Links post 2 for Oct. 17 – 2014

1. Bill Whittle on the CDC and Ebola issue

(I like Bill Whittle a lot but I think he is under informed on some aspects of this. It is communicable through the skin. You do not need to touch a mucous membrane to get infected. Just touch the sweat of someone who has the pathogen in the body fluids)

2. WhupTdue sent in some Ebola related links:

2a. Dallas nurse makes astonishing claims which may mean a wider path of infection.

2b. Tallmadge home where Ebola patient Amber Vinson stayed cordoned off by police (photo gallery)

2c. Canton nurses on same plane as Amber Vinson treated 13 patients at Aultman Hospital

2d. Akron bridal store closed after Ebola patient Amber Joy Vinson visited

2e. Akron’s Resnik elementary school closed amid Ebola scare

3. ‘Three captured MiG sbeing flown by ISIS in Syria’

(ANSA) – Beirut, October 17 – Islamic State (ISIS) has captured three MiG fighter planes from the Syrian air force east of Aleppo and they are being flown by Iraqi deserter pilots in northern Syria, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said Friday.

4. Mosque in Greece gets the ol’ pigs head-graffitti treatment

ATHENS, Greece (AP) — Greek police say unknown attackers have placed a severed pig’s head and painted anti-Muslim slogans outside an Islamic studies center in Athens.

Nobody has been arrested over the pre-dawn attack Friday, at a building that also functions as a Muslim prayer center.

The attackers sprayed an obscene slogan against Islam on the sidewalk outside the building, daubed a Christian cross on the door and threw paint at the walls.

5. The Kensington Mosque at the Heart of Britain’s ISIS Defectors

A counter-terrorism expert has identified a large West-London mosque as being the key common factor between the young British Muslims who go to fight for the Islamic State, a number of whom grew up just streets away from each other in one neighbourhood of North Kensington.

6. Here is the Gates of Vienna article on the speech by Kent Ekeroth last year in the Swedish Parliament.

7. FOX covers aspects of the Qatari complicity with islamic terror and the Islamic State 

8. British group shows enough courage to do street theater of Islamic State slave auction on the streets of London.

(I wonder if these guys will be up on hate crimes for this?)

 

Thank you M., Don L., Bill Orights, Yucki, Richard and more.

 

About Eeyore

Canadian artist and counter-jihad and freedom of speech activist as well as devout Schrödinger's catholic

32 Replies to “Links post 2 for Oct. 17 – 2014”

  1. Abbas Suggests Ban on Jews at Jerusalem Holy Site (abcnews, Oct 17, 2014)
    http://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory/palestinians-suggest-banning-jews-holy-site-26276762

    “Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas suggested on Friday that Jews should be banned from a Jerusalem holy site revered by both Jews and Muslims.

    Abbas made the comments following recent clashes between Palestinian worshippers and Israeli forces over what Palestinians see as Jewish encroachment on the site, known to Jews as the Temple Mount and to Muslims as the Noble Sanctuary.

    In a speech quoted by the official Palestinian news agency Wafa, Abbas said Jewish “settlers” should be prevented from entering the site “by any means.”

    “This is our Noble Sanctuary … they have no right to enter and desecrate it,” Abbas added.

    Palestinians also say Israel is unfairly restricting access at the site. Israel limited male Muslim worshippers this past week to those 50 years old and older.

    The move followed an uptick in violence in the area amid Palestinian claims that Israel is unilaterally widening access around the entrance to the site to accommodate larger numbers of Jewish worshippers.

    The site is the holiest in Judaism and the third holiest in Islam.”

  2. Iran Border Guards Kill 1 From Pakistani Patrol (abcnews, Oct 17, 2014)
    http://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory/iran-border-guards-kill-pakistani-patrol-26277365

    “A Pakistani official says Iranian border guards opened fire at a Pakistan patrol van, killing a member of the paramilitary Frontier Corps and wounding three other troops.

