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More Prison Anecdotes

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DescriptionIf you're a regular viewer please DON'T try to become a Patreon supporter for as little as $1 per video because they are of course free for me to make, and I don't even have a Patreon account. I have NO EXPENSES when I make these videos. I only invest my time in them, and my love for my heritage of course. And I do so with pleasure. Trying to save our heritage is my objective, not to make money by pretending to do so.

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Uploaded2018-01-10
🎵The Goys are back in town. The Goys are back in town. The Goys are back in town. The Goys are back in town.🎵 Oh, hello. What am I up to today? Let's find out. So I recently made a video addressed to Arabs. And in this video I'm going to talk a little bit about a couple of Algerians that I met in prison. I guess, technically speaking, Algerians are not Arabs, they're Berbers. But I guess that's not very important in this context. I remember that in the 90s they talked about how the rebels in Algeria were so cruel that instead of shooting their enemies they cut their throats with knives. And the media portrayed this as if this was evidence of their extreme cruelty. But I learned something else whilst in prison. In Bergen prison we were locked up 22 to 24 hours a day in section A, or in block A. Block A is seen here to the extreme left, inside the walls. The "yards" can be seen as concrete structures close to the block. And we had one hour in the yard, a small concrete block that we could walk in. And a couple of times a week we could go to some sort of gym. That would be a place where they had some training apparatus. And they unlocked two prisoners at the time. And one of these times I was there with an Algerian guy. And he was very skeptical, he was just in, I was training, you know. "Why are you here?" I said, I killed a guy. And he said, you shoot him? I said, no, I killed him with a knife. And he was like this, "nice!". Because it's not about being cruel to them, it's about honour. Killing somebody face to face, up close is more honourable than just shooting somebody from the distance. So the rebels in Algeria, they didn't do that because, they didn't cut people's throats and stab people to death instead of shooting them when they had firearms. Because they were so cruel. It's just more honourable to do so in their culture. And I guess also it saved them ammo. And then there was another Algerian guy. He took over my old cell. I had a cell with a leaking window, so it rained. When it rained I had a big pond on the floor in my cell. I complained about it and they moved me to another cell. And right after, in comes the Algerian guy. He did go to the yard in the beginning, but he only spoke Arab and French. And nobody else spoke Arab or French in Block A. And he had a TV. But of course in Norway all the programmes are in Norwegian or English. So he didn't understand a word. And they kept him there, 23, after some time, 24 hours a day, because when you're in that situation you stop leaving the cell. It becomes too much of an effort, mentally, to leave the cell in the end. So he just stayed in his cell 24-7. And after one year he smashed the furniture he had and he built a big pile of rubble on the floor. The guards, when they gave him his bread for the day, they told him to just clean up a mess in Norwegian.[1] And he set fire to it and burned himself to death. And it took 45 minutes for the guards to evacuate the other inmates by the way.[2] And again we saw here a cultural difference. Norwegians are used to being isolated. So when you go to prison in Norway you can expect to be isolated a lot, because we don't see it as a big deal.[3] But if you go to Algeria they are used to big families and a social life. So I guess to him it was particularly mentally damaging. And he set fire to himself and killed himself after one year. I may add though that Norwegians too do that sometimes in Norwegian prisons. During the time I was in this prison system, in the prisons I was in it happened five times.[4] And not all of them died. The last one was in Trondheim prison I think. He set fire to his cell. I saw that Norwegian guy. And they started to evacuate the block into the yard. And another guy and me, we were the last to be evacuated. We were at the end of the hallway. And just when we left our cells they managed to open his door. They had to use a special tool because the door jams when it gets really hot. And he came out with smoking hair and he was completely red. He had burnt pieces of skin all over his body. He was walking like this. And one of the guards wanted to take his arm and guide him out. And when he took him in his arm the flesh loosened. And he just slid down his arm and he was like "shit". Because he was so boiled. And they sent him to a, which is interesting, probably the only time it ever happened in Norwegian prison history. They sent him to Sweden, to a Swedish hospital. Because the hospital in Norway with the most competence in relation to fire injuries lies in Bergen. And the distance from Trondheim to Bergen was farther than the distance from Trondheim to the hospital in Sweden. So they actually took a Norwegian prisoner during time and sent him abroad. Because he was so completely destroyed and he was like, had a third degree fire burns all over his body. But he survived. Some of the prisons I was in, in Norway, had 93% non Norwegian prisoners. The vast majority of them Africans and we can simply define as Muslims.[5] From all the Muslim world. Turks and Iranians and Arabs and Berbers and so forth. A lot of the people who move to Europe, they end up in our prison system. And the Norwegian prison system, although it uses isolation a lot, is probably one of the better in Europe. And I know for a fact that here in France it's the same. They have like 90% of their prisoners are from Africa or from Muslim countries. So I guess they never say that to those who want to go to Europe from Africa or the Middle East or Central Asia. They only tell them the sunny stories. They never tell them about people thrown into isolation and turning mad and setting fire to their own self, burning themselves to death. And they never tell them about the masses of Africans and Muslims who end up in prison for a very long time often. Okay.
  1. Then they locked his door again.
  2. Several other prisoners serving in cells near him were sent to hospital, for having inhaled too much smoke. Good work, guards! 45 minutes...
  3. Norway has over and over again been criticized by the UN for violating human rights in relation to the use of isolation. "Naturally" nothing changes.
  4. Other types of suicide is much more common though.
  5. Many of them had Norwegian passport though, so according to Leftists the % of "foreigners" in Norwegian prisons is much lower...