Category Archives: World Politics

POTUS Oversight

Obama must think the American people have short term memories.

During his two terms:
• He promised to close Guantanamo Bay Detention camp, a prison holding facility operated by the US Military. It still remains open.
• He was personally responsible for the approval of 423 drone strikes, killing up to 116 unarmed civilians and injuring close to 200 children
• His administration is to blame for mismanagement of the attacks on Benghazi that killed US Ambassador to Libya, Chris Stevens.
• Operation Fast and Furious allowed more than 2,000 illegal firearms into the US by way of Mexico.
• 162 mass murders between 2009-2015, and 18 incidents involving 8 or more deaths, compared to 20 mass murders under the Bush administration.

Purple Revolution

Many people wondered (myself included) during Hillary Clinton’s concession speech, why her and Bill had decided to both wear purple. Was it coincidence, perhaps to show unity for Donald Trump (blue for the Democratic Party, and red for the Republicans), or perhaps it’s just one of her favourite colours.

Reuters/Carlos Barria
rtx2sv15

Well, wonder no more. The Purple Revolution has announced that it’s planning their first event, the Million Women March. A tad sexist, perhaps, but no one else seems to mind.

It came as no surprise to me, to find that the initiative is being funded by the Clintons and their campaign contributing friend George Soros, of the Black Lives Matter movement. There goal, is to unite the country (against Trump), which isn’t very democratic, and isn’t very grassroots either.

The revolution is aimed to help “Americans to Come Together in Hundreds Peaceful Gatherings of Solidarity, Resistance, and Resolve Following Election Results

Hundreds of Americans, dozens of organizations to gather peacefully outside the White House and in cities and towns nationwide to take a continued stand against misogyny, racism, Islamophobia, and xenophobia.

Tonight, thousands of Americans will come together at hundreds of peaceful gatherings in cities and towns across the nation, including outside the White House, following the results of Tuesday’s presidential election.

The gatherings – organized by MoveOn.org and allies – will affirm a continued rejection of Donald Trump’s bigotry, xenophobia, Islamophobia, and misogyny and demonstrate our resolve to fight together for the America we still believe is possible.

Within two hours of the call-to-action, MoveOn members had created more than 200 gatherings nationwide, with the number continuing to grow on Wednesday afternoon.”

But through the eyes of us here at Media Watch, it just seems to be another ploy to divide the country. The goal here, is to foment the country and overthrow the Trump era government.

We’ll be keeping close attention to these protests in the coming days, weeks, months and reporting on things from an unbiased perspective.

Eight Questions With… Part II

I was planning to hold off on this post until Friday, but the election has become such a hot topic, I honestly couldn’t wait. With anti-Trump protests across the country, I wanted to get the perspective of one of the first bloggers to appear on my radar.

Back in 2005/06, he made a regular appearances on Matthew Good‘s political blog. He is by all accounts, one of the earliest bloggers of my recollection and still maintains posts on his Busblog site. He’s also a lifelong Cubs fan, so I already liked him a lot.

Last night, on a whim, I decided to reach out and see if he’d join me in a Q and A session. Thankfully, he obliged.

His answers are warm, candid and as always, refreshingly entertaining. 

I’m incredibly excited to welcome, Tony Pierce.

Photo credit, Tony’s mom (pictured here at legendary Cub announcer Harry Caray’s grave)
tonypiercecaraysgrave

Q: Firstly, this election is obviously a hot button topic. I did a bit of research, and from your posts, I’m deducing you’re a fan of Obama’s style of politics. How do you think the government would’ve been shaped, had Hillary been elected last night?

Tony Pierce: I have no idea how the government would have been shaped if vote of the majority of the United States had been counted instead of this antiquated Electoral College nonsense. When longtime Senators like John McCain said that the GOP would have blocked anything that she sent to them, you take him at his word. So it may have been years of unprofessional gridlock, or perhaps she would have been able to figure out how to work with the Republicans. One reason I liked Obama, was because he had very (little) cooperation from the Right – unprecedented cockblocking – and yet his list of accomplishments are impressive.

