Links and News for May 12 2013

1. Yes, this is from 2004 but I still like it. Gene Simmons of Kiss teaches some basic tard-awareness

2. A write up on the new Saints made by the Vatican, the 813 who where murdered rather than be forcibly converted to Islam are now belated saints. I suggest Jason Kenney, Canada’s immigration minister remember the old adage, ‘An Oz. of prevention is worth a hundred thousand martyrs’

3. At least one Sr. member of the British government says he would vote to leave the EU. Or else he is the first one to at least own a weather vane.

4. Tony Blair, EX UK PM half sister shows her true character, gets well used to raise money, almost certainly, for jihad.

5. EDL Radio interview with Sergio Redegalli on Islam in Australia and much more.

6. Saudi Offers “Castrated African Slave” for Sale on Facebook

7. Mohamed birthday parade in Bradford

8. Hunt on for man who preys on elderly people within their homes.

And never mind the picture, the man is not described as a Canadian Lumberjack.

Asian who robs the elderly

NOT a Canadian lumberjack

 

9. This is very disturbing. The U.S. government would appear to be using the IRS for highly political and partizan purposes.

And here they admit it.

10. Teacher arrested for ‘defamation of islam’ (how is that possible? islam defames itself) goes on hunger strike.

11. I can’t be 100% sure, but I think this article is actually about Washington DC and not Louisiana as it says.

About Eeyore

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

11 Replies to “Links and News for May 12 2013”

  1. New Orleans Shooting Suspect Caught On Surveillance Video Of Mother’s Day Parade Violence

  2. Algerian convicted in French attack plot escapes

    An official says a convicted terrorist in France has escaped house arrest in a stolen car.

    Said Arif was a member of a Chechen network that once planned attacks in France, notably the eastern city of Strasbourg.

    Interior Minister Manuel Valls said in a statement that Arif, who was awaiting expulsion after serving his prison term, fled in a car owned by the family that runs the hotel where he was being held. Arif failed to report to the local police post Sunday morning as required.

    The Algerian was convicted in 2007 of criminal association with a terrorist group and served part of a 10-year term. In 2001, Arif had traveled to radical jihadi training camps in Pankisi Gorge in Georgia, a support base for Chechen fighters

    http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/world/europe/Algerian-convicted-in-French-attack-plot-escapes/articleshow/20022585.cms

  3. GERMANY- Bayern Munich Football Club Build Mosque for Muslims players and fans

    MUNICH – Helping their players to fulfil their religious duties, German football giants Bayern Munich have decided to build a mosque to help Muslim footballers to perform their prayers.

    The German football club agreed to a request to build a mosque in the Allianz Arena stadium to serve its Muslim players and fans.
    The request was made by the club’s Muslim midfielder Bilal Franck Ribery, who asked for specifying a small room for players to perform their prayers.

    The new mosque would serve Muslim players and fans with a full time imam, an Islamic library and Islamic sessions.

    The administration also announced that they will finance 85 percent of the costs of the worship place, leaving 15% to Muslim players and fans who want to participate.

    The news about the new mosque was made public via the club’s official site.

    Founded in 1900, Bayern Munich is the top tier of the German football league system, and is the most successful football club in Germany.

    http://www.onislam.net/english/news/europe/462624-bayern-munich-muslim-players-get-mosque.html

  4. Protest not the agenda as Daniel Pipes comes to Ottawa

    OTTAWA — Not surprisingly, there’s little enthusiasm among Ottawa Muslims and academics for Daniel Pipes’ appearance in Ottawa Monday night. But neither are there any plans to protest his visit.

    Indeed, one Ottawa imam contacted by the Citizen went so far as to welcome the topic — Islam versus Islamism — Pipes will address during a speech and panel discussion at Library and Archives Canada sponsored by the Free Thinking Film Society.

    Pipes, an American scholar and president of the Middle East Forum, has been a controversial figure since the 1990s for his outspoken views about radical Islam. He has long been branded an Islamaphobe by critics, but denies that he is anti-Islam.

    In 2003, his appearance at York University was nearly cancelled after protests by students and only proceeded under heavy security that included 100 police officers, 10 of whom were on horseback.

    Since then, however, Pipes has made a number of appearances in Canada without incident, including a 2008 talk in Ottawa at the National Arts Centre.

    In 2010, Pipes told the Washington Post he no longer attracts the same vitriol, because his views are more moderate than those of many anti-Islam bloggers. 🙂 🙂 🙂

    Pipes makes a clear distinction between Islam and the radical variant embraced by Islamists, says Fred Litwin, the Free Thinking Film Society’s president. “He’s very pro-Israel,” Litwin said. “That has led some people to think he’s an Islamaphobe. He’s not.”

    Samy Metwally, imam of the Ottawa Muslim Association Mosque, said he has heard no concerns about Pipes’ visit from within his community. Though he is unfamiliar with Pipes, Metwally thought the subject he plans to address — the difference between Islam and Islamism — is a “good topic.”

    Following the Boston Marathon bombing and the arrest of two alleged Islamist terrorists in Canada, this is a good time to emphasize those differences, Metwally said. “It’s good to have these sorts of dialogues.”

    Another Ottawa imam, Zijad Delic, was less welcoming. “It’s a heartbreaking and unfortunate reality that people who do not know us speak on our behalf even though we did not ask them to do so,” he said in an email.