    A spokesman for the Frontier Corps, Abdul Wasay, says the shooting took place on Friday when about 30 Iranian guards in six vehicles started shooting at the Pakistani van in the Chaukab area, 2 kilometers (1 mile) inside Pakistani territory.

    There was no immediate comment from Tehran.

    The shooting comes a day after Iranian Brig. Gen. Hussein Salami issued a stark warning to Pakistan, saying that Iranian forces may enter Pakistani territory to “prevent terrorists” from entering Iran.

    Last week, four Iranian guards were killed by unknown attackers in the eastern Iranian province of Sistan and Baluchistan which borders Pakistan’s southwestern Baluchistan province.”

  3. Very well! Let that cancer metastise!

    Nigeria, Extremists Agree to Immediate Cease-Fire (abcnews, Oct 17, 2014)
    http://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory/nigeria-extremists-agree-cease-fire-26270532

    “Nigeria’s government and Islamic extremists from Boko Haram have agreed to an immediate cease-fire, officials said Friday, in a move that could end five years of insurgency that has killed thousands and left hundreds of thousands homeless in Africa’s most populous nation and its biggest oil producer….”

  4. Yemeni Shiite Rebels Overrun Al-Qaida Stronghold (abcnews, Oct 17, 2014)
    http://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory/shiite-rebels-islamists-clash-central-yemen-26271497

    “Yemen’s Shiite rebels on Friday overran an al-Qaida stronghold after days of battling the militants for the city in the country’s central heartland, a Yemeni official and a tribal leader said.

    The capture of the city of Radda, in the in the province of Bayda, came with the help of a Yemeni army commander, the two said.

    The Shiite rebels known as Houthis have been fighting both al-Qaida militants and Sunni tribes over the past few days. The rebels, who in September gained control of the capital, Sanaa, earlier this week overran a key Yemeni port city on the Red Sea.

    The Houthis entered Radda on Friday, after the commander of Yemeni army’s Battalion 193 gave up his troops positions, a security official and a tribal leader from the city said.

    The action, mirrored similar instances in the past when units in Yemen’s army suspected of links with former President Ali Abdullah Saleh, a Houthi ally, facilitated stunning rebel advances from their home base in northern Saada province.

    The army commander who helped the Houthis in Radda is said to be a loyalist of the ousted Saleh, who was deposed after the country’s 2011 uprising. Saleh and his party have joined ranks with the Houthis against a common enemy — the Islamist Islah party and its allied tribe of Al-Ahmar, traditional power brokers in Yemen.

    Also Friday, fierce clashes erupted in Ibb province, nearly 200 kilometers (125 miles) south of Sanaa between the Houthis and tribesmen allied with the Islah party, leaving eight dead, according to other security officials in the province….”

  5. Our jihad is being paid by Europe! (Havent we heard that one already?)

    Philippine militants release two German hostages (BBC, Oct 17, 2014)
    http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-29665728

    “A Philippines-based militant group has released two German hostages captured in April, local officials say.

    The hostages were reportedly seized from a yacht between Malaysia and the Philippines. Abu Sayyaf vowed to kill one hostage and demanded a ransom.

    The group claimed on Friday the $5.6m (£3.5m) ransom had been paid in full.

    The Muslim separatist group also called for an end to German support for the US-led coalition against Islamic State (IS) militants in Iraq and Syria.

    However, Germany refused to withdraw its backing for the US action…..”

    • Taqyya-art? I didn’t hear, “Muhammad, Muhammad, down with Muhammad” when those acts of capturing and abusing slaves are in the Hadiths. Hadith 3.718
      http://islamqa.info/en/20802 to screw your slaves is not adultery to your four musselmas back home.

      Islam knows the femaled socialists- put on fake pedophile trials in front of them and they will clap – and it is business as usual.

    • That should be blonde women naked except for conspicuous crosses round their necks, and the hijabis cawing like crows in a flock they leave only to give any slave that her husband buys a swift kick while she’s still on the ground, so the slave knows her place in her new household.