Q: As a Canadian (I live in Ottawa, currently) we only get a small overview of things, how is the overall mood in California, a typically Democratic leaning state?

TP: I can’t speak for all of California – from what I understand there are as many people here as there are in all of Canada – but in my little circle, people were incredibly glum and judging from the protests in NYC, Chicago, Seattle, Portland and downtown LA, the feeling is mutual.

Q: How do you think Bernie Sanders would’ve faired in comparison to Hillary Clinton, had he been selected as the Democratic candidate instead?

TP: Bernie was a fascinating candidate. I gave him some money and there’s a cute poster of his image over my bed. So I am biased, probably, when I think he would have brought out more young people. Hillary has had haters ever since she said on 60 Minutes in 1992 that if Bill (Clinton) gets elected she wouldn’t be the type of first lady who sits around baking cookies and having tea parties. Bernie doesn’t have that sort of hate. But he is a Socialist and a Jew, which would have made other people uptight.

Q: What do you think the future (politically, or otherwise) holds for Hillary Clinton?

TP: I think Hillary will be a very popular public speaker where she will make a lot of money. Hopefully she will write a book about what it was like running against a game show host with no political experience. Although maybe she wants to just forget the whole nightmare.

Q: How can we rationalize the popular vote vs Electorals, when majority of people voted for Hillary, but based on key states (Florida, Ohio, Michigan, etc) Trump won? Is the election process flawed, in your opinion. And if so, what changes would you implement given the opportunity to improve the system.?

TP: I hate the Electoral College. People in California, for example, don’t feel the urgency to vote because the state overwhelmingly votes for Democrats, therefore the only thing you can say you really affected are local props and local politicians. The news refuses to instill this fascinating fact: 7 of the last GOP presidential candidates lost the popular vote. That includes our soon-to-be Commander in Chief. How is that a democracy? How does that inspire people to spend hours of their day to stand in line and cast a ballot. My vote here in Hollywood was far less powerful than someone’s in Florida or Ohio. How is that fair? It would be very easy to get rid of the Electoral College, the states just need to change their laws. If the majority do it, then all will be well. (http://www.nationalpopularvote.com/)

Q: What do you think will be Barack Obama’s greatest achievement once he leaves office?

TP: There’s a lot to choose from. Killing (Osama) Bin Laden was pretty good. Obamacare was a great first step to health care reform. Normalizing Cuba was pretty key. Getting us out of a nasty Recession was something that the entire globe benefited from because all markets freaked out when the US market was tanking. But to me his biggest accomplishment was to show that a black man could do the job well and do it with class, dignity and intelligence. He is the Jackie Robinson of US Presidents and he was one of our all time best ones. And the FLOTUS is a Top 10 FLOTUS. Any one who considers themselves a minority can be inspired by the Obamas showing that not only could they do it as well as their white counterparts, but in many ways they did it better.

Q: Alternately, what was his biggest failure?

TP: Obama’s biggest failure was he waited too long to start campaigning for Hillary. He, Michelle, Beyonce and Springsteen should have been on a month-long tour getting out the vote. Now with early voting it’s somewhat worthless to have a huge concert a day before Election Day.

Q: And finally, a non political question. As a life long Detroit Tigers fan (my hometown, London, was the farm team while I was growing up), and having been too young to remember when they won their last World Series in 1984, what sort of wisdom/reassurance can you impart after seeing your Cubs finally win a World Series?

