Citat:
Ursprungligen postat av
Clodius
Du är okunnig. Assimilering är om inte regel så åtminstone mycket vanligt förekommande. Exempel: i latinamerika är ofta en övervägande del av befolningen mestiser. Ett blandfolk av spanjorer och indianer.
Att spanjorer och portugiser rasblandade något förbannat i Latinamerika berodde på att de i början inte tog med sig några egna kvinnor dit; de hade nog hellre tagit vita kvinnor om de hade kunnat göra det. De flesta latinamerikanska länder är helt bisarrt våldsamma och inte bara har de ihjäl varandra, utan de torterar varandra till döds på de mest bestialiska sätt man kan föreställa sig. Det är inte speciellt trevligt att bli flådd levande, bränd levande, spetsad på en påle eller dränkt i syra.
Här har du en fyra dagar gammal artikel från den brittiska vänstertidningen The Guardian som påtalar att Latinamerika leder mordligan (det har förvisso blivit bättre på vissa håll med åren tack vare hårdare tag från polis och militär på kontinenten) och att de flesta som mördas är just rasblandade eller svarta:
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/may/06/murder-map-latin-america-leads-world-key-cities-buck-deadly-trend
Citat:
Ursprungligen postat av Jonathan Watts
Latin America may be the most murderous continent on Earth, but huge improvements in public safety have been achieved in several major cities, according to a new homicide map of the world that is being launched this week.
Several metropolises that were once bywords for violent death – such as Medellín, Bogotá, São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro – have seen murder rate declines of more than 60% over the past two decades thanks to improved living standards, better education, decelerating urbanisation and more effective policing, say the researchers behind the Homicide Monitor.
But while overall figures are falling, the map reveals that murders are stubbornly concentrated in poor communities, and
the victims are mostly young – usually black or mixed-race – men.
[...]
The map reveals that a third of the world’s 450,000 murders each year occur in Central and South America and the Caribbean, though the region is home to less than a tenth of the population. Fourteen of the top 20 countries in a ranking of murder rates are in Latin America.
The countries with highest death rates in relation to number of inhabitants are Honduras, El Salvador and Venezuela.
Excluding war zones, Brazil has the most murders overall, with 56,337 homicides in 2012, the most recent year with figures for all countries.
While the figures theoretically means a person is 25 times more likely to be murdered in Brazil than in the UK, the detailed mapping of trends and murder “hot spots” shows the risks for most people are falling.
Media reports ahead of the Rio 2016 Olympics have made much of Brazil’s deadly crime problem.
But according to Robert Muggah, the Canadian founder of the Igarapé Institute,
the data shows that murder victims in Brazil are more likely to be young black men than rich foreign tourists.
“Violence is not evenly distributed around the world, much less in Brazil. It tends to be highly concentrated,” said Muggah. “The perception in many cities that everyone is equally at risk is flat-out wrong. In many US cities, for example, less than 5% of street addresses account for 75% of violence. In Bogotá, just 2% of street addresses are where 98% of homicides occur.”
He noted that
the urban zones most susceptible to sudden outbreaks of violence are usually fast-growing, poorly regulated areas, often with high population densities and large numbers of new arrivals. Unlike longer-established downtown neighbourhoods,
these communities are often a low priority for local governments and police chiefs.
[...]
Killer facts
- An average of 450,000 people die of homicide around the world each year, with a global average of 6.7 murders per 100,000 inhabitants.
- At least 78% of victims around the world are male, and the proportion rises to 85% in Latin America and Caribbean countries.
- Less than one tenth (8%) of the world’s population lives in Latin America and the Caribbean, but the region accounts for roughly one-third (33%) of the world’s homicide cases.
- When measured by homicide rate, 14 of the 20 most dangerous countries in the world are located in Latin America and the Caribbean.
- The most dangerous cities in Latin America and the Caribbean are located in Honduras (San Pedro Sula and Choloma), Mexico (Veracruz, Acapulco, Nuevo Laredo, Torreón), Belize, Brazil (Ananindeua and Maceió) and Colombia (Palmira).