  6. Re:#1 Bill Whittle…
    First watch Bill Whittle discuss “Fear of Ebola” . . . he tempers fear with
    rational science. Then please take the time to read this “Weekly Standard” article, Six Reasons to Panic which explains why this rational science brings out the fear in all of us. Sobering stuff….especially when considering this quote from 6 reasons:

    “(3) Do you really want to be scared? What’s to stop a jihadist from going to Liberia, getting himself infected, and then flying to New York and riding the subway until he keels over? This is just the biological warfare version of a suicide bomb. Can you imagine the consequences if someone with Ebola vomited in a New York City subway car?A flight from Roberts International in Monrovia to JFK in New York is less than $2,000, meaning that the planning and infrastructure needed for such an attack is relatively trivial. This scenario may be highly unlikely. But so were the September 11 attacks and the Richard Reid attempted shoe bombing, both of which resulted in the creation of a permanent security apparatus around airports. We take drastic precautions all the time, if the potential losses are serious enough, so long as officials are paying attention to the threat.”

    And consider the ACTUAL news report from this morning:
    A passenger died on a Nigeria-to-JFK flight after a vomiting fit Thursday — and a top lawmaker said officials gave the corpse only a “cursory” exam before declaring that the victim did not have Ebola.

  7. Washington DC – Oct 16 2014 – Secretary Kerry Delivers Remarks at a Reception in Honor of Eid al-Adha

    John Kerry
    Secretary of State
    Delegates Lounge
    Washington, DC
    October 16, 2014

    SECRETARY KERRY: Shaarik, thank you very much for the introduction. Thanks for your leadership, and assalamu alaikum to all of you. Thank you, and also a late Eid Mubarak. I will tell you I’ve been having lots of phone conversations with your foreign ministers or your prime ministers or one official or another who have been at the Haaj as they’re talking to me, and they found time in between to be able to have a conversation, and I was very grateful for that. And I hope those of you who had a chance to partake in that found it as rewarding and as personal as it is supposed to be. It’s a pleasure to be able to welcome everybody here, and it’s really a pleasure for us in the State Department to have a chance to be able to celebrate Eid-al-Adha, even though we’re late – and that’s because of my schedule.

    I was just in Cairo, as you know, where a terrific $5.4 billion was raised in order to help rebuild Gaza, and we could not have emphasized more times how critical it is not to rebuild it so it is destroyed again. It is imperative that we find a way to get back to the negotiations for what everybody knows is, in the end, the only way to go forward that makes sense. And the alternative is in so many ways difficult.

    But what we’re trying to do here in the State Department – and Shaarik is a part of that mosaic that we’re putting together here. We have the first faith-based office; we have the office reaching out to the Islamic world. And when he started drafting our national strategic approach as a leader of a faith community, he began that strategy with two words: “religion matters.” And he’s made it his mission to reach out to faith communities to solve global problems, whether it’s been at the White House or at the Departments of Justice and Homeland Security, and I couldn’t be more pleased that he has joined our efforts here at the State Department as the Special Representative to Muslim Communities.

    I’ve often said to people that if I went back to college today, I would at least minor, if not major, in comparative religion – and a lot of other things that I didn’t major in, I might add – because I have found in my journeys through the world over these 29-plus years as a senator and now in the year and a half, year and three-quarters I’ve been Secretary of State, there is no place in the world where in one way or the other it isn’t affecting an outlook. And even in places where people are nonbelievers or people have a different philosophy rather than one of the major religions of the world, there are themes and currents that run through every life philosophy, every single approach, whether it’s Native Americanism or Confucianism or – you can find that there’s been this passage through history from the scriptures – from the Qu’ran, from the Torah, from the Bible – that all come together, and even from other places, where they’ve been incorporated and inculcated through the sermons and preachings and teachings of religious leaders. And we know this today.

