalo is a monster found in Saami mythology. Source: Tajukangas.
In the case of Finland, you need a political party with some credibility among voters, like the Perussuomalaiset (PS), to ensure success that your Frankenstein will work.
One political Frankenstein creation of social media is PS MP James Hirvisaari, who is so hard up for publicity these days that he seeks publicity in the tabloids by raising issues like fecal skid marks found on the toilet bowls of parliament.
Letting off the hook other parties in Finland by blaming only the PS would be too simple. You can find these types of political Frankensteins in all of the parties. None probably have so many as the PS.
Dutch football master Edgar Davids wrote about racism in a recent column. He compared such people to sheep without backbone.
Racism exists because still too many people don’t take it seriously. Such people rarely see matters from the victims’ point of view but from their white comfort zones.
Writes Davids: ”How can you know what racism is like if you have never experienced it? It’s very difficult to imagine.”
When more people start raising their voices by saying no to this social illness, matters will begin to change.