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Raw Story: Muslim-hating activist names Jon Stewart ‘most disgusting Jew on the planet’

Daily-Show-host-Jon-Stewart-on-CNN-on-Nov.-4-2014-CNN-800x430

Pamela Geller has mostly shriveled into irrelevance. Occasionally she bellows for attention by trying to top her last fit of crazy. Her most recent desperate plea for attention has her taking aim at the venerable Jon Stewart, describing him as “the most disgusting Jew on the planet.”

Wow. Geller sounds like an anti-Semite.

Raw Story, By Travis Gettys

An anti-Muslim conservative activist turned her attention to Jon Stewart and the generation he helped influence in an angry, poo-flinging column.

Pam Gellar suggested the Millennial Generation adopt as its symbol the smiling “poo” emoticon to symbolize what she believes is America’s moral decay.

She said in a column published Monday at World Net Daily that public schools had produced “goose-steppers like the Hitler Youth” who were violently imposing their “leftist/Islamic agenda.”

“Intellectually, young Americans are the most docile conformists, no matter how vocally and self-righteously they declare themselves free,” Gellar said.

She said American culture was “ugly as poo,” filled with gory television shows and violent, misogynist music – except for Pharrell’s upbeat hit, “Happy,” which she complained was used to protest police brutality during an Oscars performance.

“Happiness is a state of non-contradictory joy,” Gellar quoted from John Galt’s speech in Rand’s “Atlas Shrugged,” but she doesn’t recognize that quality in American culture.

“The left has worked so hard to make us miserable, and it has succeeded,” she sniffed.

“American traitor Edward Snowden got an Oscar; American hero Chris Kyle got the middle finger,” Gellar said. “Even the traitorous far-left journalist Glenn Greenwald got an Oscars shout-out. Of course Hollywood would reward vicious traitors. There was no way the Hollywood establishment was going to give an Oscar to Clint Eastwood after he so delightfully skewered Obama’s empty chair. And their disdain for Americanism and the military is infused in everything they churn out.”

She singled out “Daily Show” host Jon Stewart as particularly disdainful of America, after he mocked the standing ovation given Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu after his speech in Congress as the “longest blowjob a Jewish man has ever received.”

Gellar said Stewart should be given the “Most Disgusting Jew on the Planet Award.”

She continued, describing Stewart as a “vicious traitor, smug and self-righteous, (who) has long been working for the other side under the guise of comedy. Vile. Jon Stewart defines self-loathing Jew. But that’s not enough. He means to take us down with him.”

Read the entire article…

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    • Fred

      Ms. Geller is laughing all the way to the bank with the money she made from her books.

    • Capt. JB Hennessy

      That’s already happened three times, that is why they both confused.

    • Capt. JB Hennessy

      She has an inferiority complex the only man who finds her attractive is Robert Spencer and he hasn’t had an erection in decades. Not even if he goes to bed with a belly full of water does he wake up stiff.

    • Capt. JB Hennessy

      “And their disdain for Americanism and the military”

      I have disdain for the military. As a former soldier I can tell the military’s job is to take a perfectly healthy, intelligent and somewhat tolerable human being and destroy him/her. The military eradicates your personality before it even becomes a personality and gives you theirs which isn’t a personality but a blank stare.

      However the military is the greatest organization in the history of great organizations. You can wake up 05:00 hrs and shine your boots without even knowing it. That is how wonderful that organization is.

    • Jekyll

      Xir morse code version no doubt

    • Tanveer ¯_(ツ)_/¯ Khan

      – …. . -. / ..- … . / .- / — — .-. … . / -.-. — -.. . / – .-. .- -. … .-.. .- – — .-. –..– / ..-. — — .-..

    • Kataro Quasinzki

      But isn’t that true about other languages, including English with its dialects and accents? (Irish, Scottish, cockney, posh, etc) also Canada, Venezuela and Norway export oil too, yet no extreme censorship, virulent puritanism or ghoulish penology there?

    • HSkol

      Well, I guess that would technically be not speaking. It doesn’t even really seem to be an utterance – unless, that is, it’s somehow pronounceable.

    • George Carty

      I think other factors holding back the Arab world are diglossia (IIRC the dialects are as distant from fusHa as the Romance languages are from Latin) and the tremendously distorting influence of oil export revenues.

    • Kataro Quasinzki

      Many European languages are also more gendered too than, let’s say, English (that’s why I said that it’s not necessarily misogynistic) Das ist meine oma, das ist mein opa los camioneros, las terminas

    • Tanveer ¯_(ツ)_/¯ Khan

      … – — .–. / – .- .-.. -.- .. -. –. / – — / — .

    • George Carty

      Good point – if Semitic languages were the issue, then Israeli Jews would be more sexist than Iranians or Pakistanis (who speak Indo-European languages)

    • Kataro Quasinzki

      I think misogyny precedes – reversed causal chain – the more gendered language – which is not necessarily misogynistic (also everybody is oppressed there; it’s just that women are more so)

      You once mentioned cousin marriage and blood-bound clans, I think this is a major factor too. While Europeans for instance rallied only behind language, class and religion; Paternalism, jealousy, family honor, etc never really took hold (and they’re lucky for that)

      I think West Asia and Arabs generally sorely need a revolution of a seismic or even catastrophic scale. There’s a KSA progressive, Fozan al-Harbi, who summed it up nicely: “The problem is the swamp [of tyranny], we must drain it before worrying about the mosquito”.

      There’s simply a lot on their plate: 1) They occupy the center of the world’s land mass (very strategic, so they either be predators or preys, no middle ground) invaders and imperialists never gave them a time to take a breath.

      2) History isn’t on their side, there has never been an instance of extended and successive progressive rule; or even a lasting culture of hedonism on the popular level (e.g. Ancient Rome and Greece) hence, the authoritarian and puritannical order continued unabated. Modern political organization and adminstration (unions, courts, separtion of powers, etc) still remain challenging and even alien there.

      3) Also Arabs have no history of rooted and loyal bureaucrats – unlike India and present-day Iran – who love their countries and have less complex forms of identity; Arabs have always relied on wars of conquests (scavenging) and tribal loyalty to survive; once the modern world presented itself; it was simply too late to recover; powerful outside authoritarians – European colonists and Ottomans, not to mention the “discovery” of the Americas and the Cape of Good Hope that pretty much decimated Arabs’ once-superior prowess – were just more than they could reckon with; so local rulers found it much easier to align with or even serve those power players than tending to their homelands, which in turn, led to the deterioration of political thought and “healthy” nationalism; a crisis worsened by simultaneously fearing powerful outsiders while also relying on them for sustainability.

      Of course there’s more, but those in my view are the main causes of Arab strandedness and languishment.

    • Jekyll

      Thank You

    • Tanveer ¯_(ツ)_/¯ Khan

      I don’t know what the word “harresing”means but I will honour your request. We will never speak again.

