Another Fort Hood plot

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ignerntbend

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Guys, I'd rather not focus on child porn as a societally or religiously accepted practice. It was merely an attempt to point out the hypocrisy of the practicioner, not an indictment of the whole faith. Does the Koran even have an equivalent to Luke 6:31 (Do to others as you would have them do to you.)?

As a matter of fact it does. Google Islam/Golden Rule.
What difference does it make? Nobody goes by that shi+ anyway.
 

Dale00

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On Wednesday, Private First Class Naser Jason Abdo was arrested and found with a large quantity of weapons and explosives materials. The incident is a classic example of al-taqiyya, the Islamic doctrine of lying to non-believers. He publicly opposed the 2009 Fort Hood shooting, and now has admitted to planning on doing a similar attack on the same target.

Abdo converted to Islam at age 17, and is described by his peers as being “kind of weird” and a loner. He joined the military, and became part of the 101st Airborne Division based at Fort Campbell in Kentucky. In June 2010, he tried to avoid being deployed to Afghanistan by applying for conscientious objector status. Major media attention followed. ...

Abdo went AWOL over the Fourth of July weekend. On July 3, he walked into Quantico Tactical, a firearms store near Fort Hood, asked some questions and left. He came back later in the day to try to buy a handgun, but didn’t have the necessary paperwork. On July 12, he told the Associated Press that he was thinking about buying a gun after receiving threats from fellow soldiers after he was granted conscientious objector status.

On Tuesday, Abdo took a taxi to an Army surplus store, where he purchased a military uniform with Fort Hood insignia. He then took a taxi to Guns Galore LLC, the same store that Hasan purchased a weapon from. He purchased six pounds of smokeless gunpowder, three boxes of shotgun ammunition, and a magazine for a semi-automatic pistol. Alarmed by the purchases and the fact that he “didn’t know what the hell he was buying,” the store employees alerted law enforcement.

He was arrested on Wednesday at a motel only three miles from Fort Hood, and he quickly admitted that he was going to attack the base. He was in possession of four magazines, a .40 caliber pistol and a list of bomb ingredients. The authorities found enough equipment for two bombs, including a pressure cooker, 18 pounds of sugar, dismantled shotgun shells, and shrapnel. He also had Christmas lights and battery-operated clocks; items that can be used in assembling timed explosives. Documents he had indicate he wanted to set off two bombs at a restaurant frequented by the soldiers at Fort Hood, and then going on a shooting.

He also had “Islamic extremist literature,” including at least one article from Inspire, Al-Qaeda’s English-only magazine that is created by its branch in Yemen. He also mentioned the name of Anwar al-Awlaki to police, though no evidence of a direct link to the powerful Al-Qaeda official has been found so far. It is said that Abdo’s attack preparations and bomb construction came “straight out of Inspire magazine and an Al-Qaeda explosives course manual.”

The foiled plot shows how the threat from terrorism is becoming increasingly homegrown. The plots against the U.S. homeland “have surpassed the number and pace of attacks during any year since 9/11,” as Michael Leiter, Director of the National Counterterrorism Center, explained. Attorney General Eric Holder likewise says, “You didn’t have to worry about this [homegrown terrorism] even two years ago—about individuals, about Americans, to the extent that we now do.”

However, this does not mean that a law enforcement-only approach is best. Homegrown extremism is fueled by overseas sources, such as Anwar al-Awlaki. He is radicalizing a new generation of Muslims through the Internet as he escapes U.S. aerial attacks in Yemen. His sermons “surface in every single homegrown terrorism investigation, whether in the U.S., the U.K., Canada or beyond,” says terrorism expert Evan Kohlmann.

Bin Laden may be dead, but the ideology that drove him lives on.
http://frontpagemag.com/2011/07/29/second-fort-hood-attack-foiled/?utm_source=FrontPage+Magazine&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=63823900a2-RSS_EMAIL_CAMPAIGN&utm_content=Yahoo!+Mail
 

RidgeHunter

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Only if it is boy children and no I am not making that up. It may not say it in the book but many Muslim men keep young boytoys because women are unclean. The practice has been going on for centuries and it is not discouraged by the Islamic faith.

You're talking about Bacha Bazi. I remember reading someplace that the practice predates Islam in those areas, and that it doesn't have anything to do with Islam itself, but I can't find it at 2am.

Also I always thought Bacha Bazi Boyz would be a hilarious name for a boy band.

We are on dangerous ground here, but that sounds like my mother the Catholic Church.
And this is about to get locked, just when we were begining to talk about something

I understand what you are saying but with the Catholic Church it is only some priest. No I am not defending them and have enjoyed MANY a bad joke at their expense (I have a Catholic sister-inlaw who I love to needle) but I have to admit it is not that wide spread.

Look, I think you can all find some common ground here and agree that it's at best highly improbable that either Catholicism or Islam exist for any other reason than the sole purpose of propagating boyrape on a global level.
 

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