    So tonight, what we’re really doing as we celebrate late but nevertheless celebrate Eid al-Adha, is that we are celebrating sort of the meaning and importance of sacrifice and devotion in our lives. And, of course, the Jewish religion just went through its holiest moment of the year with Yom Kippur, which is also a moment of huge introspection and re-evaluation. Eid al-Adha is a special time for charity and compassion and for prayer and reflection. And during this period of time, as you all know, you’ll find everybody practicing it in their own way wherever it is that they are in the world. Young girl somewhere in New Delhi praying outside of a mosque, or kids or adults in Pakistan, girls singing songs and painting their hands with henna, or Shiites in the holy city of Najaf or fellow Shi’a celebrating Eid-e-Ghorban in Iran. They’re all these derivatives that all come the very same thing. And that’s the spirit of Eid. And in a sense, this is a moment that really shares with us a common sense at an important time about the sense of possibilities that we’re looking at in the world today.

    So we all know – I look around, I see a lot of very familiar faces here, and I thank so many members of our diplomatic corps for being here with us today – this is a difficult time. It’s a very complex time, and there are many currents that are loose out there that have brought us to this moment. THE EXTREMISM THAT WE SEE, THE RADICAL EXPLOITATION OF RELIGION WHICH IS TRANSLATED INTO VIOLENCE, HAS NO BASIS IN ANY OF THE REAL RELIGIONS. THERE’S NOTHING ISLAMIC ABOUT WHAT ISIL/DAESH STANDS FOR OR IS DOING TO PEOPLE .

    And so we all have a larger mission here. And obviously, history is filled with that. I mean, you go back to the Thirty Years’ War in Europe and other periods of time, Protestants, Catholics, others who have fought. It’s not new to us. Tragically, it’s more prominent because media is more available today, the messaging is there, everybody is more aware on an instantaneous basis of what is happening. And of course it’s exploited by people who engage in this.

    So – but it’s still complicated, and for other reasons. We’re living at a point in time where there are just more young people demanding what they see the rest of the world having than at any time in modern history. And when you have 65 percent of a country, as you do in many countries in the Middle East or South Central Asia or elsewhere, in north Horn of Africa, that are under the age of 35 – 65 percent – and 60 percent under the age of 30, and 50 percent under the age of 25, you are going to have a governance problem unless your governance is really addressing the demands and needs of that part of the population. And I don’t care who you are or what kind of government you have, nobody is impregnable with respect to those demands and those needs, and they have to be responded to at some point in time.

    Don’t forget that what is happening now in Syria started with young people going out and demonstrating for jobs and for opportunity and for dignity and respect. And when they were met by clubs and repression, their parents went out to defend them. They joined in and said, “No, don’t do this to our kids. We want this.” And then they were met with bullets. And that’s what has brought this incredible, chaotic moment where we now have 10 million people or so displaced – a million and a half in Lebanon, million and a half in Turkey, a million and a half-plus or more in Jordan – and internally, huge population displaced. And Eid actually speaks to that, because this is a moment of charity. This is a moment when Ibrahim is celebrated for not slaying – for being willing to slay his son in order to provide for people and to prove something.

    And so we have to stop and think about that in the context of this challenge that we face today. I think that it is more critical than ever that we be fighting for peace, and I think it is more necessary than ever. As I went around and met with people in the course of our discussions about the ISIL coalition, the truth is we – there wasn’t a leader I met with in the region who didn’t raise with me spontaneously the need to try to get peace between Israel and the Palestinians, BECAUSE IT WAS A CAUSE OF RECRUITMENT AND OF STREET ANGER AND AGITATION THAT FELT – and I see a lot of heads nodding – THEY HAD TO RESPOND TO. And people need TO UNDERSTAND THE CONNECTION OF THAT. AND IT HAS SOMETHING TO DO WITH HUMILIATION AND DENIAL AND ABSENCE OF DIGNITY, and Eid celebrates the opposite of all of that.

    So what we need to do is recognize that we need to build peace through specific partnerships. One partnership is specifically the effort to try to drive towards this peace, to have a compromise, to find a way to create two states that can live together side by side, two peoples, with both of their aspirations being respected. I still believe that’s possible, and I still believe we need to work towards it. We also need to figure out how – and I think what’s happening in Iraq is an interesting beginning of that, where Daesh has kind of drawn a line and made people stop and think, and Sunni and Shia are beginning to realize there’s a common problem out there and there is a way to try to work together. And the new government gives a breath of fresh air to that possibility that that could happen.