    • George Carty

      What do you make of the argument that Middle Eastern cultures are so sexist because Semitic languages are more thoroughly gendered (in verb conjugations for example) than European ones?

    • Jekyll

      Please stop harresing me and just leave me alone.

Mehdi Hasan: How Islamic is Islamic State?

ISIS_Libya

A must read article. Mehdi Hasan touches upon key points in the ongoing discussion over the Atlantic article that argued ISIS was “very Islamic.”

By Mehdi Hasan, The New Statesman

It is difficult to forget the names, or the images, of James Foley, Steven Sotloff, David Haines, Alan Henning and Peter Kassig. The barbaric beheadings between August and November 2014, in cold blood and on camera, of these five jumpsuit-clad western hostages by the self-styled Islamic State, or Isis, provoked widespread outrage and condemnation.

However, we should also remember the name of Didier François, a French journalist who was held by Isis in Syria for ten months before being released in April 2014. François has since given us a rare insight into life inside what the Atlantic’s Graeme Wood, in a recent report for the magazine, has called the “hermit kingdom” of Isis, where “few have gone . . . and returned”. And it is an insight that threatens to turn the conventional wisdom about the world’s most fearsome terrorist organisation on its head.

“There was never really discussion about texts,” the French journalist told CNN’s Christiane Amanpour last month, referring to his captors. “It was not a religious discussion. It was a political discussion.”

According to François, “It was more hammering what they were believing than teaching us about the Quran. Because it has nothing to do with the Quran.” And the former hostage revealed to a startled Amanpour: “We didn’t even have the Quran. They didn’t want even to give us a Quran.”

The rise of Isis in Iraq and Syria has been a disaster for the public image of Islam – and a boon for the Islamophobia industry. Here, after all, is a group that calls itself Islamic State; that claims the support of Islamic texts to justify its medieval punishments, from the stoning of adulterers to the amputation of the hands of thieves; and that has a leader with a PhD in Islamic studies who declares himself to be a “caliph”, or ruler over all Muslims, and has even renamed himself in honour of the first Muslim caliph, Abu Bakr.

The consequences are, perhaps, as expected. In September 2014, a Zogby poll found that only 27 per cent of Americans had a favourable view of Islam – down from 35 per cent in 2010. By February 2015, more than a quarter of Americans (27 per cent) were telling the pollsters LifeWay Research that they believed that life under Isis rule “gives a true indication of what an Islamic society looks like”.

Yet what is much more worrying is that it isn’t just ill-informed, ignorant or bigoted members of the public who take such a view. “The reality is that the Islamic State is Islamic. Very Islamic,” wrote Wood in his widely read 10,000-word cover report (“What Isis really wants”) in the March issue of Atlantic, in which he argued, “The religion preached by its most ardent followers derives from coherent and even learned interpretations of Islam.”

Bernard Haykel of Princeton University, the only scholar of Islam whom Wood bothered to interview, described Muslims who considered Isis to be un-Islamic, or anti-Islamic, as “embarrassed and politically correct, with a cotton-candy view of their own religion”, and declared that the hand-choppers and throat-slitters of Isis “have just as much legitimacy” as any other Muslims, because Islam is “what Muslims do and how they interpret their texts”.

Many other analysts across the political spectrum agree and have denounced the Obama administration for refusing, in the words of the journalist-turned-terrorism-expert Peter Bergen, to make “the connection between Islamist terrorism and ultra-fundamentalist forms of Islam”. Writing on the CNN website in February, Bergen declared, “Isis may be a perversion of Islam, but Islamic it is.”

“Will it take the end of the world for Obama to recognise Isis as ‘Islamic’?” screamed a headline on the Daily Beast website in the same month. “Which will come first, flying cars and vacations to Mars, or a simple acknowledgment that beliefs guide behaviour and that certain religious ideas – jihad, martyrdom, blasphemy, apostasy – reliably lead to oppression and murder?” asked Sam Harris, the neuroscientist and high priest of the “New Atheism” movement.

So, is Isis a recognisably “Islamic” movement? Are Isis recruits motivated by religious fervour and faith?

The Analyst

“Our exploration of the intuitive psychologist’s shortcomings must start with his general tendency to overestimate the importance of personal or dispositional factors relative to environmental influences,” wrote the American social anthropologist Lee Ross in 1977.

It was Ross who coined the phrase “fundamental attribution error”, which refers to the phenomenon in which we place excessive emphasis on internal motivations to explain the behaviour of others, in any given situation, rather than considering the relevant external factors.

Nowhere is the fundamental attribution error more prevalent, suggests the forensic psychiatrist Marc Sageman, than in our navel-gazing analysis of wannabe terrorists and what does or doesn’t motivate them. “You attribute other people’s behaviour to internal motivations but your own to circumstances. ‘They’re attacking us and therefore we have to attack them.’” Yet, he tells me, we rarely do the reverse.

Few experts have done more to try to understand the mindset of the young men and women who aspire to join the blood-drenched ranks of groups such as Isis and al-Qaeda than Sageman. And few can match his qualifications, credentials or background. The 61-year-old, Polish-born psychiatrist and academic is a former CIA operations officer who was based in Pakistan in the late 1980s. There he worked closely with the Afghan mujahedin. He has since advised the New York City Police Department on counterterrorism issues, testified in front of the 9/11 Commission in Washington, DC, and, in his acclaimed works Understanding Terror Networks and Leaderless Jihad, closely analysed the biographies of several hundred terrorists.

Does he see religion as a useful analytical prism through which to view the rise of Isis and the process by which thousands of young people arrive in Syria and Iraq, ready to fight and die for the group?

“Religion has a role but it is a role of justification,” he tells me. “It’s not why they do this [or] why young people go there.”

Isis members, he says, are using religion to advance a political vision, rather than using politics to advance a religious vision. “To give themselves a bit more legitimacy, they use Islam as their justification. It’s not about religion, it’s about identity . . . You identify with the victims, [with] the guys being killed by your enemies.”

For converts to Islam in particular, he adds, “Identity is important to them. They have . . . invested a lot of their own efforts and identity to become this ‘Muslim’ and, because of this, identity is so important to them. They see other Muslims being slaughtered [and say], ‘I need to protect my community.’” (A recent study found that converts to Islam were involved in 31 per cent of Muslim terrorism convictions in the UK between 2001 and 2010.)

Sageman believes that it isn’t religious faith but, rather, a “sense of emotional and moral outrage” at what they see on their television screens or on YouTube that propels people from Portsmouth to Peshawar, from Berlin to Beirut, to head for war zones and to sign up for the so-called jihad. Today, he notes archly, “Orwell would be [considered as foreign fighter like] a jihadi,” referring to the writer’s involvement in the anti-fascist campaign during the Spanish civil war.