TP: The lesson of the Cubs winning the World Series is better told from the perspective of Cleveland. No one was talking about the Indians at the beginning of the season. Everyone was talking about Baltimore, NY and Toronto in the AL and Cleveland overcame injuries and picked up Andrew Miller and dominated in the playoffs. Then they took the Cubs to 7 games and extra innings. The Cubs were loaded with talent, the manager of the year, hot rookies, a Cy Young and an MVP. And still it took them extra innings and a rain delay to win it all. So to me, Detroit can rest assured knowing they don’t have to be America’s team to win it all, they just need a good manager, a few good pitchers and a(n) offence that can score 5 runs a game. Sadly the Cubs will be super dominant over the next 5 years so good luck getting past them in October. 🙂

Election Rundown 2016

Unthinkable: https://www.thestar.com/news/world/uselection/2016/11/09/donald-trump-wins-america-elects-an-unthinkable-president.html?campaign_id=A100sd

That’s how the Toronto Star described it. Unthinkable.

Credit: David Zalubowski/APtrumppres

I was out most of Tuesday night. Unavoidable. But just after 7pm, I received a text saying Trump had wrapped up Indiana and Kentucky, while Hillary was claiming a win in Vermont. Trump’s support was proving to be stronger than earlier predictions had indicated.

He jumped out to an early 19 to 3 lead. But the night was young. Plenty of time for the Clinton camp to mount a comeback, all but assured of locking up California (55 electoral votes), and very likely to win Pennsylvania’s 20 electoral votes too.

Just after 9pm, Eastern time, another text came in. “Florida too close to call. Trump has closed the gap in Ohio. He still leads Florida, but they claim strong Democratic districts haven’t been counted.”

Just before 11pm, “Ohio is confirmed.” It was starting to sink in.

And then another, “New York Times has a Trump Presidency at > (greater than) 95%. Multiple networks are calling Florida for Trump.”

Shortly after 11pm as I was heading home, another text came in. “They haven’t called Pennsylvania, but she’s leading.”

I knew Pennsylvania would probably decide it. 20 votes wasn’t huge, but it has long been a Democratic stronghold. Surely the tide would roll if Clinton’s camp could lockup the Keystone state.

Trump had just wrapped up Indiana, Utah, and North Carolina, 11, 6 and 3, respectively.

Then, just before 11:30pm, Canada’s Immigration website crashed.

Shortly after 11:30, Fox called Wisconsin for Trump. 232 to 209. Then Trump won Florida. ABC called it first. 30,000 vote lead in Michigan. Trump won Georgia, putting him to 254 of a possible 270 needed to clinch. Trump mounted a 90,000 vote lead in Wisconsin.

Then the impossible happened. He pulled ahead in Pennsylvania.

Just before 2am, New York Times announced Trump had won Pennsylvania. It was all over.

Reports were rolling in that Clinton campaign chair John Podesta (Yes, that John Podesta), was urging supporters at campaign headquarters in New York, to go home. Tweets were saying that they’d turned off election coverage after Trump locked up Pennsylvania and that there would be no concession speech.

Just before 2:30 am, while CNN was still trying to count district votes for a “Miracle comeback”, Associated Press announced that Donald J. Trump was elected 45th President of the United States of America.

Eight Questions with… Part I

In a segment I’m calling ‘Eight Questions with…’, I’ll be asking politically involved people eight questions in a Q and A style segment. I won’t be censoring their answers at all, so for these particular posts, reader discretion is advised.

antonnewcombe

This afternoon, over email, I had the opportunity to interview Anton Newcombe, an American singer-songwriter, producer, and founder of the music group, The Brian Jonestown Massacre.

Q: You’re from California originally, so I assume you still keep an eye on American politics. But as a resident of Berlin, you’re also exposed to the EU (European Union) and Angela Merkel. How do you find the two governments parallel and what are your thoughts on the geopolitics of how these two countries’ governments operate?

Anton Newcombe: Ok, first lets deal with the German government and how it was created. After WW2 the Americans with help from the English set out to build a system that combined the best of the UK and USA, in fact it was the Americans calling all the shots and I have to be honest, they treated it from the perspective like the founding fathers and improved on the American system.