- The safest country in Latin America and the Caribbean measured is Chile, with just 2.74 murders per 100,000 people in 2013. Only 10 countries in the region have homicide rates below 10. These include Chile, Cuba, Argentina, Suriname, Peru, Barbados, Uruguay, Dominica, Costa Rica and Paraguay.
^^ Vi får alltså veta att i områden där det råder dålig polisövervakning sker många mord och att det sker MYCKET färre mord i latinamerikanska länder som är totalitära kommunistiska diktaturer eller där det bor många vita, ljusare mestiser och nästanvita/castizos. Detta tyder på att rasifierade kroppar är ögontjänare: Så fort ordningsmakten inte finns på plats, passar de på att begå så många mord de kan.
Under en 48 timmar lång polisstrejk i staden Salvador (Adriana Lima kommer därifrån) i
den afrikanättlingstäta delstaten Bahia i nordöstra Brasilien så mördades 39 personer (två år innan artikeln publicerades (2014) så strejkade polisen i samma stad i tolv dagar vilket ledde till att 157 personer mördades):
http://www.geo.tv/article-144961-Brazil-police-strike-ends-after-looting-39-deaths
Citat:
Troops patrolled the World Cup host city of Salvador on Thursday after a deadly orgy of violence triggered by a police strike less than two months before thousands of fans descend on the coastal Brazilian metropolis for the football extravaganza.
Thirty-nine deaths and widespread looting of supermarkets, pharmacies and electronics stores were reported in a 48-hour crime wave, adding to concerns about Brazil's ability to deliver a safe World Cup.
State officials said Thursday police were back on duty after ending their industrial dispute, which got under way on Tuesday.
"The strike is now over," state government spokesman Isaac Jorge said, describing the death toll in the city as "well above normal, though not absurdly so."
Two years ago, 157 people died in a wave of violence after Bahia police went on strike for 12 days.
[...]
A Bahia state court declared the strike illegal and imposed a daily $22,000 fine against the union until the officers, who are demanding a pay increase and career plan improvements, returned to work.
[...]
But its violent reputation is based on a murder rate for Bahia state which soared by 400 percent between 2000 and 2010 to 41.1 murders per 100,000 inhabitants, according to Brazil's Applied Economics Research Institute.
Jorge indicated that authorities would meet some strikers' demands, including for better pay, although such measures are subject to approval by the state legislature.
Färre än 1 av 11 brott i Brasilien klaras upp:
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/may/06/ten-murders-in-five-hours-one-deadly-night-in-sao-paulos-dangerous-triangle
Citat:
When it comes to homicide “hot spots”, few can match the triangle of crime around the Jardim São Luiz district of southern São Paulo, which in March saw 15 shootings, 10 murders and five injuries in the space of just six hours.
While São Paulo – Latin America’s biggest city with 11.3 million people – has seen a dramatic improvement in murder rates over the past 15 years, São Luiz is among several areas on the periphery of the megalopolis where violence remains a grave problem.
Reliable crime statistics are hard to come by in this fast-growing area, which is a two-hour commute from the city centre. Last year, police reports suggest that 129 murders, 199 rapes and thousands of muggings or assaults took place within the three main districts in the area – Campo Limpo, Capão Redondo and Parque Santo Antônio.
Residents are no strangers to violent crime, but even they were horrified by the wave of killings that took place a few hours either side of midnight on 6-7 March this year.
[...]
The perpetrators are unlikely to be brought to justice. Fewer than one in 11 crimes is solved in Brazil.
Citat:
Det fanns under medeltid en ganska omfattade afrikans invandring till portugall. De assimilerades inom några generationer.
Som jag har förstått det så är negerpåbråt bland portugiser ganska litet: Bland
vissa portugiser kan det
uppgå till 5%. Dock så har jag fått uppfattningen att portugiser är något rasblandningsvänligare än spanjorer. Det katolska Spanien införde på medeltiden raslagar i form av
Limpieza de sangre. Spanjorer har också i genomsnitt 2-3 punkter högre IQ än portugiser.
[Källa]
Att få slippa allt detta våld, kaos och misär som rasblandade samhällen ger upphov till är anledning till att Svenskarnas parti och Nordiska motståndsrörelsen vill se ett helvitt Sverige och Norden (och förlängning Europa) i framtiden.