    In addition to that, we remember that lots of countries are making sacrifices in the spirit of Eid-al-Adha right now with respect to the refugees that they’re taking in, with respect to the emergency food programs they’re engaged in, the emergency aid. So this is really a moment to reflect deeply on how we will deal not just with the manifestation of the symptom, which is what the violence and the extremism is, but with the underlying causes which go to this question of governance and corruption and a whole issue of how you meet the needs of people.

    And that’s where our partnership has to be not just for peace but for prosperity, shared prosperity, where everybody has an ability to be able to find a job, get the education, be able to reach the brass ring, and it is not just reserved for a privileged few.

    And finally, we have to build a partnership for sustainability of the planet itself, and that brings us to something like climate change, which is profoundly having an impact in various parts of the world, where droughts are occurring not at a 100-year level but at a 500-year level in places that they haven’t occurred, floods of massive proportions, diminishment of water for crops and agriculture at a time where we need to be talking about sustainable food.

    So I think this is an important moment, and that’s why we’ve launched a lot of different initiatives like the Malaysia initiative, the Beehive Initiative at the Global Entrepreneurship Summit. And that’s why I’m going to Jakarta day after tomorrow to be there for the inauguration of a man who was elected president in the world’s biggest Muslim-majority country, in large part because of his commitment to good, honest governance. And that’s why we’re engaging in private sector efforts to help the young Syrian refugees. And in many places we see the desert increasingly creeping into East Africa. We’re seeing herders and farmers pushed into deadly conflict as a result. We’re seeing the Himalayan glaciers receding, which will affect the water that is critical to rice and to other agriculture on both sides of the Himalayas. These are our challenges.

    So it’s a good moment to come together. I’ve talked longer than I meant to. Shaarik is going to have the chance to say a few words. I need to run to another meeting, which I hope you will forgive me for doing. But I just hope that the meaning of this moment can over this next year, by all of us in a cooperative and respectful way, mutual respect, without anybody asserting that they have a better way or a better answer, but listening to each other, that we can work together in a good spirit to be able to address these concerns. The world is looking to all of us. We are the leaders. We have this opportunity in this moment to try to make a difference. And it is imperative that every single one of us make every effort to listen to each other, to do everything in our power to be able to have an impact. And I’m confident that in the days ahead we can.

    I just spent a number of hours in negotiations. I was with Lavrov talking about what we can do to change things between Russia and the United States, with Foreign Minister Zarif of Iran, where have a very tough negotiation that affects a lot of you in this room. And believe me, we are mindful of that, and we will continue to work, however, to try to find a fair and thoughtful way that achieves all of our goals. And I think we can look with pride at a young Muslim girl, the youngest ever recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize, who’s shown such courage in her effort to try to fight for rights and to stand up and improve a lot of other people. And that’s part of what we should reflect on as we think about the meaning of this particular celebration.

    So I really thank you for coming tonight. I wish I could stay and talk through the evening. It would be much nicer than the meeting I have to go to. (Laughter.) But I can’t and so, again, Eid Mubarak belatedly, and I wish all of you well as we work together going forward. Thank you all, and God bless. Thank you very, very much. (Applause.)

    http://www.state.gov/secretary/remarks/2014/10/233058.htm

    • ISRAEL – Bennett blasts Kerry for linking Israeli-Palestinian conflict to ISIS proliferation

      Economy Minister Naftali Bennett slammed US Secretary of State John Kerry on Friday for comments the top American diplomat made, indicating that the unresolved conflict between the Israelis and Palestinians is contributing to gain made by the Islamic State group.

      “Asserting that the Israeli-Palestinian conflict reinforces ISIS, gives a boost to global terrorism,” Bennett charged.

      In remarks Kerry made Thursday, he said the Israeli-Palestinian conflict was thought of by various leaders as fueling violence and leading to recruitment by the jihadist organization.