Religion, according to this view, plays a role not as a driver of behaviour but as a vehicle for outrage and, crucially, a marker of identity. Religion is important in the sense that it happens to “define your identity”, Sageman says, and not because you are “more pious than anybody else”. He invokes the political scientist Benedict Anderson’s conception of a nation state as an “imagined political community”, arguing that the “imagined community of Muslims” is what drives the terrorists, the allure of being members of – and defenders of – the ultimate “in-group”.

“You don’t have the most religious folks going there,” he points out. Isis fighters from the west, in particular, “tend to have rediscovered Islam as teenagers, or as converts”; they are angry, or even bored, young men in search of a call to arms and a thrilling cause. The Isis executioner Mohammed Emwazi, also known as “Jihadi John” – who was raised and educated in the UK – was described, for instance, by two British medics who met him at a Syrian hospital as “quiet but a bit of an adrenalin junkie”.

Sageman’s viewpoint should not really surprise us. Writing in his 2011 book The Black Banners: the Inside Story of 9/11 and the War Against al-Qaeda, the Lebanese-American former FBI agent Ali H Soufan, who led the bureau’s pre-9/11 investigation into al-Qaeda, observed: “When I first began interrogating al-Qaeda members, I found that while they could quote Bin Laden’s sayings by heart, I knew far more of the Quran than they did – and in fact some barely knew classical Arabic, the language of both the hadith and the Quran. An understanding of their thought process and the limits of their knowledge enabled me and my colleagues to use their claimed piousness against them.”

Three years earlier, in 2008, a classified briefing note on radicalisation, prepared by MI5’s behavioural science unit, was obtained by the Guardian. It revealed: “Far from being religious zealots, a large number of those involved in terrorism do not practise their faith regularly. Many lack religious literacy and could . . . be regarded as religious novices.” The MI5 analysts noted the disproportionate number of converts and the high propensity for “drug-taking, drinking alcohol and visiting prostitutes”. The newspaper claimed they concluded, “A well-established religious identity actually protects against violent radicalisation.”

As I have pointed out on these pages before, Mohammed Ahmed and Yusuf Sarwar, the two young British Muslim men from Birmingham who were convicted on terrorism charges in 2014 after travelling to fight in Syria, bought copies of Islam for Dummies and The Koran for Dummies from Amazon prior to their departure. Religious novices, indeed.

Sageman, the former CIA officer, says we have to locate terrorism and extremism in local conflicts rather than in grand or sweeping ideological narratives – the grievances and the anger come first, he argues, followed by the convenient and self-serving ideological justifications. For example, he says, the origins of Isis as a terror group lie not in this or that Islamic book or school of thought, but in the “slaughter of Sunnis in Iraq”. He reminds me how, in April 2013, when there was a peaceful Sunni demonstration asking the Shia-led Maliki government in Baghdad to reapportion to the various provinces what the government was getting in oil revenues, Iraqi security forces shot into the crowds. “That was the start of this [current] insurrection.”

Before that, it was the brutal, US-led occupation, under which Iraq became ground zero for suicide bombers from across the region and spurred the creation of new terrorist organisations, such as al-Qaeda in Iraq (AQI).

Isis is the “remnant” of AQI, Sageman adds. He believes that any analysis of the group and of the ongoing violence and chaos in Iraq that doesn’t take into account the long period of war, torture, occupation and sectarian cleansing is inadequate – and a convenient way of exonerating the west of any responsibility. “Without the invasion of Iraq, [Isis] would not exist. We created it by our presence there.”

Read the entire article…

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    • Amie

      Fake/orchestrated picture of ISIS killers. Look how tall they are in the photo? What are they, giants? Lol

    • 1DrM

      The only factual observation is that you are a sock puppet pedo high on feces again at hasbaRat central.

    • jkings

      Sageman believes that it isn’t religious faith but, rather, a “sense of emotional and moral outrage” at what they see on their television screens or on YouTube that propels people from Portsmouth to Peshawar, from Berlin to Beirut, to head for war zones and to sign up for the so-called jihad.” if this is true, why aren’t there more people going to fight ISIS? This article is a wash. As if so many of these extremist don’t believe in bringing about the end of the world with their efforts? As if they didn’t make a video about it? As if they didn’t explain why? It must be a very hard job trying to explain this away. TBH, my advice is, work on explaining the different sects of Islam that believe different things than you. I have come to learn more about some different ideas in Islam and, I have to say, they are very different. Why not coach us on the difference between 12ers and Muslims who don’t believe in bringing the world in an end asap? Just an idea.

    • Victoria

      It was Ross who coined the phrase “fundamental attribution error”, which refers to the phenomenon in which we place excessive emphasis on internal motivations to explain the behaviour of others, in any given situation, rather than considering the relevant external factors.

      Forensic psychiatrist Marc Sageman, “You attribute other people’s behaviour to internal motivations but your own to circumstances. ‘They’re attacking us and therefore we have to attack them.’” Yet, he tells me, we rarely do the reverse.”

      This distills the article for me. I see this repeatedly in islamophobes verbal attacks on Muslims.

    • 1DrM

      LoL! “israel” behaves “better then its neighbors”? You should have waited for April fools for that one.

    • cmyfe .

      Taqiyya?

      “Taqiyya holds a central place in Twelver Shi’a Islam (roughly 20% of Muslims) . This is sometimes explained by the minority position Shi’ites had under the political dominance of Sunni Muslims, requiring them to protect themselves through concealment and dissimulation.”

      What has that got to do with our discussion now? Are you a Sunni Muslim and think I am a Shi’a? Have you EVER done some real research into the words you use?

      I give evidence while you spill more crap.

      http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2014/08/19/Saudi-mufti-ISIS-is-enemy-No-1-of-Islam-.html

      Is there ANY basis left for your claim?

      Btw I can really prove that you are breathing dog piss as you type the rubbish.

    • cmyfe .

      Mr American’t please note the below; Grand Mufti of Saudi Arabia, all renowned scholars of Muslim world, Al Azhar University and vast majority of Muslims and institutions that would include many PhDs in Islamic Studies and the organisations awarding such honor REJECT ISIS and Baghdadi’s claim. As for Baghdadi, he may be your Caliph so go ahead and believe in him but the claim that he qualifies to be an Islamic Caliph is not one bit authentic. Other than holding a PhD there are also claims that he was trained by spy agencies and pictures of him clean shaven (haram!) with his daughters on a beach (in bikini!) have also been circulated – showing a different mindset to his current “Caliph” mode. As for your claim about ISIS, again you have no authority or credibility. It is actually more probable that you are breathing in dog piss while typing the rubbish.

    • American

      Again, accusing others of what they do themselves…

    • Lithium2006

      Thank you 1DrM, but you didn’t have to, any person with half a brain can see “American” is just another internet Islamophobic sewer rat just by reading one comment from him.

    • Lithium2006

      No, but we definitely know that you are nothing but an AKKKT for America insect. Like I said, nothing but a bigot cowering behind a keyboard.