In my passport it says”Let us raise a banner that wise men can improve.” Basically it doesn’t say, “Ok, we’re number one.” Fuck it. Anyway, the post war boffins did a great job, because it’s more or less a parliament type government. You have an election and if you don’t win out right, you form a coalition, and if you mess up, the other people can say we are leaving. Then it’s time to have another election, etc. (to) address that.

Now this would be a problem in America right now, because we have this insane ‘shoot yourself in the foot’ politics over every subject and in Germany people are more rational even over very unpopular topics like letting 1.5 million refugees in your country.
Now, Merkel is a very interesting person. She’s dealt with unification politics and economics…and she has to deal with Russia…and that’s one 500 pound gorilla.
She has to deal with the legacy and relations with Israel (for instance Germany designed and built 6 attack subs for Israel.) She has to deal with America, and Germany is the defacto power house engine on many levels for Europe and 500 million people…it’s a tightrope.
On the one hand we all know Germany’s past. On the other hand it takes a certain type to see clearly the geopolitics of this century.
Geopolitics – gosh, I will really have to qualify so many topics I touch on for this.

In a nut shell. Sit back, this will take some time.

There is an economic side, to what end, it’s debatable a new world system? How can every country owe money to who? There is the grand chess game? (here he’s referring to Zbigniew Brzezinski‘s 1997 novel The Grand Chessboard) Ever hear of that term? You should google it.
There is the Caspian Sea and the honey pot of oil. There is Israel and safety and the truth about the Leviathan field…that the gas goes from Egypt to Turkey. There is Russia, China, Iran, The Shia, Isma ‘ilisim… proxy wars, India and generating power from a natural gas line that never gets finished. South China sea..Brexit…
where should we start?

All of this leads to an awareness that USA politics and geo-politics are not left to the whimsy of the mob.

Q: You touched on the new world order. Do you see Germany’s place in that sort of position as a figurehead or more of a tag along party along with another superpower like the United States or Britain?

AN: Well New World Order means one thing to an Alex jones fan and another to George Bush…or maybe not but the truth is nationalism as we know it is on it’s way out from a Neo-Conservative perspective and the goal is economic unions and federalism etc.

The political landscape changed because I truly believe one of the weapons America uses quiet effectively is economic and there was a crash in 2008 at the very same time the US dollar was sinking and China, quite aggressively positioning its own currency among a basket. At that point several things happened one of them iceland… but also Western QE (Quantitive easing) i.e., printing fake money on a large scale.

The migrant issue only affects me specifically in that it became a hot button issue in Europe and the UK, now Brexit. But people are in fear and rightly so. They should fear what will happen if there are no plans to deal with the fact that a billion people’s brightest idea is to move to Switzerland. The other part, the displaced by war? That’s another subject and it’s two fold because refugees are a tool of war.

Q: You’ve always been outspoken on issues you believe in. Living in Europe since 2007, how has the political landscape changed, and how does the recent migrant situation affect your day to day life (if at all) in Germany?

AN: The world is leaning more to the right. I don’t find Hillary Clinton to be all that different than George Bush to be honest… it’s only the tone that people take, and a few small gestures that come and go. However the tolerance levels in society for many things are changing quite fast…

If you are asking about Germany or Europe, it’s polarized between people that want to be forward thinking and people that are saying hold on, letting a million people from another culture just roll on in when they are completely against our way of life is a bad idea and I fear what is happening along with terrorism.
Merkel took an interesting stand, but it sets in play an interesting thing because the borders are now not as free and we are on the edge of a real war.
Believe it or not they are pushing Putin to the limit knowing that he will have to react or get removed from power and they believe they can win quick and he will be removed from power. At the same time the ngo’s (Non-governmental organization)  with the colour revolutions, whip up internal dissent in the countries like Russia and China in hopes that an internal change happens…but we are looking at a conflit in the South China sea and one over here on multi-fronts and one in the Persian gulf and smaller ones in Africa all at once…pushing…pushing towards a goal.
But my day to day, I am a hermit…I ride the trains…go to my studio..do my thing.
The news is like an alarm clock for me. I keep waking up in the night, I see the time, I go back to sleep because I know I have an hour, 30 minutes whatever.

