Monday, November 24, 2008

Following Toben's release, Jewish thought police seek to universalize "hate speech" laws

http://www.rense.com/general84/respp.htmThought Police Push To Universal Hate Laws Respond To Toben VictoryBy Rev. Ted Pike11-24-8 Last Thursday in London, the case against Dr. Frederick Toben was dropped by German and European Union prosecutors. Toben was charged with using the internet to question the numbers and methods of the Holocaust, and online "anti-Semitism." This week European thought police are fighting back from this defeat. The Council of Europe announced it will no longer tolerate the disuniformity in European hate law enforcement which resulted in Toben's freedom. The Council of Europe wants to create a hate crimes system in which all European states will share identical definitions, legal procedures and punishments. No Council of Europe country will be free from anti-hate and holocaust denial laws. The Jerusalem Post reports:
"The Council of Europe will consider over the next few years a new convention meant to standardize and unify anti-prejudice legislation throughout the Council's member states. "The European Framework Convention on Promoting Tolerance and Combating Intolerance was presented in the Capital European Parliament last week. Its architects hope it will be adopted by the 47-member Council of Europe" ("Europe considers unifying anti-prejudice legislation" Jerusalem Post, November 16, 2008)
European "anti-hate" laws were created primarily by the Jewish Anti-Defamation League (ADL Europe). ADL also orchestrated creation of Europe's 56 member-nation hate crimes gestapo, The Organization for Security and Cooperation in European (OSCE), and its internet watchdog arm, The International Network Against Cyberhate (INACH). ADL's hate laws are used to silence conservative and traditional religious viewpoints in these nations. Christians who oppose homosexuality are particularly targeted. It is thus not surprising that this latest effort to unify hate crimes enforcement is the work of anti-Christian supremacist Jews. Jerusalem Post says, "The Convention was developed by The European Council on Tolerance and Reconciliation (ECTR), a group formed at the initiative of the European Jewish Congress . . ." (emphasis mine) Uniting Europe's Hate Laws with America ADL's next step is to persuade the United States to conform to such internationally enforced hate crime laws. That is exactly what ADL worked toward this past week in Washington, D.C., where it cosponsored The Global Summit on Internet Hate in the French Embassy. At a kick-off press conference, INACH chair Chris Wolf, US Sen. Ben Cardin, US State Dept. Ambassador David A. Gross and ADL head Abe Foxman (Wolf, Cardin and Foxman are Jewish) said internet technologies allow unprecedented proliferation of hate groups worldwide. Wolf's comments included:
"The virus of hate certainly has infected those technologies. The internet continues to be exploited by people who espouse hate in different ways - anti-Semites, Holocaust deniers, racists, homophobes, and terrorists. The emergence of new internet technologies and their adoption by online haters is far more pernicious than the static website that most of us have been focusing on for years. Much more problematic is the sudden and rapidly increasing deployment of Web 2.0 technology...On YouTube, for example, there are thousands of hate videos that are uploaded with messages of racism, anti-Semitism, homophobia, and intolerance toward minorities...for every site that we can report and get taken down, there is at least one other site to replace it and often many others." At the summit, Brian Marcus, an analyst for The Department of Homeland Security, said, "extremists and terrorists are just like the other users of electronic media. They adapt to the new ways and technologies with incredible speed." Marcus warned that "these emerging medium give scale, scope, and speed and new dimension to terrorism and extremism unlike anything we have seen in the past."
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