This is a commentary and expresses the writer’s own views.
“Why do some Norwegians hate their own people?” was the original headline, but I realised that “hate” is a strong word that ought to be used with caution. Nevertheless, I actually cannot think of an alternative when I see what is unfolding in my homeland on the other side of the Atlantic.
Contempt is also a strong word, and I have long thought that certain parts of the Norwegian population must despise their own countrymen and women. The elites in the media, politics and elsewhere who look down on Ola and Kari in the streets of Norway.
Those who put immigrants first, while simultaneously looking disparagingly upon a large part of the population that stands in the way of their multicultural dream. We are labelled racist and xenophobic, roughly as depicted in the dreadful drawing of the six “imaginary” racist men who rampaged in Bergen.
Lately, I have also come to the conclusion that my people are treated as third-class citizens in their own country. Not even second-class citizens, as I previously thought. For first come the immigrants in Norway, especially those from non-Western countries, then comes the “suffering” world, and last comes the ethnically Norwegian population.
It may sound extreme to call Norwegians third-class citizens, but as I see it, that is the citizen who is pushed all the way down to the bottom of the social or legal hierarchy. The overwhelming majority of the people, who carry all the burdens and pay all the taxes, yet nevertheless stand at the bottom of the ranking ladder. The small Jewish population is there together with us. And do not dare say anything about it.
But back to hatred and contempt for one’s own people. The mistreatment of a 17-year-old blåruss and the Hamse Ali case in the same city are a perfect example of this. While all of Bergen and the rest of the tyranny of goodness in Norway marched in solidarity against racism for Hamse Ali, a victim of a brutal act is practically treated as though he were in the wrong place at the wrong time. And now the four bullies have been made into the victims.
I can only conclude that it must come from a deeply rooted hatred and a profound contempt for one’s own people. The 17-year-old boy is yet another sacrifice on the altar of their multicultural dream.
There is a lynch mentality, many now say. Not against the boy who was brutally beaten, but against the four perpetrators. I have not watched the video myself, because I simply cannot bear it; it is too disturbing. But the still images are more than enough. If one looks closely at the image above, number 2 has his fist clenched for combat, while the boy was probably already lying down. They all appear to be in lynching mode, enjoying the moment.
It was Norgesdemokratene that shared the image on Facebook. I have blurred parts of their faces, because I do not want Document to get into trouble. The defence counsel for one of the violent offenders is said to have stated that the identification of his client will be reported to the police.
That is how wrongheaded and inverted things have become in Norway. Imagine if the six fictional Bergen men in the Hamse Ali case had been real and caught on video brutally beating the compulsive liar. Would anyone have been reported for identifying them? Never in the world! They would probably have been named “Bergen Citizen of the Year”.
The Bergen incident is unfortunately not the only proof that some Norwegians despise their own. For several decades, Norwegians have tolerated almost anything so that the Left can live out its multicultural dream.
More than one hundred Norwegians have been killed by their new compatriots, thousands are victims of immigrant crime, their lives ruined forever. Villages, urban areas and cities have been transformed into multicultural enclaves, while anyone who dares to speak out is ostracised from “good” society.
Asylum reception centres with violent and psychotic asylum seekers are placed in peaceful neighbourhoods, while the local population lives in fear. We need not go further back than Rødbergodden on Senja a couple of months ago.
Our country is being Islamised, churches are becoming mosques, while female politicians parade around in hijabs to show solidarity with a dogma that would kill them if they apostatised. Meanwhile, politicians visit mosques on Liberation Day and pray with people who think only of their own interests.
Then there is the latest news that almost 80 per cent of all social assistance goes to non-Western immigrants, paid for by the third-class citizens. And those who despise us want us to keep silent about absolutely everything, and tacitly accept it. Because we are worth nothing to them.
We could continue indefinitely. The list of unjust treatment against us Norwegians is endless. As you all know and have witnessed for decades.
I think the main image illustrates present-day Norway well and how Norwegians are treated. The six primitive, violent, ape-like Nazis hunting immigrants are us, Norway’s third-class citizens. And the four immigrants beating up a 17-year-old while he lies on the ground are the privileged victims who, in the eyes of the tyrants of goodness, can do no wrong.
My family is large and spread across the whole of Norway. Lillehammer, Oslo, Harstad, Trondheim, Svolvær, Hallingdal and Drammen and even more places. From little children to youths, adults and the elderly. I worry about them every single day and think “what if it were one of them?”.
I value my people infinitely highly and simply cannot understand that anyone sides with four foreign bullies when one of our own is subjected to blind violence while lying on the ground. These are strong words, but it cannot be anything other than a deep-seated hatred that breeds such conduct.
Norway’s Jussie Smollett: Bergen men’s reputations hit in hoax case