Q: How have Berliners reacted to the flow of refugees, and where do you see the country’s politics/laws changing (if at all) as a result of that influx?

AN: There are right wing marches, and Gegen Nazi marches to protest them. Merkel’s party got 12 percent. The ultra right (Alternative for Germany, or AfD party for short) 14 percent in the city election so that shows you something, it’s a coalition government but thats a big change and its vocal – this is the most Liberal and progressive.

Q: During your recent tour, you were offering tickets/vinyl records to people who donated to Oxfam and Médecins Sans Frontières (Doctors without Borders). What sort of voice/platform have social media sites like twitter and Facebook given you to inform people of causes you believe in?

AN: Nothing specifically that isn’t out there for anyone else to use, but it occurred to me that I could raffle off tickets and things by asking people to show proof of donation – it takes nothing for me to give away two tickets to a sold out show and all of our shows are sold out – I must have raised £50k ($82,428) or more and I gave people a choice. But my goal was to get other people to do it – no money touched my hands – it would take Beyoncé nothing and she would raise millions.

Museums, sports, theatre any event / people could do this and it was my idea that sadly never caught on.

Q: You recently played a string of shows in Canada (including a show I attended in Montréal this past May), after being banned for comments made on stage. How do you feel about government regulations/red tape or work permits required to perform in this country?

AN: I love the people of Canada and I have great hope as many do for the new leader and a fresh perspective in hard times. I see no reason for any government to make it hard for artists to share culture.

For someone to assume that I am a negative instead of a positive is a serious mistake. I am a very creative person and I do a lot to create and foster Canadian content internationally including Tess Parks, (a) Toronto native and an extremely talented woman.

I reacted when someone threw a glass bottle at my face and it shattered glass into my eyes and without seeing, without having any way of knowing gender affiliation I spit out a racial and a homosexual slur at once. Now, it was a set up because no cameras were allowed and that person should have been arrested for gbh (Grevious bodily harm) – furthermore I’m not ashamed that I said those words at that second because I wasn’t using them correctly or directly.

In my mind, (I) basically spit out the most offensive thing, be it conscious or unconscious as a reaction. In hindsight could I have reacted different? Yes. I could have attacked the person with a mic stand. Or said nothing, but here we are and I have that to think about it. (It) says less about me, or a word, than a person that would go to a concert with a friend to specifically wound someone for a reaction to film.
Basically mother fuck them. Judge me as you wish, I can live with it.

I’m fine with Canada. I even like Stompin’ Tom (Connors), haha.

Q: What sort of voice do ordinary citizens have compared to mainstream media, who are allegedly complicit in picking sides within this current US and other past election? And do you think sites like wikileaks have a future in providing a polarizing information for those who seek it?

AN: You have to remember that we cannot want for other people what they do not want for themselves. I honestly think that most people no longer have any need for the truth and that slumber is self preservation. It’s not like anyone has to go to any great amount of effort to hypnotize anyone because people need the rest.

Wikileaks? I have mixed feelings about. The big drop. We should talk about that.
But really, most people have a computer more powerful than these ones that put a man on the moon…in their pocket and what are they doing on it?
Nothing.

Satanic reverses…. they call it a smart phone but it’s not really being used to its full potiential – equals dumb phone.

Q: Finally, you recently released a new Brian Jonestown Massacre album called ‘Third World Pyramid.’ How would you describe this albums sound compared to previous albums? And do you have plans to tour North America (more specifically Canada) in 2017?

