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Honey Badger Don't Give A Shit
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I would now retort with all of the Holy Bible proscriptions to kill non-believers, murder those who make God "angry" (...as if a Supreme Being could possibly be made angry), subjugate females and of course anyone who believes in the physical sciences.....

But then we would just have two long posts describing irrational and superstitious mumbo-jumbo. And no one read the first one, so why would they read a second?
 

FreeRyanFerguson.com
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I would now retort with all of the Holy Bible proscriptions to kill non-believers, murder those who make God "angry" (...as if a Supreme Being could possibly be made angry), subjugate females and of course anyone who believes in the physical sciences.....

But then we would just have two long posts describing irrational and superstitious mumbo-jumbo. And no one read the first one, so why would they read a second?
Go ahead and post it for my benefit, since you're right and I'm wrong. I'll read it.
 

Honey Badger Don't Give A Shit
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I'm sure you're able to find any of the thousands of websites which detail the hypocrisies found within the Holy Bible. And most of them also provide nice detail of the violence, murder and mayhem attributed to that angry, pissed off Old Testament God.

That is, if you're really interested.
 

FreeRyanFerguson.com
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I'm sure you're able to find any of the thousands of websites which detail the hypocrisies found within the Holy Bible. And most of them also provide nice detail of the violence, murder and mayhem attributed to that angry, pissed off Old Testament God.

That is, if you're really interested.
That's not sufficient, Mr. "I'm a Christian but I mock the Bible and think atheism is cool."
 
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New York-Based Muslim's Web Site Calls for God to 'Kill the Jews'

Tuesday, October 13, 2009
foxnews_story.gif

By Joshua Rhett Miller

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RevolutionMuslim.com

Yousef al-Khattab, formerly Joseph Cohen, is seen here in an undated photograph.
<style type="text/css"> #story .gallery_container p.caption{display:none !important;} #story .gallery_container p.strut{color:#000;} </style> Yousef al-Khattab, formerly Joseph Cohen, is seen here in an undated photograph.





