The EU Is Scared of Humor

  • 3 years ago
The EU Commission solicited a report on right-wing extremist's humour. The writers in charge were Maik Fielitz and Reem Ahmed of the Radicalisation Awareness Network RAN. It isn't quite clear how they define right-wing extremists, but their enumerations don't contain Islamists who, as the left is convinced, are 'conservatives' that, left to their own devices, would degrade any beautiful desert to a stinking free-market economy. We are no longer looking at 'backward-looking, stiff and formal' neo-Nazis, they say. But if it isn't about all these top-hat, tailcoat skinheads with baseball bats that are abundant in Europe, apparently, who are we looking at? Pepe, of course!

And we look at Saul Alinsky, a 'civil rights activist,' who wrote the 'renowned' book 'Rules for Radicals.' 'Rules for Radicals' proposes that humour can be used as a weapon. And while sneering does the trick for the left right now, Alinsky's idea was supposedly ripped from his innocent and harmless communist intentions and misappropriated to sinister internet memes.

sources:
https://ec.europa.eu/home-affairs/sites/default/files/what-we-do/networks/radicalisation_awareness_network/ran-papers/docs/ran_ad-hoc_pap_fre_humor_20210215_en.pdf
https://www.focus.de/politik/deutschland/allensbach-umfrage-mehrheit-der-deutschen-ueberzeugt-die-meinungsfreiheit-ist-in-gefahr_id_13403028.html

All thumbnail images from the following creative commons license sources:
[vdL] https://youtu.be/unl2SBxH9oo?t=179
{Bugs Bunny]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Bugs_Bunny.svg
[Duffy Duck]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Daffy_Duck.svg
[Roger Rabbit]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Roger-Rabbit.png

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