    • Lithium2006

      Dream on. I don’t loose any sleep over piss-ant bigots hiding behind a computer screen such as yourself. However, that does not mean I will hesitate calling you out on your vile ignorance.

    • AJ

      Really, the same Wikipedia references can’t decide if he has a degree in Islamic Studies or Education. So which is it?

    • 1DrM

      Amusing coming from a Zionist fanatic and apologist for the terrorist “state” of “israel.”.

MondoWeiss: Israel’s Foreign Minister Calls For Beheading Arab Citizens And It’s Not Anywhere in the New York Times

By Scott Roth and Phil Weiss, Mondoweiss

Two days ago Israel’s foreign minister called for beheading Arab citizens of Israel who are “against us.” Haaretz did the story yesterday. So did Newsweek.

Israeli foreign minister Avigdor Lieberman has said that Arab citizens who are not loyal to the state of Israel should have their heads “chopped off with an axe”.

The minister, leader of the Yisrael Beiteinu party and an outspoken critic of Israel’s Arab population, made the controversial remarks on Sunday in a speech to an election rally held in the western Israeli city of Herzliya ahead of the March 17 vote.

“Those who are with us deserve everything, but those who are against us deserve to have their heads chopped off with an axe,” the ultra-nationalist politician said.

The incitement resulted in a call to behead Haneen Zoabi, the outspoken Palestinian member of Knesset, as reported by this Arabic site and (translated by the new head of the US Committee to End the Occupation, Yousef Munayyer):

An Israeli call to behead Haneen Zoabi

An Israeli call to behead Haneen Zoabi

Lara Friedman of Peace Now has been pushing the story, including Lieberman’s call for “transfer,” or ethnic cleansing of Palestinians. “Not the Onion,” she says.

But this story is no joke at all. What would happen if a Palestinian politician called for beheading some Jews? How loudly would our media decry such statements?

This morning the New York Times had still not covered the story.

National Public Radio has given Lieberman a platform in the past. NPR host Robert Siegel also spent an hour interviewing Lieberman at the Brookings institution. Shouldn’t NPR be covering Lieberman’s latest views? Radio silence.

– See more at: http://mondoweiss.net/2015/03/minister-beheading-anywhere#sthash.M3SJQQIm.dpuf

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    • Friend of Bosnia

      Hey mods, BAN this individual from heren, he comes just to provoke, infuriate and insult. And just so you know you genocidal fascist scum, you’re not on your home ground here. You can consider yourself lucky we don’t meet face to face.

    • adc714

      didn’t i tell you to piss off

    • Friend of Bosnia

      Hindutva fascist scum, it is YOU who is stepping over the line here; and with this and your other statements you habve proven that you have no brains anyway. You just come here to provoke and oiffend. If we ever met on the street I’d have one or more .44 slugs ready for you, because people like you who believe that genocide is all right do not deserve to walk this Earth. Kindly note that I’m not threatening you, I’m just telling you not to step on my toes. If you do, the consequences are all up to you. I shall never turn the other cheek, if someone comes to me with murderous intentI will shoot first and ask questions later, and that is just legitimate self-defense. After all I’m not one of those fools who go out shouting “Kill me, kill me.” I’m no Luca Brasi. But I’m not a sheep either. If the choice is being sheep or wolf, if I’m cornered I’ll be the wolf anytime. I think I have talked to you reasonably enough, and you respond with insult. So then I see you understand just one language, that of violence. You are one of those guys who walk through life shouting “Kill me, kill me”: I really do hope someone will oblige you soon. And let this be the last time you dare open your mouth to me.

    • Friend of Bosnia

      Yeah, yeah. You KNOW I’m right, that’s why you say such a thing. If you had ANYTHING at all with which you could refute me you’d have shown it to me a long time ago. But as it is you have NOTHING, NOTHING at all to stand on. That’s why people like you must resort to verbal, or factual, violence. As you have proved in all of your other staements. Since you can’t be talked to reasonably there is only one way to deal with people of your ilk, and that’s strike you over the head with a two-by-four. I will state the obvious: As long as you behave yourself we can get along just fine, thank you very much. But if you ever try to get wise with me you won’t have a chance to regret it. And that’s not a threat, that’s just friendly advice. I strongly recommend you to follow it.

    • adc714

      you’re brainwashed

    • Friend of Bosnia

      You will see. And then it will be too late to repent. But do as you like. As long as you leave me in peace. But even suggesting to me that i should be an atheist is offensive and unacceptable. Because I’m not suggesting to you that you become a Muslim or a religious person. You do as you please, and see where it will get you.

    • Friend of Bosnia

      Yeah, you say “religion” and you mean Islam. Besides that, teh Communists and the Nazis are atheists too. So don’t give me that. be an atheist if you like to but of you try to force it on me I will push it down your throat.

    • AJ

      You specially created this account to type this? It would have been nice if you could check out adc714’s history. Very loving indeed!

    • Edward Bernthal

      I see see no hate in words of adc714 but in your words i see not the love that you say your God is full of. Shame on you

    • GaribaldiOfLoonwatch

      Well there is the figurative quote, “heads will roll” but that doesn’t fit at all what Lieberman was saying. Reading his quote literally a second time, it’s clear he is calling for their beheading without any qualification.

      MP Ahmed Tibi said it in a figurative way, saying provocatively, “remove racists’ and fascists’ heads only through democratic means – bringing as many [Knesset] seats as possible and active participation in the election. The stronger we are, the weaker Jewish IS will be.”

    • Tanveer ¯_(ツ)_/¯ Khan

      Ah, I mostly see doodoos in the toilet.

    • Tanveer ¯_(ツ)_/¯ Khan

      An extinct bird which has a reputation, rightly or wrongly, for being very stupid.

GOP Bill Targets Nonexistent “No-Go Zones”

No_Go_Zones_Tennessee

The no-go zones garbage is spreading into legislative action.

via. OnIslam

CAIRO – A new proposed legislation, banning nonexistent Muslim “No-Go Zones”, has been furiously rejected by Tennessean Muslim community, saying it is motivated by Islamophobic allegations spread by Fox news.

“The whole fantastical notion of a no-go zone, which has been disproven by even Fox News, is almost gospel on the right wing of the political spectrum now,” Ibrahim Hooper, director of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), told The Huffington Post after likening the zones to unicorns.

“It’s just utter nonsense but, [as] with so much in the Islamophobia industry in the United States … it passes for statesmanship in the current climate.”

The whole problem erupted last January when a pundit on Fox News claimed that there were neighborhoods in France and the United Kingdom that had been taken over by Muslims and were off-limits to others.

The claim, which turned out to be false, forced the network to apologize.

Yet, the line was taken last month by Tennessee state Rep. Susan Lynn (R) and state Sen. Bill Ketron (R) introduced legislation in the House and Senate aimed at ridding the state of no-go zones.

The claimed zones are described in the bills as, “contiguous geographical area[s] consisting of public space or privately owned public space where community organizing efforts systematically intimidate or exclude the general public or public workers from entering or being present within the area.”

