Some links for Tuesday, Nov 30 2010

It appears that the fellow who does Wikileaks is a very sought after fellow:

Here is an interpol page seeking his arrest for sex crimes in Sweden:

And I found this awesome video on Blazing Cat fur.

Over at Sheik Yermami, this story:

I have a theory about that fire. I bet it was the Mosque principles that wanted to destroy any records they have which may implicate them as partners with Mohamed Mohamed and his plan to kill lots of kids at the Christmas tree ceremony. We will know soon enough I’m sure.
Here is an article about Tower Hamlets. I hope to post something more on this tonight. A more general state of the nation with respect to Islam and England. A Millar is sending me a collection of links later on which, when seen in context and together, presents a fairly bleak picture of England. I can’t help but think to myself that it is no accident that A Clockwork Orange, and so much of Orwell’s books are about the UK.

Iran: Pastor Charged—Apostasy

The Assize Court of the province of Gilan, in Iran, has officially charged Pastor Youcef Nardarkhani with denying that Mohammed was a prophet. The court stated that this resulted in apostasy because Nardarkhani believes in Jesus and has shared his faith with others, according to The Voice of the Martyrs.
Here is a story I am hoping some of you can explain to me. Obama on his recent trip to India, cancelled a visit to a Sikh Temple because according to him, Americans can’t tell the difference between a Sikh and a Muslim, and he didn’t want to fuel speculation that he was a secret Muslim, then, he promptly visited an actual Mosque. I guess his grandmother didn’t get the memo.

I wish Julian Assange would Wikileak this story so maybe, just maybe American would finally pay attention to a real scandal.

From the AP:

KABUL, Afghanistan — An Afghan border policeman killed six American servicemen during a training mission Monday, underscoring one of the risks in a U.S.-led program to educate enough recruits to turn over the lead for security to Afghan forces by 2014….

Is this what jihadist, Muslim-on-infidel murder by our Afghan “allies” is now — “one of the risks”? This is not a risk worth taking for the servicemen’s interest, the military’s interest, or the country’s interest. This effort, this theory, this utopian drive to remake Afghanistan in something akin to our own image is not workable, nor is it acceptable as the blood-and-treasure-draining policy of this nation.

Nor is this:

NATO is still investigating an incident earlier this month in which two U.S. Marines were killed in southern Helmand province, allegedly at the hands of an Afghan soldier.

Or this:

After two deadly shootings in July, NATO officers said they were re-examining training practices to make sure that such attacks did not happen again.

On July 20, an Afghan army sergeant got into an argument at a shooting range in northern Afghanistan and shot dead two American civilian trainers before being killed. Another Afghan soldier was killed in the crossfire.

Or this:

A week earlier, an Afghan soldier stationed in the south killed three British troopers, including the company commander, with gunfire and a rocket-propelled grenade in the middle of the night.

Please click over to Diana West to read the rest of this important story:


Carolyn Glick does her usual exceptional geopolitical analysis of Obama and North Korea here:

Video games now to be rated according to Islamic values:

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About Eeyore

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

One Reply to “Some links for Tuesday, Nov 30 2010”

  1. The lesson to be learned in all these stories is: never trust a Muslim to behave, think or act like a westerner. Ever.

    Countless generations of indoctrination has left hundreds of millions of them without freedom of conscience and has created whole communities of people willing to kill for the sake of their death cult.

    The mistake the Allies made is to think that only a few years in the presence of western values would ever make them believe otherwise.

    So what has being in Afghanistan really done for the region?