A New York bicycle cabbie who last year used his Web site to mock the beheading of journalist Daniel Pearl posted a prayer calling for the murder of Jews and exhorting Muslims to “throw liquid drain cleaner in their faces." And there's nothing authorities can do about it.
Yousef al-Khattab, who runs RevolutionMuslim.com and pedals a pedicab in New York City, insists the words he has posted on his Web site are a prayer, and not a threat — and that his hatred is protected by the First Amendment.
"If it was a threat, I'd be in jail," the 41-year-old al-Khattab told <nobr style="font-weight: normal; font-size: 100%; color: darkgreen;" id="itxt_nobr_1_0">Foxnews.com </nobr> from his home in Queens. "I'm asking my God, that's what it is. Every supporter of Israel is an enemy combatant and the immune system is not anti-Semitic for resisting disease."
Al-Khattab removed the Oct. 7 post a "few days ago" and replaced it with a post about a mosque in Jerusalem.
An American-born Jew formerly known as Joseph Cohen who converted to Islam after attending an Orthodox rabbinical <nobr style="font-weight: normal; font-size: 100%; color: darkgreen;" id="itxt_nobr_3_0">school </nobr> — al-Khattab called on Allah to carry out "wrath on the Jewish occupiers of Palestine & their supporters."
"Please throw liquid drain cleaner in their faces," he wrote. " … burn their flammable sukkos while they sleep … Ya Allah (Oh God) answer my duaa (prayer)." ("Sukkos" refers to the Jewish holiday of Sukkot, during which Jews build and eat their meals in outdoor huts known as "sukkahs," which represent the huts the Jews lived in during their exodus from Egypt.)
<!-- QUIGO --> <!-- QUIGO --> <script type="text/javascript"> var adsonar_placementId="1425767",adsonar_pid="144757",adsonar_ps="-1",adsonar_zw=224;adsonar_zh=93,adsonar_jv="ads.adsonar.com"; </script> <script type="text/javascript" src="http://js.adsonar.com/js/adsonar.js"></script><iframe name="adsonar_serve278982" id="adsonar_serve278982" marginwidth="0" marginheight="0" vspace="0" hspace="0" src="http://ads.adsonar.com/adserving/getAds.jsp?previousPlacementIds=&placementId=1425767&pid=144757&ps=-1&zw=224&zh=93&url=http%3A//www.foxnews.com/story/0%2C2933%2C565365%2C00.html&v=5&dct=New%20York-Based%20Muslim%27s%20W-s%20%7C%20US%20News%20-%20FOXNews.com" scrolling="no" frameborder="0" height="93" width="224"></iframe>
Judge Andrew Napolitano, Fox News' senior legal analyst, said the posting is "absolutely protected" by the First Amendment.
"All innocuous speech is absolutely protected and all speech is innocuous when there is time for more speech to rebut or address it," he told Foxnews.com. "So even if this Web site were to call on Muslim freedom fighters to kill Jews, as long as there is time for someone else to challenge this with words, then the originals words are lawful."
The blog post, signed by al-Khattab, notes that it should be taken only as a "prayer" and not as an incitement to genocide. But officials at the Anti-Defamation <nobr style="font-weight: normal; font-size: 100%; color: darkgreen;" id="itxt_nobr_8_0">League </nobr> are worried about its ability to influence others.
"Whether it's a poem or a prayer, however he describes it, he decided to post it. And if you're going to be posting a prayer like that, you just don't know who's going to read that and who might be influenced by it," said Oren Segal, director of the ADL's Center on Extremism. "There's a certain amount of responsibility behind posting your own blog. We take it very seriously."
Segal said the New York Police <nobr style="font-weight: normal; font-size: 100%; color: darkgreen;" id="itxt_nobr_10_0">Department </nobr> is "aware" of the blog post. Calls to Paul Browne, deputy commissioner of public information for the NYPD, were not immediately returned.
RevolutionMuslim.com has been monitored by the ADL since 2006, Segal said, and has roughly five to 10 active members who frequently distribute anti-Semitic literature in front of mosques throughout New York City.
"This is a group we've monitored for a while," Segal said. "This is nothing particularly new, but then again, [the threat] has the ability to potentially influence people."
The posting reflects the "prayer of every true Muslim," al-Khattab said.
"Every true Muslim would say the same thing," he continued. "Most people would agree that any occupied people have the right to defend themselves."
Al-Khattab, who said he's driven a pedicab in New York for the last three years, is married with four kids. He said he's driven plenty of Jewish passengers without incident.
"I've never killed one," he told Foxnews.com. "I suffer from mental Tourette's [syndrome]. I say what's on my mind. We have freedom of speech."
Al-Khattab said he created RevolutionMuslim.com with the mission of "preserving Islamic culture" and seeking support of the "beloved Sheik Abdullah Faisal, who's preaching the religion of Islam and serving as a spiritual guide."
Faisal was convicted in the U.K. in 2003 for spreading messages of racial hatred and urging his followers to kill Jews, Hindus and Westerners. In sermon recordings played at his trial, Faisal called on young, impressionable Muslims to use chemical weapons to “exterminate unbelievers” and “cut the throat of the Kaffars [nonbelievers] with [a] machete.”
Authorities believe Faisal’s sermons influenced London transport bomber Germaine Lindsay and the so-called "shoe bomber," Richard Reid, who attended mosques where Faisal preached.
FBI spokesman Richard Kolko told Foxnews.com last year that it's difficult to bring criminal charges against operators of Web sites like RevolutionMuslim.com unless specific threats are made.
'It's usually a First Amendment right if they don't cross the threshold of making threats," Kolko said. "There's nothing we should or could do."
Gregg Zukowski, president of the NYC Pedicab <nobr style="font-weight: normal; font-size: 100%; color: darkgreen;" id="itxt_nobr_22_0">Association </nobr>, said al-Khattab has been riding a pedicab in midtown Manhattan "on and off" for the past several years without any reported incidents. Zukowski was unaware of al-Khattab's Web site.
"He's just like one of a 1,000 guys who ride a pedicab," Zukowski told Foxnews.com. "There's nothing that sticks out about him in particular."
 