Reacting to the bill, Robert McCaw, CAIR’s government affairs manager, recently wrote a letter to leading lawmakers in the Tennessee General Assembly, asking them to abandon the legislation.

Though the bill does not explicitly target or single out any particular group, Lynn claimed that some constituents have expressed feelings of discomfort when in areas they consider sketchy.

“And as you know, when there’s activity happening where people sort of feel intimidated, there’s not exactly a sign up on the wall,” Lynn told The Tennessean. “But it’s just an overall feeling of intimidation.”

Absurd

Muslim leaders rejected Republican representatives’ claims as absurd.

“It’s all just a smoke screen for anti-Muslim bigotry,” Hooper said.

“It’s all part of the Islamophobia machine’s campaign to demonize Islam and marginalize American Muslims. And anything that contributes to that marginalization is okay with them — no matter how fantastical it is.”

Hedy Weinberg, executive director of Tennessee’s American Civil Liberties Union, shared a similar opinion.

He said the new bill was a mere attempt to subject the state’s Muslim population to unwarranted discrimination.

Read the rest of the article…

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    • Amie

      ISIS has its own definition of who a Muslim is. Majority of the Muslim world/ordinary people, religious leadership and scholars disagree with ISIS’ definition of who a Muslim is. They have killed many Muslims too.

    • Amie

      We Americans are aghast at the blasphemy laws in places like Pakistan, but it seems such are lurking in the U.S. as well, only in a different manner. Laws such as ‘Sharia ban’ and now ‘no-go zones ban’ are just fueling fear of non-Muslim Americans of their American Muslim neighbors, while ensuring that there are secure laws in the country to eventually ban Islam all together. While I understand that the U.S. is not a Muslim nation, it has its laws and Constitution, and it is only natural and 100% full right to protect its law of the land. But why all these ridiculous bans? I know that there might be some American Muslims (or rather naturalized citizens) who tend to be trying to change things. They should be taken to court promptly if they do not abide by the constitutional laws–no problem. But, when one looks at the core issue here: it is not about those extremists. Muslim Americans make up a small percentage of the U.S. population, and the extremists even smaller. I think that the purpose of these anti-Sharia/no-go zones laws is something else: to create anti-blasphemy laws in the U.S. Maybe I am crazy, but is anyone else seeing this?

    • Trimmercastle42

      People still believe in the “No-go Zone” none sense because it easier to believe what a guy in an expensive suit tells you. They know it wrong and has no basis in reality, but as long as they can get people to vote for them and keep them in office then “Screw the facts”

    • Dimension

      ISIS or ISIL also have no-go zones. If you’re Jew, Christian or any other religion except Muslims as per the authorization and intellect of the great council of ISIS then, you’re likely to be beheaded. I say Muslims also as they have to prove them being the real Muslims as per the terms of present day regime of ISIS.

    • cmyfe .

      There are actual “No-go zones” in capital cities of Muslim countries e.g. Islamabad and Karachi etc. of Pakistan where if you’re a Pakistani you can’t go and only Americans ( Blackwater and CIA agents) can. They scare off traffic police if stopped for breaching laws. One of them shot dead 2 teenagers publicly on the road few years ago and started diverting traffic after doing so. Ironically U.S saved his life by relying on Sharia where they supposedly paid the blood money to the parents. No one has seen the family since as they disappeared days before the agent was secretly flown out of Pakistan.

    • The greenmantle

      Are drugs involved ? and should these legislators be on them ? or is it April the 1st already ? Sir David

  • mindy1

    The only good things to come from that state are BBQ and Elvis

Jadaliyya: “Beyond Authenticity: ISIS and the Islamic Legal Tradition”

ISIS-Logo

One of the best contributions on the subject of ISIS and its relationship to Islam and the Islamic jurisprudence on war and violence.

Sohair Siddiqui, highlights points that have gone under the radar in most article covering ISIS, including the groups military strategy which is highly informed by the work, “The Management of Savagery” written by a pseudonymous author. Also discussed is the clear contravention of normative and majority historical Islamic jurisprudential rules of warfare.

by Sohaira Siddiqui, Jadaliyya

The Atlantic thinks ISIS is Islamic. President Obama and countless others disagree. As the debate rages on with no shortage of interlocutors, one must stop to ask, what is the utility of making such pronouncements? Is the simple binary of whether ISIS is Islamic or not an effective way to discuss and understand the various questions at stake concerning the Islamic tradition, its authenticity, continuity and change? In response to this basic question, Muslims globally have gone on the defensive, denying any relationship between the religion and the group. Whether it be the eighteen-page open letter issued by prominent Muslim clerics globally, the statement of the twelve largest mosques in Britain, or the fatwa written and distributed by Sunni and Shi‘i  clerics in Baghdad, Muslims are keen to distance themselves from any atrocities committed in their name. However most recently, Graeme Wood’s piece in The AtlanticWhat ISIS Really Wants” argues that ISIS’s actions are definitively Islamic. Since the publication of the article there has been an outpouring of critiques—some correcting factual errors, others noting that he ignores the political and social context which gave rise to ISIS, and others pointing to the absence of legitimate voices in the article who the majority of Muslims actually take as their authority.

As the war continues with growing numbers of willing Muslim recruits, and with provocative images of atavistic executions and offerings of justifications based on Islamic sources, the debate on whether ISIS is Islamic is not ending anytime soon. By situating ISIS within the Islamic tradition on the basis of their mere utilization of it, Wood’s article and others like it overlook the fundamental issue which stands at the heart of the debate—ISIS’s juridical understanding and its relationship to the classical Islamic legal tradition. Mapping ISIS onto a dichotomy of Islamic versus un-Islamic is far too simple an approach when trying to understand the phenomenon of ISIS. The parameters of the debate ignore the amorphous nature of law, that law is paradoxical in that it is both fixed and flexible and that the validity of law is dependent upon the framework and system of law issuance that is created. Indeed, if we step outside of the cyclical authenticity debate in order to understand ISIS’s methodology in relation to the Islamic juridical tradition, we will see that ISIS represents a very fundamental rejection of both its principles and its parameters of operation.

Historically, Islamic law has evolved and created an architecture that creates stability within the law while at the same time allowing for change. However, as a group that is seeking to be a legitimate manifestation of Islam, ISIS constructs its authority and the validity of its actions outside the boundaries of what has been normatively accepted both in terms of conceptualizing the law, and more specifically in the realm of warfare.

