GeenStijl

GeenStijl announced on their website that they would bus people from all over the country to Rotterdam, where one of the cabinet parties was holding a convention.

[citation needed] Not long after this deal, Telegraaf sold their interest after having changed their mind, retaining ownership of the site Dumpert.

Both the editors and the readers of GeenStijl have invented a wide range of names to refer to immigrants to the Netherlands that are generally considered to be stereotypic and derisive.

They also use insulting words for right-wing people they believe to go over the mark though[2] and in recent years inappropriate reader comments are jorissed away (as they call censoring of posts by their mods – the best-known of these used the nickname "Joris van Loghausen").

[3] In combination with Weesie's network, who had been a reporter for the major Dutch newspaper de Telegraaf for more than 10 years, this has proven a successful formula.

In May 2006, internet service providers in Bonaire began boycotting GeenStijl after the blog had published secret and private documents of Bonairean public prosecutor Ernst Wesselius.

[7][8] In 2015 GeenStijl launched GeenPeil, a group which successfully campaigned to organise a referendum on the EU-Association Treaty with Ukraine.

Previous logo of GeenStijl