AN: I recorded 45 songs at once, wrote them one after another…but I knew immediately that there were at least two different things happening with me, one was that I solidified the old and the constant in me… Sun Ship is as fine of a song as I will ever write but it is in now way even the tip of who I am or what I can express in the full spectrum of awareness – the other grouping explores what I can be,what I might be, what could happen and there are some excellent things happening in this exploration – some of my best work again – so this second record coming in December is the punchline to Third World Pyramid –

I really hope I tour again. –
I love playing music. –
I could give a fuck about being a rock star.
I love creating this thing together with people – this music, these ideas.
This conversation – being real.

Weinergate part ii

U.S. Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton talks to staff members, including aide Huma Abedin, onboard her campaign plane in White Plains
REUTERS/Brian Snyder

News broke this morning that documents found on a computer shared by Huma Abedin and her estranged husband Anthony Weiner contained close to 650,000 new emails allegedly in a folder marked “Life Insurance.” Rumoured to include the 33,000 Hillary deleted.

Potential blackmail against the Clintons, should Hillary choose to throw Abedin under the bus?

My understanding, is that the Clinton top aide has been put in a tight spot. And here’s why:

A) If she doesn’t cooperate with the FBI on the findings on this shared laptop, she’ll likely be implicated, including Espionage in sharing classified documents sent from her Yahoo email account, and printed out for Hillary.

B) If she divorces her estranged husband, Anthony Weiner, he can be forced to testify against her.

Things get dicey, as the election looms. With just over a week to go in the elections, US 18 Code 2071 dictates that if found guilty, Hillary won’t be allowed to hold office in the United States government. Including, but not limited to President elect.

All in all, it should make for an interesting week ahead.

That whole Trump is like Hitler meme

This mornings article is in reference to this tweet: https://twitter.com/BrandMooreArt/status/780391058358280193 and also this one as well: https://twitter.com/mattgood/status/780412920689754112

I spend a lot of time on Twitter. Far more than I ever did on Facebook. And since joining in 2011, it’s been my go to for political news and updates from around the world. A veritable feed of any type of information I’m looking for from who won the Tigers game last night (12-0 Tigs over the Cleveland Indians), to Theo Walcott’s passing percentage v Chelsea (77%), to the amount of unarmed civilians Obama has droned since taking office (at least 314 since 2009).

But where there’s a wealth indisputable knowledge, there’s also conjecture and lunacy. There’s tightrope walking that fine line of Political Correctness that still allows hundreds of thousands of us a soapbox of our very own. And magazines like Medium to make sweeping statements that wind around and never really go anywhere.

As of this morning, I follow 604 different Twitter accounts. Most of them news conglomerates, politicians and a wide variety of graphic designers, whose posts help inspire me and see the design world from a different perspective. On Monday morning, a pair of tweets appeared in my timeline.

Firstly, this one:
092816a

It certainly caught my attention.

Hitler was a lot of things to a myriad of people. But no one can argue that with the help of German clothing designer Hugo Boss, he had an immense sense of style. The Feldgrau and Luftwaffe fashion is still part of every day wear over 80 years after. He also had some incredibly lofty ideas that made Germany a super power and a country feared by every neighbour within a one hundred mile radius of Berlin. The article, sadly, does nothing to prove it’s point for or against.

The second tweet, was by Canadian rock musician Matthew Good, someone I’ve known for well over 20 years, and whose politics have always been concise and well thought out yet, filled to the brim with a foreboding tinge that let’s you know exactly who he’s backing. Put mildly, he’s very Liberal.

092816b
I probably should’ve been more eloquent. I certainly could’ve been less biased as well. But what developed was an exchange over direct message that would compare former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger to a war mongering sociopath, while mostly overlooking the atrocities carried out by this regime. My point was, that if you kill one person, or you kill over 300, you’re still a criminal. And since Trump, to the best of my knowledge has done neither, that sets him apart.

