By A Colleague
fri, nov 25, 2022 1:21 p.m.
Inside the US: Muslim Brotherhood Member Calls for Jihadist Terrorism Worldwide
I haven't heard of this particular terrorist. However, we have muslims in congress, just as england has muslims in government positions. The situations in both countries are strangely parallel.
In the states, we have constitutional freedom of speech and freedom of religion. This makes it much more difficult to put a halt to jihadist destruction from within.
In the uk, my understanding is that there is no free speech guarantee. Indeed, hate speech laws stymie open discussion of the jihadist threat. Please correct me, if I am wrong.
Resources on political Islam, creeping sharia and Islamic conquest:
In the states, we have constitutional freedom of speech and freedom of religion. This makes it much more difficult to put a halt to jihadist destruction from within.
In the uk, my understanding is that there is no free speech guarantee. Indeed, hate speech laws stymie open discussion of the jihadist threat. Please correct me, if I am wrong.
Resources on political Islam, creeping sharia and Islamic conquest:
cairco.org/issues/islam-terrorism-isis
From Mark Steyn in August 2008:
Thus we see that today's multicultural societies tolerate the explicitly intolerant and avowedly unicultural, while refusing to tolerate anyone pointing out that intolerance. It's been that way for 20 years now, ever since Valentine's Day 1989, when the Ayatollah Khomeini issued his fatwa against the novelist Salman Rushdie, a British subject, and shortly thereafter large numbers of British Muslims marched through English cities openly calling for Rushdie to be killed. A reader in Bradford wrote to me recalling asking a West Yorkshire policeman on the street that day why the various "muslim community leaders" weren't being arrested for incitement to murder. The officer said they'd been told to "play it cool." The calls for blood got more raucous. My correspondent asked his question again. The policeman told him to "Push off" (he expressed the sentiment rather more Anglo-Saxonly, but let that pass) "or I'll arrest you."
THEIR version of assimilation.With a viewpoint like that,he and others should be deported.
ReplyDelete--GRA
"In the uk, my understanding is that there is no free speech guarantee."
ReplyDeleteThat is anywhere in the world. Free speech an American import that has not been accepted as an absolute more or less as it is here.