"We're talking about terrorism carried out in the name of Islam, by Muslims, and justified using their holy scripture. But apparently it's got nothing to do with Islam. Well, I'm sorry, but just because every Muslim doesn't support it doesn't mean it's not Islamic." - Pat Condell
Tuesday, May 31, 2011
Barack Obama, Bill Ayers, Bernardine Dohrn & Rashid Khalidi
See also:
Pro-Palestinian-in-Chief
Seminar in Shamelessness
In Obama’s Hyde Park, It’s All in the Family
The L.A. Times Suppresses Obama’s Khalidi Bash Tape
William Ayers' forgotten communist manifesto: Prairie Fire
The Company He Keeps
_____
Sunday, March 28, 2010
Homegrown jihad in the United States
A report of Channel 4 on homegrown jihad in the United States:
Video via Vlad Tepes.
See also:
Homegrown Jihad in Arkansas and Ohio
Little Rock Shooting Suspect Joins Growing List of Muslim Converts Accused of Targeting U.S.
Confronting the Reality of Homegrown Jihadist Terror in 2009
Desperate (Muslim) Housewives
For the Love of Islam
Nidal Hasan’s Ominous Islam
Political Correctness Claims 13 Lives at Fort Hood
Pentagon on Fort Hood: Jihad? What Jihad?
American AQ agent in Yemen worked at nuclear plants
Barack Obama is vulnerable on terror – and he knows it
_____
Wednesday, November 25, 2009
FBI's political correctness with regard to jihadist attack at Fort Hood
Two days ago, The Wallstreet Journal published an article about the FBI's political correctness with regard to army psychiatrist Nidal Malik Hasan, the radical Muslim who murdered and wounded fellow-soldiers at Fort Hood. Here's a quote:
For the FBI, religion remains a much too sensitive subject, much more so than the threatening ideologies of yesteryear. Imagine if Maj. Hasan had been an officer during the Cold War, regularly expressing his sympathy for the Soviet Union and American criminality against the working man. Imagine him writing to a KGB front organization espousing socialist solidarity. The major would have been surrounded by counterintelligence officers.
Christopher Hitchens' latest column at Slate is also worth reading.
_____