Trump is different. He’s not a politician. He’s not beholden to anyone. I’m not an American, so it’s irrelevant really, but given the opportunity I’d throw my vote away on Libertarian candidate Gary Johnson, despite the fact that msm berated him for not knowing what Aleppo is.

That said, I can fully understand why someone would vote for Trump instead of a lying, conniving criminal like Hillary, who would likely sell out her own family and backstab her former cohorts at the State to have another chance of climbing those White House steps. She lied to congress, she covered up the planned kidnapping and eventual killing of an Ambassador, while her and Obama blamed it on a laughable propaganda film denouncing Mohammed.

Hitler had some truly terrible ideas when it came to ethnic cleansing, eugenics and racial purity. None of which I see in Trump. Frankly, Hillary’s win at all costs mentality is far more in line with the Third Reich, in my honest opinion.

 

The Skittle Controversy

This mornings entry was written in regards to this BBC post: http://trib.al/NwsGSRZ

A bowl of skittles – we’ve all seen the meme. One of them is allegedly poisonous, and by relation, the entire bowl could harm us. Is it an accurate analogy to the growing concern over the Syrian refugee crisis? Or perhaps a comparison that misses the boat (apologies in advance to those of you coming into this country illegally on rafts and load bearing vessels.)

It was revisited in August by Donald Trump Jr. the son of Republican hopeful Donald Trump on Conservative Joe Walsh’s radio show.

This morning by way of bbc.com, Denise Young, vice-president of corporate affairs for Wrigley America (the company that manufacturers the popular candy), had this to say: “Skittles are candy. Refugees are people.” Which was then followed shortly after by retweets on Twitter of refugees and the subheading “Not a skittle.”

Lost in all of this, is the discovery that a self admitted refugee has revealed himself as the originator of the photo, and that it was used without his permission, adding further insult to injury.

What can be learned from all this? For one, the media will go to great lengths to revisit futile attempts to cast candidates in a negative light to sway public opinion, leading up to the November election. And that people aren’t candy coated food. Well done bbc for this enlightening report.

The statement from Wrigley is perfectly timed to pull on the heart strings of voters, while Obama laid out a speech earlier in the week in his final address to UN diplomats urging them to “Open their borders to immigrants.” A move that has proven costly for the Merkel led Christian Democratics Party (CDU.)

Sources


http://www.express.co.uk/news/world/712750/President-Obama-UN-summit-speech-refugees-welcome

http://www.cnn.com/2016/09/20/politics/barack-obama-un-diplomacy/

http://qz.com/786261/germany-and-europes-migrant-crisis-in-a-rare-show-of-regret-angela-merkel-admits-she-lost-control-of-her-refugee-policy/

Tagged

The Curious Case of Eliezer Wiesel

By all acounts there are many discrepancies to the claims made by Eliezer “Elie” Wiesel. I have done my best to shed some light onto those events.

Eliezer “Elie” Wiesel KBE (born September 30, 1928) is a Romanian-born Jewish-American writer, professor, political activist and Nobel Laureate, who also claims to be a Holocaust survivor.

There’s a special place in hell for holocaust deniers. I assume the same exists for those lying about living through it.

For everything I’ve read, there will be a very special place for Eli Wiesel, who by all accounts has been lying about it for financial gain. If Mr Wiesel’s accounts were true in keeping with who he has identified himself as in concentration camp photos, he would be closer to 92. Not 85, as is listed on his Wikipedia page.

Added to that, people who were in concentration camps in Auschwitz don’t recognize him by photo.

For someone who called into question the motives of one Bernie Madoff, branding him an evil crook and a thief; Eli Wiesel’s actions leave a bitter taste in the mouths of all those who seek to separate lie from fiction.

A book written by Wiesel titled Night, also bares a striking resemblance to a Hungarian account of Auschwitz titled ‘The World Kept Silent’.

Eliezer Wiesel received a Nobel Peace prize in 1986 for his book “La Nuit”, which has since been translated and has sold millions of copies worldwide.