Warfare was a complex discussion within Islamic law. The discussion encompassed balancing Prophetic precedence, Quranic principles, and the need to protect and defend the Muslim community. The result was a variety of legal rulings that were connected by two principles which guided legal derivation when it came to warfare. The first was the protection of noncombatants, and the second was the limitation and restriction of war and violence. Jurists agreed that war was permissible, but to do so in a way that regulated the loss of life. Conversely, the basic operating principle of ISIS is the promotion of violence and instability which contradicts the principles of warfare the jurists constructed. Aside from this important difference in the substantive matters of law, this article will also demonstrate that ISIS conceptualizes the law broadly in a starkly different way. Classical jurists accepted and regulated between plurality of legal rulings which allowed for both jurists and rulers to engage with the law on a more intimate level. This meant that the law could evolve, and when deciding on rulings, the ruling selected would be on the basis of public interest (maslaha) which meant protecting the life, religion, property, and honor of all individuals, Muslim and non-Muslims alike. For ISIS, this plurality does not exist within the law; rather, law is implemented uniformly, not on the basis of general public interest, but in order to satisfy their overarching goal of establishing the caliphate, denigrating the enemy, and promoting chaos and violence. As such, even though ISIS may be invoking elements from within the legal tradition or historical precedence, they are doing so by contradicting its very principles and therefore cannot be understood as normative.

Violence and Brutality as ISIS’s Operating Principle

Some clarity with regards to the ideology of ISIS came in September 2014 when Jack Jenkins alerted the world’s attention to a book titled The Management of Savagery. The book was written in 2004 by Abu Bakr Naji, a pseudonym, and became very influential in Salafi-Jihadi circles globally. In 2006 it was translated by William McCants in an effort to bring more clarity to the direction various Salafi-Jihadi movements had taken. The four hundred-page text is a manual on how to establish the Caliphate through the systematic creation of pockets of instability, or “regions of savagery” which force individuals in these areas to search for some stabilizing factor. With widespread instability, individuals will willingly submit to a group which promises to bring stability. In the fourth section of the text entitled “Using Violence,” the author presents a detailed exposition on the necessity of violence, and brutality in achieving these aims.

One of the central concepts in this section is the idea of “paying the price.” Naji argues that if an enemy attacks the group, their response should be so intense that it should create a sense of hopelessness within the enemy and recognition that they have “paid the price” for their actions. Furthermore, when “paying the price” Naji argues that retaliation does not need to be directed at the enemy directly so “if the enemy undertakes a hostile action against a region in the Arabian Peninsula or in Iraq, then the response will occur in Morocco or Nigeria or Indonesia.” Speaking more directly to the general use of violence, Naji states “If we are not violent in our jihad and if softness seizes us, that will be a major factor in the loss of the element of strength.” In another context he states “the hostages should be liquidated in a terrifying manner which will send fear into the hearts of the enemy and his supporters.” For Naji, violence is not only important, but it’s random, unrestricted, and terrifying use will be of particular importance in establishing the caliphate. In this sense, violence is not simply a matter of a physical war, but it is a strategic tool which is intended to have psychological effects on both the perpetrators and the recipients.

If we move from the Management of Savagery to ISIS’s own publications, we see the same fixation on wanton violence amplified through the use of graphic images, exhortative manifestos, and vicious condemnations. ISIS has officially released numerous execution videos, a few longer propaganda videos and perhaps most importantly, seven issues of their official magazine, entitled Dabiq. In the first issue they devoted the most space to elaborating upon the necessity of the caliphate, but towards the end the magazine focuses on the use of violence. Echoing the Management of Savagery one feature article states,

To create maximum chaos, the Shaykh [Shaykh Abu Mus’ab] focused on the most effective weapons…vehicle bombs, IEDs, and istishhadiyyin (seekers of martyrdom). He would order nikayah (disruptive) operations in a dozen areas daily, targeting and killing sometimes hundreds of apostates…In addition to that he tried to force every apostate group in Iraq into an all-out war. So he targeted the Iraqi apostate forces (army, police and intelligence), the Shi‘a and the Kurdish secularists.” He then goes on to state, “These attacks will compel the apostate forces to partially withdraw from rural territories and regroup. The jama’ah [we] would then take advantage of the situation by increasing the chaos to a point of leading to the complete collapse of oppressive regimes, a situation some would refer to as ‘mayhem.’

In these statements unrestricted violence is encouraged as a means of creating chaos.

Similarly, in the fourth issue of the magazine in an article titled “Reflections on the Final Crusade,” ISIS spokesperson Abu Muhammad al-‘Adnani said,

Destroy their beds. Embitter their lives for them and busy them with themselves. If you can kill a disbelieving American or European—especially the spiteful and filthy French—or an Australian, or a Canadian, or any other disbeliever from the disbelievers waging war, including the citizens of the countries that entered into a coalition against the Islamic State, then rely upon Allah, and kill him in any manner or way however it may be. Do not ask for anyone’s advice and do not seek anyone’s verdict. Kill the disbeliever whether he is civilian or military, for they have the same ruling…Every Muslim should get out of his house, find a crusader, and kill him. It is important that the killing becomes attributed to patrons of the Islamic State who have obeyed its leadership. This can easily be done with anonymity. Otherwise, crusader media makes such attacks appear to be random killings.

For al-Adnani and other propagators of ISIS’ doctrine, violence is not limited to the war which is being waged within their territories. They are envisioning a constant cosmic war which requires the use of violence by every Muslim against anyone considered non-Muslim—simply put, there are no non-combatants and no method too brutal. These exhortations towards violence are matched with gruesome images of torture and killings, valorizing the very violence that they call to. From the totality of the images, articles, and statements of ISIS, their use of violence is guided by the basic principle that it is unrestricted and should be practiced with utmost brutality to not only physically defeat the enemy, but to psychologically impair it.

In contrast to ISIS, while the jurists were creating the laws of warfare in the eighth through eleventh centuries, they were doing so with the lens to regulate violence and protect the noncombatant and in accordance with the overall objectives of the law. Thus, even though ISIS may use historical precedence to justify their actions, they do so by manipulating the legal tradition and using non-majoritarian, often rejected juristic opinions of the past. For ISIS, spreading violence and expanding the Caliphate, irrespective of the loss of life, is the goal. Their legal architecture is created to fulfill this mission, regardless of what the majoritarian opinions are within the totality of Islamic juristic thought.

Interpreting What is Islamic and Un-Islamic

For the neophyte, Islamic law has never been absolute. It may strike one as odd that there can be plurality when it comes to God’s law, but the reality is that legal pluralism was the sine qua non of Islamic law. After the death of the Prophet it was understood by Sunnis that access to the Lawgiver, God, had been terminated and what remained were only the scriptural sources—the Quran and the hadith (reported sayings of the Prophet)—to guide individuals afterwards. The jurists were then tasked with the responsibility of creating a methodology which would allow for the deduction of law from the scriptural sources and also allow for the valid creation of law in the absence of any textual indicant. What was created was a jurisprudential system that could extract legal rulings from the scriptural sources, create new ones, and also adjust preexisting ones. All of this was done with the realization that the jurist was arriving at the best estimation of what God truly wants in a situation, but could not be certain that they have arrived at the correct answer given that the direct connection between humans and God was severed with the death of the Prophet.