Honey Badger Don't Give A Shit
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Sounds like one of a million "Internet tough guys". If he's serious about his admonitions, we should be seeing his arrest report soon for actually killing some Jewish New Yorkers.
 
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[ Don't cut in front of a Muslim in the line in front of the Falafel cart ]

A fatal hunger strike



alafel-rager explains

By LAURA ITALIANO
Last Updated: 7:34 AM, December 12, 2009
Posted: 4:34 AM, December 12, 2009

Call it falafel rage.<p> </p><br> laura.italiano@nypost.com <p> </p><br></textarea> </form>

[*] RSS
[/LIST]
Call it falafel rage.
The lamb and chicken combo platters were so heavenly at a popular Midtown halal cart that one customer is on trial in Manhattan for admittedly stabbing to death another customer he thought had cut the line.
"I was hungry," the stabber in the fatal 2006 case of gyro-mania tells cops in a videotaped confession screened yesterday before a Manhattan jury.
Ziad Tayeh, 26, on trial for manslaughter, told cops he had already waited about 15 minutes -- in a downpour at 4 a.m. -- at the Halal Chicken and Gyro stand at 53rd Street and Sixth Avenue when the argument broke out.
<!-- CORRELATION PHOTO -->
ziad_tayeh--300x300.jpg
ZIAD TAYEH Video slay confession.



Victim Tyrone Noel Gibbons, 19, along with an older brother and a friend, had cut in front of some 15 other customers to sidle up to Tayeh at the front of the line.
Prosecutors concede it's a minor infraction.
"They sneak up on the line to try to get their food a little faster," Assistant District Attorney Randolph Clarke told jurors in openings. "Is that polite? No. But is it criminal? No."
Words were exchanged, the sides agree, both at the stand and as the combatants got into their separate cars and chased each other uptown, finally stopping at Seventh Avenue and 52nd Street.
"They called me a punk!" Tayeh told cops in his confession.
But defense lawyer Daniel Ollen told jurors it was the victim's brother, Shannon, who turned what was merely a minor falafel kerfuffle into a tragedy -- by pulling the first knife and holding it to Tayeh's neck.
Tayeh then swung out with his own knife, the death weapon -- a punch knife with a four-inch blade.
"I was scared," Tayeh cried in his confession. "It was quick!"
Afterward, as he sped from the scene, "I seen the blood on my hand . . . I didn't think I hurt him."

 

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Hamas Makes Gaza More Islamist - Avi Issacharoff (Ha'aretz)

Hamas rule in Gaza has only become more firmly established since the coup of June 2007. Fatah has nearly ceased to exist in the public domain. At the same time, Hamas is making great efforts to compete with the rising popularity of Islamic extremists.

Hamas is offering afternoon religion lessons in government offices and is also encouraging the activities of sharia courts at the expense of the civil ones.

In schools and universities, religious curricula have been expanded. Islamic reconciliation committees operate throughout the Strip, mediating in disputes between families and individuals.

Many markets and shops close now on Fridays, and men and women sit in separate areas on the beaches. The Hamas government prohibits the wearing of immodest garments in schools, and favors uniforms for students.

The parliament in Gaza, which consists entirely of Hamas members, recently discussed the implementation of sharia-style punishment (for example, cutting off a thief's hand).

The Hamas Ministry of Religion puts up posters throughout Gaza encouraging women to dress modestly, not only in the hijab, but also in long dresses.

Merchants are asked not to dress female store-window mannequins in immodest garments, as well as to remove their heads.
 

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Hizbullah's Delusions - Jonathan Spyer

The Iranian-backed Shi'ite Islamist movement Hizbullah is pursuing a long-term strategy intended to eventually deliver Lebanon into its hands. But at the core of its strategic thinking lies a series of delusions which are likely to bring about its defeat over time.

Senior Israeli officials note the growing strength of Shi'ite officers in the Lebanese Armed Forces, particularly at mid-level.

This development, alongside political moves that enable the Hizbullah-led opposition to block any legislation not to its liking, is slowly blurring the borders between the official Lebanese state and the parallel state maintained by Hizbullah - representing the slow, full-spectrum advance of the Shi'ite Islamist camp in Lebanon.