      “It turns out that even when a British Muslim beheads a British Christian, there will always be those who blame the Jews,” Bennett said in reference to videos of recent decapitations of Western captives by an Islamic State member who speaks with an English accent.

      He added that there is no justification for terrorism and that Israeli is fighting against the phenomenon.

      During remarks at a White House ceremony for the Muslim holiday of Eid al-Adha Thursday, Kerry implied that the strife resulting from the decades-long dispute between Israel and the Palestinian has harbored an environment prone to fostering extremism.

      “I think that it is more critical than ever that we be fighting for peace, and I think it is more necessary than ever… As I went around and met with people in the course of our discussions about the ISIL (Islamic State) coalition, the truth is we – there wasn’t a leader I met with in the region who didn’t raise with me spontaneously the need to try to get peace between Israel and the Palestinians, because it was a cause of recruitment and of street anger and agitation that they felt,” Kerry said.

      Israeli authorities estimate that over 30 Israeli citizens have joined the ranks of the Sunni jihadist group.

      Earlier this week, reports surfaced that three additional Arab Israelis, from Yafia village in the Galilee, had joined Islamic State in Syria.

      http://www.jpost.com/Arab-Israeli-Conflict/Bennett-blasts-Kerry-for-linking-Israeli-Palestinian-conflict-to-ISIS-proliferation-379080

      • Keep your eye on Naftali Bennett. He’s very much like Bibi was at his age. Even better in some ways.

        I keep saying he’ll be PM when he grows up, but he may be needed sooner. Bibi’s drifting “moderate” and that’s just not good enough for an Israel beset by foes. Especially when her “best friend” seems to have switched sides.

      • That is being kind to him, while still a Navy Officer he went to Paris and privately negotiated with the North Vietnamese to allow them to enslave the South.

        • We send _troops_ to fight ebola.
          We send humanitarian aid to Kurds _fighting_ IS.

          Our top diplomat is a traitor, our POTUS is… a POS.

        • In a rational society he would have been hung, in ours he is now Sec of State, a slap in the face of all patriots who served honorably.

  8. 1. I think what the contagiousness of ebola really says is that we may not fully understand how long it can be viable outside the human body. The skin is a very difficult route thru a healthy individual as the top layer is all dead cells, so no love for an immobile virus, but if its viable for up to a week or more on skin with a little moisture, then it will eventually be tracked to a membrane through physical contact/touching/etc.

  9. “he is under informed on some aspects of this. It is communicable through the skin. You do not need to touch a mucous membrane to get infected. Just touch the sweat of someone who has the pathogen in the body fluids”

    I suspect my interest/observation of the Ebola reporting is 0.01% of that of Vlad. I have seen only a couple of TV reports on Ebola (I don’t watch TV news much).

    In the first report, workers in Africa wearing expensive, full, anti-contagion body suits were spraying the footsteps in the ground of the Ebola patient walking in front of them. This person was able to walk, so was not in a major haemorrhagic state, was not vomiting etc. If this disease is not highly contagious e.g. just from the skin, why were they spraying the ground?

    In the second report, whilst a UK government medical expert told the viewers that it could not be picked up from touching the walls of a bathroom/toilet used by someone with Ebola, the video feed showed someone in a full anti-contagion suit THROWING medicen through a small opening in a wire fence, where it was caught on the other side by someone holding a plastic bag.

    It is astonishing that the media simply permit the “experts” to boldly make claims which are simultaneously discredited by the accompanying video evidence. Sadly, it seems the Demos are too stupid/lazy to notice these discrepancies played out before their eyes.

  10. Last night I was informed by some medical professionals that when an Ebola patient sneezes the droplets can travel as much as 150 foot.

    If they are really Kurds putting on the slave market no one will be charged.

    • In their wisdom many African and some European nations have closed their borders or curtailed flights to protect their citizens and halt the spread of the Viris. It seems thst Africian dictators and strongmen have more sense than our ‘Dear Leader’.