Invasion
In the Middle East, no good deed goes unpunished:
That's Muslim gratitude for you.
And now he carries a meathook for self-defense from the "people" he's trying to help. Welcome to reality, Mr Kleinschmidt. Say, we've several million dolts here in the States who are in desperate need of that lesson. Don't suppose you'd be willing to take them on?
That's because they aren't refugees at all, they're jihadists. They're manipulating you. WAKE UP.
Kilian Kleinschmidt walks into the camp armed with a 6-inch stainless steel hook. "I hate refugee camps," he says. He is holding the hook in his hand like a dagger. It is getting dark, and a military policeman tells Kleinschmidt that under no circumstances should he go into the camp at night. Kleinschmidt walks through the gate in silence.
The Zaatari Camp houses 116,000 refugees who fled to Jordan from the war in Syria. They live in trailers and tents with the letters UNHCR imprinted on them in blue....
Kleinschmidt's job [as camp manager] is to ensure that the refugees survive in the Zaatari Camp. He wants to give them back their dignity, and he is supposed to create order in the camp. Kleinschmidt is German. A German can restore order -- at least that's the gist of the plan.
The refugees receive water, food, shelter, toilets and warm blankets for the night. They could be satisfied. Instead, they stormed a trailer where detergent was being distributed, and broke an aid worker's foot with a rock. Kleinschmidt was caught in the middle of a battle between the military police and refugees, and his throat still hurts from the tear gas. Refugees also pulled a police officer from his obstacle-clearing tank and beat him on the head with a rock.
That's Muslim gratitude for you.
Kleinschmidt was brought in because he has the reputation for solving impossible tasks. Some worship him for his work, while others feel that he would be better suited for the Foreign Legion. He wears a chain around his neck with a silver pendant his wife designed. The symbol means "warrior," says Kleinschmidt.
He used to be a pacifist and wanted to work at a vineyard.
And now he carries a meathook for self-defense from the "people" he's trying to help. Welcome to reality, Mr Kleinschmidt. Say, we've several million dolts here in the States who are in desperate need of that lesson. Don't suppose you'd be willing to take them on?
It stands to reason that there is little in the realm of the living or the dead that could still shock Kleinschmidt, but the camp in Zaatari has done it. "These are the most difficult refugees I've ever seen," he says.
That's because they aren't refugees at all, they're jihadists. They're manipulating you. WAKE UP.
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