Paul Belien has some comments on the ongoing situation in England involving Simone Clarke the leading ballerina at the English National Ballet. Ms. Clarke was recently outed by the far left-wing newspaper The Guardian as a member of the BNP, a political party which worries about the uncontrolled immigration into the UK of islamist militants, rising crime rates and confiscatory taxes.
Mr. Belien compares Simone Clarke to Katharina Blum the heroine of the Heinrich Böll novel The Lost Honor of Katharina Blum:
. . . In the story the reporter, Werner Tötges, works for Die Zeitung, a right-wing mass circulation paper. Tötges deliberately ruins the life of Katharina Blum, a divorced housewife, who has met Ludwig Götten, a bank robber on the run from the police.
Katharina is innocent. She does not know who Götten, whom she bumped into at a carnival party, really is. Nevertheless, since Götten has escaped the law, Tötges concocts a story depicting Katharina as Götten’s accomplice. The journalist tracks down her friends and family, including her ex-husband, and publishes a wild story in which Katharina Blum is depicted as a fervent communist and an accomplice of Götten.
In order to set the record straight, Katharina agrees to grant Tötges an interview. The journalist, however, distorts her story to inform his readers how “cold and calculating” she is and to cast suspicion on her socialist father and brother. Die Zeitung crushes Katharina and her family completely, causing the death of her sick mother. When finally Tötges forces his way into Katharina’s home and proposes to let her off the hook if they have sex together, she ends the ordeal by shooting him, aware that her life has been utterly destroyed.
I very highly recomend going over and reading Mr. Belien's entire post. Europe is growing progressively less free on an almost daily basis. The fact is that they are an ally to the United States in name only and will soon not even be that.
Thursday, January 04, 2007
The lynching continues
Posted by Lemuel Calhoon at 7:29 PM
Labels: Europe, Simone Clarke, The Brussels Journal
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