Posted on 02/03/2022 11:24:01 AM PST by Jan_Sobieski
The large town of Ostfildern in the district of Esslingen near Stuttgart in Germany issued a “general decree” on January 26, 2022, according to which peaceful walkers can now also be shot if they take part in protests against the leftwing government's Corona measures.
In order to ensure that the ban on assembly in Germany is observed, the use of direct coercion, i.e. physical violence or the use of weapons, have been ordered. After weighing up the conflicting interests, this is “proportionate and necessary” because there are no other means that would discourage potential anti-vaccine participants from walking, the decree states.
This death penalty was imposed and signed by SPD Mayor Christof Bolay (54) on January 26, 2022 and came into effect on January 28. It is unclear whether and how the municipal council was involved in his decision. To date, there have been no large anti-vaccine walks in this insignificant town with around 30 000 inhabitants. The highest number of strolling participants seems to have been less than 150 people.
The quality of leadership raises eyebrows
The Socialist Bolay was never in the Bundeswehr, so he has no weapons training. In fact, the militant mayor from Ostfildern does not appear to have any professional qualifications. Nevertheless, he has threatened armed violence.
The governing leftist clique from Stuttgart shares Bolay’s convictions, where the former Maoist Winfried Kretschmann serves as the Green chief of Baden-Württemberg with the toughest Corona measures. Only the courts and other federal states have managed to slow down Kretschmann’s vaccine fever. The state’s opposition CDU Interior Minister Thomas Strobl, the son-in-law of ex-Bundestag President Schäuble, is however also a jab fanatic.
The current German “elite” has been described as a kakistocracy, a government run by the worst, least qualified, and most unscrupulous citizens…
(Excerpt) Read more at freewestmedia.com ...
Sorry, Mr. Vigilanteman, but a few bits in your map might not be correct.
You see, Stuttgart had been taken on the 22nd of April by the Free French forces, while the Americans took the eastern suburbs in the same days.
However, as Stuttgart was supposed to be in the US zone of occupation, the French ceded it to the US army on the 5th of July.
The final line of demarcation between both zones was, however, really formed by the present-day Autobahn 8.
Sorry, my bad :-)
Nobody does authoritarian like the Germans. Imagine the 20th Century without Germans.
Once the Germans were all warlike and mean
But that couldn’t happen again
We taught them a lesson in 1918
And they’ve hardly bothered us since then
-Tom Lehrer
Who did nazi this coming?
Gentlemen,
in a sense you are both correct. On one side, feuds between nobles were not unheard of, like “infightings” (is that proper English?) between the ruling class, but OTOH:
My countrymen were regarded as “obedient” by one French observer in the Middle Ages, because, more often than not, conflicts between different social classes were usually solved by negotiation and compromise, not bloodshed.
There would have little to be gained from the latter, since in medieval society everybody depended on everybody else:
- the peasants on the nobles who defended them (medieval knights were, in fact, something like a warrior caste),
- the nobles and the Church on the peasants to provide for them,
- and every layman depended on the Church for spiritual guidance and erudition (most teachers and savants of the time were clerics).
This society was not called “Domus Dei”, the house of God, without a reason: the term “society” did not appear until the 1700s, iirc.
You’re repeating yourself again with your poetry and your memes.
I think, anybody on this forum knows that, apparently, you hate my people indisciminately - and me personally, I suppose. I regret this very much.
Clearly yes, as they wouldn’t be tyrants otherwise.
Very interesting posts! Thank you
You are very welcome. Thank you for your kind words, too :-)
Coming soon to America?
We hate you more!
surname,Boley....this guy isn't even German,
judging from his surname, info on the internet!
He's a commie Englishman who thinks he's chosen to rule the wogs!
You can see how Bolay families moved over time by selecting different census years. The Bolay family name was found in the USA, the UK, and Canada between 1880 and 1920. The most Bolay families were found in the USA in 1920. In 1880 there was 1 Bolay family living in Indiana. This was about 50% of all the recorded Bolay's in the USA. Indiana and 1 other state had the highest population of Bolay families in 1880. Use census records and voter lists to see where families with the Bolay surname lived. Within census records, you can often find information like name of household members, ages, birthplaces, residences, and occupations.
If it wasn’t the Germans, it would have been the French, or Italians, or Russians. The USA is going down the same road…
Sounds familiar…
Interesting,,,speaking of moot points...I know this old German guy who describes how when he was a teenager, the SS came to his village and were looking for kids to fight to stop the allied advance from the west. He and a lot of others hid out in the hills (Odenwald) and resisted the fanatic freaks. Would be nice to have a map of those!
Good one!
Very interesting thoughts, sir, but I’m afraid that in this case, this mayor is most probably of German heritage :-)
You see, there are some surnames in both English and German, which are relatively similar. Furthermore, there are quite a few Bolay families to be found in the Stuttgart region, among them a clockmaker and an entrepreneur.
In German, the name is also pronounced somewhat differently than in English. It sounds like: ˈboːlaɪ̯.
The name is derived from the personal name of a late Roman martyr named Pelagius of Constance, who was referred to as “Sant Bolai” in late medieval vernacular (i.e. non-literary) German. His relics have found their way to Constance, which is situated in Southwestern Germany as well, like Stuttgart.
Maybe the English version of this last name traces back to the same saint; that would explain the similarity in both languages :-)
That’s what I’m afraid of, too. We’re being faced with a very special kind of authoritanism, which, alas, has been spreading all over the West like a plague of the mind :-(
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