    Delic wished Canadians would invite speakers on Islam who are “looking for permanent solutions to the world’s conflicts, not those who exploit emotions and build their reputations on such acts.

    “The question that good, ethical and thinking Canadians should ask is: Will his speech generate any tangible benefit for Canada and Canadians?” he said. “I know with certainty that it will not.”

    Despite that, Delic added, “let him speak as much as he wants. No protests!”

    Ihsaan Gardee, executive director of the Ottawa-based Canadian Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR. CAN), emphasized that his organization values freedom of speech and expression.

    On the other hand, he said, based on Pipes’ previous commentaries about Muslims and other minority groups, Canadian Muslims “would be concerned about the nature and content” of his message in Ottawa.

    “We hope that Mr. Pipes respects and adheres to Canadian laws, including those related to hate speech. If not, we trust that authorities will take appropriate action.”

    Mira Sucharov, a professor of political science at Carleton University, said Pipes “infuriated” academics in 2002 when his think tank established a website called Campus Watch to review and critique Middle East studies at North American universities.

    “Many people would probably consider him quite incendiary,” she said. “So then the message gets caught up in more heat than light.”

    Pipes continues to espouse controversial views. Following the bombings in Boston, he argued that wearing burquas and niqabs in public places should be banned. Had the alleged bombers donned such garb, they would not have been identified and apprehended so swiftly, he said.

    In an article in the Washington Times last month, Pipes also reluctantly argued that Western governments should support the “malign dictatorship” of Syria’s Bashar Assad because of the risk that Islamic extremists will seize power if he falls.

    “Western powers should guide enemies to stalemate by helping whichever side is losing, so as to prolong their conflict,” he wrote.

    http://www.ottawacitizen.com/life/Ottawa+Muslims+aren+thrilled+that+controversial+American/8374043/story.html

  5. Muslim dad finds severed pig’s head on his driveway

    A Birmingham man has gone on trial accused of leaving a pig’s head on a Muslim father’s driveway.

    Dad-of-six Shafique Rehman said he was “sickened” to find the head after rushing home when he was told his family’s home in Heather Road, Bordesley Green, had been attacked.

    Walter Bealby, prosecuting, said the front lounge window had been smashed with a brick and corrosive fluid, possibly paint stripper, had been poured over a Volkswagen car.

    He told Birmingham Crown Court that the head was found close to a white plastic bag which contained defendant Ehtisham Badar’s fingerprints. Mr Bealby told the jury: “It probably does not need me to tell you how offensive it must have been, Mr Rehman being a Muslim, to have a pig’s head left on his drive.”

    Badar, 21, of Daniers Road, Bordesley Green, has denied religiously aggravated harassment, two charges of religiously aggravated criminal damage, two of criminal damage and one count of threatening to destroy property.

    The head was found when nightshift worker Mr Rehman came home at 3am on October 20 last year.

    Mr Bealby said one of Mr Rehman’s daughters had been friends with another young woman who lived down the road.

    “It seems the two young ladies had some sort of falling out a couple of years ago and were no longer friends by October last year,” he said.

    Mr Bealby said Badar later told Mr Rehman: “Next time it will be a petrol bomb” as he drew alongside him in a car.

    He said Badar was arrested and claimed he had been asleep at the time.

    http://www.birminghammail.co.uk/news/local-news/muslim-dad-finds-severed-pigs-3660675

  6. APRIL 24th 2013

    At least 110 people killed in Iraq after two days of violence

    At least 110 people have been killed in Iraq since clashes broke out yesterday between security force and gunmen, officials said on Wednesday.

    Tensions are rising since dozens of people were killed and injured when Iraqi security forces stormed a Sunni Muslim anti-government protest camp in Hawija, near Kirkuk, on Tuesday. The raid on the protest was followed by an attack on Iraqi army checkpoints.

    Iraqi officials are meeting in Anbar, in the western region of Iraq, to discuss the crisis in Kirkuk, Al Arabiya’s correspondent reported on Wednesday.

    Following the raid on the camp, coordination committees in Anbar called on tribesmen in the province to take up arms and remain on high alert.

    http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2013/04/24/Iraqi-tribesmen-to-take-up-arms-after-Kirkuk-massacre-.html

  7. IRAQ Gunmen kill 12 at Baghdad alcohol shops

    Gunmen armed with silenced weapons shot dead 12 people at alcohol shops in the Iraqi capital on Tuesday, while four people died in other attacks, security and medical officials said.

    The gunmen, who were travelling in four vehicles, restrained federal policemen at a checkpoint in the Zayouna area of Baghdad, an interior ministry official said.

    They then shot dead 12 people in multiple adjoining alcohol shops nearby, the ministry official said.

    A medical official confirmed the toll.

    With alcohol forbidden by Islam, Baghdad liquor stores are an attractive target for fundamentalist groups, made more so because they are often staffed by religious minorities.

    In other violence on Tuesday, gunmen killed an anti-Qaeda militiaman along with his brother in Fallujah, west of Baghdad, while a car bomb in the northern city of Mosul killed a child and wounded 14 people, police and doctors said.

    And gunmen killed anti-government protest organiser Abdulrahman al-Badri near the city of Baquba, north of Baghdad, officials said.

    Protests broke out in Sunni areas of Shiite-majority Iraq more than four months ago.

    http://www.france24.com/en/20130514-gunmen-kill-12-baghdad-alcohol-shops