Hizbullah's new manifesto condemns the U.S. as the "root of all terror," and a "danger that threatens the whole world." It also reiterates the call for the destruction of Israel, describing the need to "liberate Jerusalem and Al-Aqsa" as a "religious duty" for all Muslims.

Recent visitors to Lebanon speak of a high, almost delusional state of morale among circles affiliated with Hizbullah. Inside its closed world, it is sincerely believed that the next war between Israel and Hizbullah will be part of a greater conflict in which Israel will be destroyed.

The true balance of power is rather different, of course. And as Hizbullah slowly swallows other elements of the Lebanese system, the conclusion being reached in Israel is that any differentiation between the movement and the nest it has taken over is increasingly artificial - and will not be maintained in a future conflict.

The recent history of the Middle East indicates that gaps between reality and ideological perceptions tend to be decided - eventually - in favor of the former. The writer is a senior research fellow at the Global Research in International Affairs Center at the Interdisciplinary Center, Herzliya. (Ha'aretz)
 

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Syria and Turkey: Walking Arm in Arm Down the Same Road? - David Schenker

Two factors have led to Turkey's shift away from Israel and toward Syria.

First, Turkey no longer needed Israeli assistance to pressure the Syrian government to change its policy of providing safe-haven to the terrorist Kurdish Worker's Organization (PKK).

Second, in the past seven years, once secular Turkish politics have undergone a profound Islamist transformation. At the same time, the Turkish military can do little to impact the policies of the Islamist AKP, which promote solidarity with Islamist, anti-Western regimes while dismissing secular, pro-Western Muslim governments.

The writer is director of the Program on Arab Politics at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy.
 

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Man Convicted in Seattle Jewish Center Shooting Spree - Levi Pulkkinen (Seattle Post-Intelligencer)
http://www.seattlepi.com/local/413210_HAQ11.html?source=mypi
Naveed Haq, 34, was found guilty of aggravated murder Tuesday, with jurors unanimously rejecting claims of insanity raised by the defense.

In a July 28, 2006, shooting at the Seattle Jewish Federation, he killed Pamela Waechter and wounded Carol Goldman, Layla Bush, Dayna Klein, Christina Rexroad and Cheryl Stumbo.

King County Prosecutor Dan Satterberg described the attack as "our state's worst hate crime." Shooting survivor Carol Goldman said, "It was not insanity that led him to do this, it was hate that was in his heart."
 

Rx. Junior
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Zit..was your mom raped by a big bad muslim dude or something? You really need to take it easy boy. Either that or maybe you just do this for attention. You are such a joke.
 

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Zit..was your mom raped by a big bad muslim dude or something? You really need to take it easy boy. Either that or maybe you just do this for attention. You are such a joke.

Way, way over the line. Even for a douchebag like you.
 

Rx. Junior
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Way, way over the line. Even for a douchebag like you.

Shut up you hypocrite. You troll of a poster that's going around looking for my threads making snide remarks...what a joke you are..blah blah blah...

Mr. selfrighteous here lol..talks about not replying in eachother's threads then goes around looking for mine and making a point to make a silly snide remark...talk about your douchebags...grow up and be a man.
 
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I've been wondering this week if Sumday might be an
even bigger douche bag than gtc08.

My conclusion so far is that since gtc08 seems to have mellowed
out, that currently Sumday is a way bigger douche bag, but
he's got a little ways to go before he becomes a bigger douche
bag than when gtc08 was at his peak.

@)
 

Rx. Junior
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I've been wondering this week if Sumday might be an
even bigger douche bag than gtc08.

My conclusion so far is that since gtc08 seems to have mellowed
out, that currently Sumday is a way bigger douche bag, but
he's got a little ways to go before he becomes a bigger douche
bag than when gtc08 was at his peak.

@)

Riiiight..the king of douchebags himself talking here..I guess you reached the peak long ago huh?