Because no jurist could say with certainty that they have arrived at God’s law, multiple opinions could always exist on any issue. At the same time jurists were concerned with unbound plurality, so they restricted it in many ways—preventing lay individuals from engaging in jurisprudential reasoning, limiting jurisprudential reasoning even within jurists circles, and searching for overlaps whenever possible. Emerging from the plurality of rulings was an understanding that there would be a majority articulation of a ruling, alongside the acceptance that minority opinions would also exist. A comparable situation is the presence of differing opinions in the US Supreme Court on legal issues even when confronted with the same evidence.

In formulating Islamic law, jurists would start with the textual sources, namely the Quran and hadith. Of importance was the example of the life of the Prophet himself, and this was especially so with any discussion concerning warfare because the Prophet himself engaged in various military battles. When jurists began to speak about the law of warfare, they were not merely discussing the concept that we most commonly associate with Islamic warfare, namely jihad. In fact, they developed a dense legal discussion under the headings of siyar, translated today as Islamic International law. Discussions of siyar in legal texts encompassed jihad, military campaigns (maghazi), safe conduct (aman), dividing spoils, truce (hudana), and non-Muslim tax (jizya). Jurists were keen to answer three pivotal questions: when is it legitimate to fight, what is legitimate conduct during fighting, and what is to be done upon the completion of fighting. The focus of their attention was tackling the second question, namely what is legitimate conduct during war. Ahmed al-Dawoody, who has written a comprehensive book on the Islamic law of war has argued that the jurists categorized war into eight main topics.[1] They are:

  1. Noncombatant immunity
  2. Human Shields
  3. Night Attack
  4. Mutilation
  5. Weapons
  6. Aman (quarter and safe passage)
  7. Prisoners of War
  8. Treatment of Prisoners

While al-Dawoody concisely shows the sheer amount of diversity that was present within the legal discussions he also highlights that in each instance there was a majority opinion that was rooted in Prophetic practice or Quranic statements.

One of the elements of ISIS’s methodology of war noted above is their promotion of indiscriminate killing of individuals in countries all over the globe. Counter to this opinion is the juristic discussion of noncombatant immunity which was intended to restrict violence against any individual who was not actively fighting in the war, even if they ideologically agreed with the enemy. Scholars such as Sufyan al-Thawri (d. 788), al-Ghazali (d. 1111), al-Qarafi (d. 1285) and countless others safeguarded from combat women, children, the aged, the blind, the sick, the insane, the clergy, and perhaps most interestingly, any hired man (al-asif) such as a farmer, craftsman, or employee that was not directly engaged in warfare. While a few minority opinions did exist that belief alone would make individuals part of the “enemy,” the majority of jurists agreed that the aggression of the individual combatant is the decisive factor. Jurists were concerned with establishing who was considered a noncombatant to ensure that violence was restricted to those that only displayed outward aggression. Only after establishing those protected in times of war did the jurists then turn to discuss the actual conduct of war against the enemy.

Read the whole article…

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    • HSkol

      So sorry, AJ, but I just giggled.

    • GaribaldiOfLoonwatch

      Your comments seem to be going through just fine.

    • AJ

      I might have accidentally banned myself on the polygamy thread (and everywhere else) by uttering the dreaded private body part names of male and females. Please check into that. Thanks.

  • AJ

    Okay, will do isa at least before we have another discussion

NBC: Northeast D.C. Mosque Vandalized Second Time in a Week

DC_Moque_Vandalized_Hate_Crime

The FBI is now involved after a DC mosque was vandalized twice in less than a week.

The Ivy City Mosque in the 2000 block of Gallaudet Street NW was first ransacked Monday night. Mohammed Mobaidin, the director of the mosque, said the damage was minor. Police had decided it was not a hate crime, because another vandalism was reported nearby around the same time.

Another vandalism was reported late Wednesday night or early Thursday morning at the same mosque. According to Mobaidin, vandals ripped religious hangings from the walls and broke furniture; a picture of the sacred Kaaba was stolen.

“Now that this picture is missing, I’m beggining to think it could have been a hate crime. That picture has value to the Muslims,” Mobaidin said.

“Something is wrong there, detectives will give us answers,” Nihad Awad with the Council on American-Islamic Relations (sic.CAIR) said.

The mosque had been unlocked and open to the D.C. community for 17 years.

Read the entire article…

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    • mindy1

      Sad, I almost hope it was a random vandal. I’d hate to think someone could be vengeful and dumb :((

    • HSkol

      It’s beginning to seem that mosques might be best served by overnight, live security. Unfortunately, that could likely be an expense that is simply not feasible. A call to or for volunteer security would be another option. The optimist within me would like to think that there’d be individuals who would stand up to take part in a volunteer rotation. The pessimist within me thinks that people are not so good at finding and donating their own time for the greater good.

France: Israeli Embassy and its PR Man “Elad Ratson” Threaten Bloggers with Bombing

By Emperor

The Israeli embassy in France and Elad Ratson, its Director of PR (Public Relations) have threatened websites and bloggers, among them, Al-Kanz, (a website that’s previously tipped us to Islamophobia in France) with a Gaza style bombing. (hat tip: MuslimMatters)

Elad Ratson’s LinkedIn Profile:

Elad_Ratson

The image created by Israel embassy website (coolisrael.fr) and shared by its PR man:

u1bjtel3

By @EladRatson: “Islamists in France struck by a targeted Israeli strike”

Al-Kanz and its founder Fateh Kimouche have been targeted by many who want to see the website shut down. French blogger Olivier Pechter writes:

Hassen Chalghoumi, « moderate imam », with links to radical zionist organisations, has asked the Israeli government to take down his website (july 2013).

Frederic Haziza, journalist for the radical right wing Jewish « Radio J » radio station and French public TV station LCP, interviewing Jean-Christophe Cambadelis (leader of the socialist party) asked, earlier this month and in the aftermath of the killing that took place in a kosher store, how we should put an end to online « holocaust denying and antisemitic campaign » on the net, naming Al Kanz among the « bad guys » A crude lie : Al Kanz, let’s repeat it, has condemned clearly antisemitism and criticized those of his fellows that support bigot comedian Dieudonne M’Bala (2010, 2014). Nevertheless, Kanz « kept calm and carried on »

Pechter notes that the threats have continued and now you have Israel’s French Embassy getting involved in upping the ante.

coolisrael.fr, a website edited by the Israeli Embassy, wrote an article called « Islamists in France struck by a targeted missile from Israeli PR ». The so called missile is « symbolic » and refers to a stereotyped Hasbara video that was largely mocked on social networks these last days: « to which side do you belong ? ».

This is all in the backdrop of a new Hasbara (propaganda) campaign initiated by the Israeli Embassy in France that seeks to counter perceptions of Israel as uncool, murderous and suffocating of the Palestinians.

In doing so they think it is joyous to show a missile striking Gaza and creating a giant cloud of flames and debris, including no doubt human limbs and charred bodies.

