Holier than thou Representatives of the “Religeon of Peace” dig Strip Clubs, Prostitutes and Flogging Christians for Indecencey
by admin ~ November 28th, 2009. Filed under: Muslims and the Islam.What’s good for the goat humper is not good for the gander…
(Khartoum, Sudan) Over a period of merely 90 minutes, a 16-year-old
Christian girl, Silva Kashif, was arrested, tried, convicted, sentenced
and flogged under sharia law for wearing a short skirt. She received 50 lashes for the crime of offending public morality.
Reportedly, the skirt hung between the knee and ankle and was quite
appropriate in Kashif’s community. However, the Sudanese Islamic
morality police thought differently.
Whereas the Al-Qaeda imam who was in contact with the Fort Hood jihadist was regularly soliciting prostitutes.
The probe of the 9/11 attacks soon led Washington FBI agents back to San Diego, where they found that al-Awlaki had twice been busted for soliciting prostitutes in 1996 and 1997 but had avoided jail time.
Al-Awlaki has previously described these charges as “bogus.” But FBI
agents hoped al-Awlaki might cooperate with the 9/11 probe if they
could nab him on similar charges in Virginia. FBI sources say
agents observed the imam allegedly taking Washington-area prostitutes
into Virginia and contemplated using a federal statute usually reserved
for nabbing pimps who transport prostitutes across state lines. But
in March 2002, al-Awlaki abruptly left the country for Yemen. “When he
left town, it was as if the air went out of the balloon,” says one FBI
source. Al-Awlaki briefly returned to the United States in October
2002, but federal authorities did not have sufficient cause to detain
him, even though his name popped up on a terrorist “lookout” database.
Now he’s back in the Middle East, where FBI agents are said to be
keeping their eyes on him.
December 4th, 2009 at 11:35
stunning blog
competitive intelligence
July 4th, 2010 at 10:28
Christians must rise to the challenge of Islam, says Italian cardinal
The murder of Bishop Luigi Padovese in Turkey is a reminder of the dangers facing Christians in Turkey and elsewhere in Europe, said Cardinal Dionigi Tettamanzi at a Mass for the slain prelate in his native Milan.
Cardinal Tettamanzi said that Italian Catholics need “to heed the cry—or better, the lament” from Turkey after the death of Bishop Padovese. The man who has confessed to the killing of the bishop, a driver who was placed in the bishop’s service by Turkish security officials, shouted “Allah akbar” after the assault, giving rise to the belief that the killing was arranged by Islamic extremists.
While Christians in Turkey face the fear of radical Islam, Cardinal Tettamanzi suggested that Italian Catholics must confront the same challenge, with “growing awareness of our Christian identity, and bear witness without fear, always and everywhere.”
How can “infidels” still mistake this for a religion of peace? One would think the world would have caught on about a century ago when the Armenian Genocide was perpetrated.