
This article was originally published in Danish on October 15, 2017.
After many attempts, the government and the DPP have come together to introduce a mask ban that also affects motorcyclists and people wearing balaclavas on a cold winter day. No one has the courage to say that we don’t want burqas and similar garments in Danish public spaces, but that’s what it’s really about. In this connection, we have been through an endless discussion about freedom of speech and “Danish values”.
A burka, niqab or similar is a spit in the eye of the Danish population. If you can even call wearing a certain piece of clothing an expression, it is an expression of contempt against Danish women, and as such, it should really fall under section 266b1 of the Danish Penal Code. It’s also hilarious that the very people who want the burqa to be classified as an expression are the same people who defend the headscarf by saying that it’s just a piece of clothing. What is it: a piece of clothing or an expression?
As for “Danish values”, these only make sense in a homogeneous society where everyone automatically respects them, precisely because we have common Danish values. Here we are up against creatures who do not share our values, but feed on them.
We are very much against a burqa ban. It’s just treating symptoms and is unlikely to be enforced. If you want to get rid of the burqa, all you have to do is cut off all public benefits to people who wear such costumes, on the grounds that they are not available for work. This applies to most Muslim costumes.
However, what we object to is not the burqa as such – it is what is underneath the burqa. We want a ban on Muslims, not on their clothes! They must all be removed from the Danish people as one!
The only mitigating factor in the coming Mohammedan takeover of power in this country will be that a large number of female, traitorous parliamentary politicians and other hysterical women whose utterances are an insult to human intelligence will disappear in a burqa and be sent to a Middle Eastern harem. Johanne, Pernille, Zenia, Josephine, etc. in a burka: what a delight!
Povl H. Riis-Knudsen
Translated by means of AI
- Section 266 b of the Danish Penal Code, popularly known as the racism section or the discrimination section. The clause is often maliciously used by the system to crack down on the free speech of patriots. ↩︎