This is a week when the Israeli Embassy in France launched on YouTube and Facebook a campaign entitled ” Whose side are you on? “against fundamentalism and Defence of Democracy (video shown at the end of article). Real missile targeted to Islamists but also anti-Semitic and anti-Zionists of all kinds, this Israeli communications campaign is a big hit. She made ​​the buzz on social networks and the numbers reflect this success. 78,994 views on YouTube 709,665 views and 1,748,480 people on Facebook Our article on this video has also become one of the most read and shared the month with more than 2600 shares…. (coolisrael.fr)

The Israeli embassy and its spokesman think the usage of such imagery to make their point is going to win them sympathy and support. Somehow they have also translated the number of views and shares into a victory, even though most are the result of their video being parodied and lampooned.

According to Pechter the websites targeted are not all of the same stripe but Eldad and the Israeli Embassy wish to conflate them all together in an attempted delegitimization.

Among other websites (two far-right antisemitic websites and Oumma.com, most visited Muslim website, known for his opposition to Muslim Brotherhood), we can see Al Kanz logo broken in two. At first sight, the picture (Gaza attacked) is, at the same time disgusting and childish. But it has to be taken seriously in a country with already so many « tensions » as France.

coolIsrael.fr

After Al-Kanz called out both the Embassy and Elad Ratson they removed the links from their social media but have not removed the article from the website, nor have they apologized.

The article was promoted by the embassy on social networks. When it provoked a « twitter battle » between Al Kanz and Israeli PR director, they withdrew the links, but not the article. Nor did they apologize.

The embassy is also directly connected to France’s chapter of StandWithUs:

Coolisrael.fr is hosted by the « Ambassade d’Israël » (Israel’s embassy), as we said, and edited by Laurent (« Epelbaumas »), French leader of « Stand with us », in charge of « digital communication » at the Israeli ambassy. « Stand with us France », unlike its US branch, is a tiny organization. Its website have been hosted by the Israeli ambassy in the past,  a new illustration of the links between SWU and the Israeli FM.

Whois registar of coolisrael.fr « siliconwadi.fr », another website edited by the Ambassy

Whois registar of coolisrael.fr « siliconwadi.fr », another website edited by the Ambassy

« Laurent », editorial director

« Laurent », editorial director

Interestingly after we tweeted @EladRatson about his message of hate, he blocked us:

Eldar_Ratson_Twitter

He wants you to know that despite happily posting articles with pics of indiscriminate bombing and then sharing them all over the media he is really cool and Israel is cool because he really loves sea life and coral reefs.

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    • Trimmercastle42

      “Today on “The 700 Club,” Pat Robertson said that the Islamic world has largely embraced violent extremism “like a trigger went off” and “something activated this latent spirit in Islam.”

      Robertson said that while Christians in the Middle East should love their Muslim neighbors, they must “be aware that they are trying to kill you.”

      Earlier in the program, the televangelist repeated his frequent refrain that President Obama is aiding Islamic extremists, telling listeners that Obama has “a desire to somehow weaken America, weaken western power and build up Islam.”

      “His action time and time again is favoring Islam and not favoring America and what we would call western democracy,” Robertson said”

      Dear Pat:

      http://i1.kym-cdn.com/photos/images/original/000/916/788/d9f.png

      and

      http://i2.kym-cdn.com/photos/images/original/000/918/227/2cf.jpg

      Love, Humanity

    • cmyfe .

      “Peace Removal”

    • Guess – BDS

      He looks like an Ayrab, though I can’t point my finger where, I’ll wholeheartedly with go North Africa!

    • Iman

      Hassen Chalghoumi, « moderate imam », with links to radical zionist organisations, has asked the Israeli government to take down his website (july 2013). That’s the key to ISIS and it’s like .

    • Tanveer ¯_(ツ)_/¯ Khan

      I get it

  • Tanveer ¯_(ツ)_/¯ Khan

    I dun get it

Mehdi Hasan Owns David Starkey On BBC Question Time

David_Starkey_Ding_Dong

A funny video clip produced by aKam productions in which Mehdi Hasan ridicules the bigoted David “ding dong” Starkey on “Question Time.” (h/t: H. Shaikh)

Also Read: David Starkey Sparks Outrage After Calling Mehdi Hasan ‘Ahmed’ On Question Time

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  • Guess – BDS

    True story, this time finally Khamas was granted a right of return in the form of Achmed The Dead Terrorist, terrorizing via laughs and applauds — not rockets

Haaretz: West Bank mosque torched by settlers

Mosque_torched_Bethlehem

via. Haaretz, by Chaim Levinson and Jacob Khoury

A mosque in a West Bank village near Bethlehem was torched overnight Wednesday, the official Palestinian news agency Wafa reported.

Settlers that entered Kafr Jab’a also sprayed hate graffiti on the building, including “we want the redemption of Zion,” and “revenge,” Wafa reported.

The chairman of the Jab’a council told the news agency that the inner walls and furniture were damaged in the attack. Israel Police said that army forces and an anti-terror crime unit were in the village, investigating the incident.

Last month, vandals torched the door of a mosque in the village of Dir Istia, causing light damage. Hate graffiti was sprayed on the building there as well.

Read the entire article…

Price_Tag_Israeli_Terrorism

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    • cmyfe .

      “Settlers”? More like “Invaders”.

    • mindy1

      Holiest place on earth and this is what happens :((

Islamophobic Sun News Network’s Failure

SunBanner

I couldn’t let this good news pass without comment.

The Sun News Network, geared toward a Canadian audience was forced to shut down its operations due to financial loss and poor viewership. Sun was known for being an Islamophobic propaganda outlet with programs led by the likes of Michael Coren and Ezra Levant consistently promoting Islamophobes such as Rev. Deacon Robert Spencer and Pamela Geller.

This wasn’t very popular among a Canadian audience that saw through the cheap propaganda and voted to just watch something else.

CBC News

“Over the past four years, we tried everything we could to achieve sufficient market penetration to generate the profits needed to operate a national news channel. Sadly, the numerous obstacles to carriage that we encountered spelled the end of this venture,” Tremblay said in a statement

The network’s website featured only a Sun News logo on Friday morning.

The network began broadcasting in April 2011, launching a right-of-centre programming schedule, but it has had a constant challenge attracting viewers.

Its supporters blamed the CRTC for not giving it the same access enjoyed by news channels operated by CBC and CTV.

The federal broadcast regulator denied Sun News a guaranteed spot on basic cable TV packages in August  2013.

Data released as part of that application showed that while the network was available to 5.1 million households, it was only attracting, on average, 8,000 viewers at any given time.

That number was far lower than what well-established all-news networks operated by CTV and CBC were reporting. CBC, for example, said it had eight times as many viewers as Sun News.

Read the entire article…

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  • Trimmercastle42

    That’s what they want you to think to cover their alliance with the mole empire.

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