:ohno:
 

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Thailand’s former prime minister, Chavalit Yongchaiyudh, recently ignited a furor when he proposed that the separatist campaign in his country’s Muslim-majority southern provinces might be solved politically, with a form of self-rule. Thailand’s ruling Democrat Party immediately called Chavalit’s remarks “traitorous.”

But recent developments surrounding Afghanistan’s elections have highlighted the shortcomings of using military force alone to resolve a civil war. This precedent offers an important lesson for Thailand and other countries facing intractable insurgencies. As Aristotle put it, “politics is the master science in the realm of action.”

In June 2006, I sat in a village in southern Thailand’s Yala Province with several ordinary-looking young men who had taken part in extraordinary events. They had joined the militants who had attacked a dozen security checkpoints across three southern provinces on April 28, 2004.

Armed mainly with machetes and kitchen knives, 106 attackers perished that day, 32 of them inside Pattani’s historic Krue-Ze mosque, where they had taken refuge. Five members of the Thai security forces were also killed.

None of the youths I talked to could give any clear explanation for their actions, except to say that an Islamic schoolteacher known as Ustadz So had recruited them into a shadowy militant movement. Ustadz So had taught them that Thai rule over this historically Malay region was illegitimate, that Thai officials were cruel and heartless, and that the time had come for the Muslim population to rise up and expel the Buddhist infidels.

According to counter-insurgency expert David Kilcullen, the violence in Thailand’s deep South – which has now claimed more than 3,500 lives – was some of the most intense in the world between 2004 and 2007, “second only to Iraq and Afghanistan during this period.” Yet, despite such alarming levels of bloodshed, the insurgency has been under-reported and under-researched, barely registering on the international community’s radar screen, largely because the conflict cannot be reduced to a sound bite-friendly narrative of identifiable bad guys and good guys.

First, the militant movement itself has no name, operating in a highly decentralized manner through small local cells that operate relatively independently of each other – what might be described as self-managed violence franchises. Thai political expert Chaiwat Satha-Anand has called the movement a “network without a core.” The lack of a defined enemy makes reporting on and understanding the conflict difficult for journalists, diplomats, and government officials.

Second, outcomes are not predictable. On April 28, 2004, the insurgents’ primary targets were Buddhist members of the security forces, but most of those who died were Malay Muslims. The would-be perpetrators also became the primary victims. Some victims have been killed extra-judicially. The one group not targeted by anyone has been Westerners. Again, reporting such a messy story is a challenge; most Western news editors have preferred to highlight Iraq and Afghanistan.

A third factor is that the violence has become a marginal issue even within Thailand. The breaking news teams returned to Bangkok long ago, where a military coup, ongoing mass protests, and other big political stories have kept them busy ever since. And, because the violence tends to come in dribs and drabs – rarely since 2004 has any one day’s casualties reached double figures – the South has never risen back up the news agenda.

Many Thai military and police officials now privately admit that the insurgency cannot be defeated through security measures. After a dip in the number of incidents in late 2007 and 2008, violence increased in 2009. The military’s belief that Malay Muslims could be re-educated and re-socialized into accepting a Thai identity has proved untenable.

The same goes for earlier hardline rhetoric about rooting out the militants and destroying their organization. The current government under Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva misses the point with rhetoric about creating peace simply through promoting justice, or by funding large-scale socio-economic development projects. Malay Muslims in Thailand’s southern provinces are demanding their own political space. Few of them seriously believe that a tiny separate Patani state, wedged between Thailand and Malaysia, would be viable. What many are seeking is some form of special status within Thailand, enabling them to pursue their own cultural and religious traditions without interference from Bangkok.

Until the Thai government grasps this simple point, young men like those I met in Yala will still be recruited into militant activity. As Yongchaiyudh understands, the southern Thai conflict is a political problem in need of a political solution – just like Afghanistan and other more familiar wars.

Duncan McCargo is a professor of Southeast Asian politics at the University of Leeds and author of “Tearing Apart the Land: Islam and Legitimacy in Southern Thailand,” which won the 2009 Asia Society Bernard Schwartz Book Award. THE DAILY STAR publishes this commentary in collaboration with Project Syndicate © (www.project-syndicate.org).
 

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