September 23, 2005
Indictment in Lodi Islamic Terror Probe
(Sacramento, California) In the ongoing three-year probe of the alleged Lodi, California, Islamic terrorist cell, five people have been implicated and, of those, three have been deported for immigration violations and two are being held in federal custody without bail.
Last month, 47-year-old Islamic cleric Muhammad Adil Khan and his son were deported for overstaying their visas. On Wednesday of this week, 39-year-old Islamic cleric Shabbir Ahmed was deported for the same reason. The three were deported without being charged with any crimes, however, the government alleged that they intended to set up a terror training camp in Lodi. It's noteworthy that both Ahmed and Khan are allegedly linked to Osama bin Laden and al-Qaeda.
The two being held in custody, charged with lying to federal agents, are 23-year-old Hamid Hayat and his father, 47-year-old Umer Hayat. In a development yesterday resulting from a federal grand jury hearing, prosecutors charged Hamid Hayat with providing material support to terrorists.
From MercuryNews.com:
The federal indictment alleged that Hamid Hayat, 23, provided material support and resources for carrying out international acts of terror between March 2003 and June 4, 2005, when he was arrested days after returning to the United States from Pakistan. Hayat faces multiple charges for which the combined maximum sentence is 31 years in prison.
"Today's charge centers around the fact that Hamid Hayat attended a terrorist training camp in Pakistan in 2004, returned to this country with the intent of committing jihad against America, and by doing so provided material support to terrorists," U.S. attorney McGregor Scott said.
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Posted by: Mike Pechar at
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Sup man? You don't love my blog anymore?
Posted by: Chris Short at September 23, 2005 06:05 AM (0OCQY)
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As I said here 4 months ago in the discussion of "the religion of peace". When the Muslim community and its "leaders" come out against the terrorists in Lodi I *may* give some credence the the MSM/DNC bull shit about "religion of peace".
Of course NoCal's most famous muslin is the son of a PG+E executive VP, the murderer of Johnny Spaim, the darling of Nancy Pelosi - Johnny Walker. Who BTW is not Scotch.
Posted by: Rod Stanton at September 23, 2005 06:15 AM (tplWd)
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How many countries has he invaded and bombed???
Posted by: Downing Street Memo at September 23, 2005 07:04 AM (VhNDM)
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How many has Bush invaded and bombed?
Posted by: Downing Street Memo at September 23, 2005 08:02 AM (VhNDM)
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DSM,
How many countries did Ted Bundy invade and bomb? Is that supposed to be an excuse for murder? Oh, judge, I didn't invade or bomb any countries, so you have to let me go.
Whatever you say about Bush, it doesn't justify terrorism against anyone. And yes, if you come to the US and try to practice the jihad shit, we are going to get your ass.
Posted by: jesusland joe at September 23, 2005 10:15 AM (rUyw4)
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DSM wrote: "How many countries has he invaded and bombed???"
Invaded: 1 (he's here with hostile intent)
Bombed: 0 (because they caught him beforehand)
"How many has Bush invaded and bombed?"
Answer: 0
I helped invade Iraq, and I didn't see the President anywhere. Henry Rollins came to visit our camp, though. How evil does that make him?
Posted by: File Closer at September 23, 2005 02:26 PM (pgXsZ)
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Seems like Khan is a bad name all around. Genghis Khan, AQ Khan, Muhammad Adil Khan, Chaka Khan, ...
Posted by: Oyster at September 23, 2005 03:43 PM (fl6E1)
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C'mon Jesusland and Mind-closer
Drunken Monkey is a screeching terrorist, playing bomb-and-seek with the people of Iraq. Why not bomb Boston to wipe out the Irish Nationalists there who openly fund the IRA? Your BushGod is a criminal drunk, an indefensible weasel.
Posted by: Downing Street Memo at September 23, 2005 07:43 PM (VhNDM)
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Resorting to name-calling, DSM? Since you started it, here's one for you: DSM = Double Stupid Moonbat.
Having got that out of the way, I would like to address one of your "points":
"bomb-and-seek with the people of Iraq."
Sigh.
So how much time have you spent in Iraq, then? Just wondering, since you seem to be such an expert.
PS: I'd love to bomb Boston, but just to make sure the hated Patriots don't dominate the AFC again this NFL season!
Posted by: File Closer at September 23, 2005 10:28 PM (pgXsZ)
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File Cruiser,
You want to bomb Boston?! Why, why - that's a 'Terra'ist' statement... and now, you....you must call Cherty and Brownie's DHS and report yourself! Pack a toothbrush and learn Navy Hospitality!!
Iraq is a twistnut place: http://www.thedossier.ukonline.co.uk/video_iraqwar.htm scroll down to "Secret US Plans for Iraq's Oil" and for sick laughs, Bremner Byrd and Fortune's fact-based skits.
Posted by: Downing Street Memo at September 23, 2005 11:48 PM (VhNDM)
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September 16, 2005
Partial vs. Total War: Revisiting Tranquil Blindness
The following is an email exchange I had with Nicole Argo, one of the panel on suicide terrorism that I panned recently
here. That is, it was unfair to the extent that some of my criticism wasn't so much substantive as atmospheric, and it may also have been unfair to Argo. I still disagree with Pape's policy prescriptions, which I think do not follow from his analysis, and I thought Bloom's attitude rather superficial and trite, reflecting the "unseriousness" of the Moveon crowd. And I still have the sense that the way nearly all of these people frame the issue of suicide terrorism reflects a false dichotomy between "military" and "non-military" strategy.
In the 1940s Roosevelt created an agency that he called the "Board of Economic Warfare," which was chaired, rather ironically, by R. Buckminster Fuller. While this agency wasn't "military," its design purpose was unambiguously to serve the military campaign. If there is value in the work of these researchers attempting to understand the nature of terrorism it probably is not in an alternative to a military strategy, but in service to it... with the laudable objective of preventing a drift toward what Clausewitz calls "Total War."
But Argo was quite gracious in the following note, and in a follow-up (which I won't post because I haven't quite figured out how to respond yet). Anyway, here's the exchange. The quotes from my original post are in bold, her comments in italics, and my responses in plain old, plain old.
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Speaking of Total Wars, other than Medieval and Rome which were both excellent but Medieval was better after the Viking Invasion addition, should there be one that isn't on already? If yes, then where?
Posted by: A Finn at September 16, 2005 05:15 AM (cWMi4)
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After the scathing comment frome "clarifier" in your last post about this I'm hesitant to comment further. I have an opinion though, so I will. Right here in the "comfort of my high speed connection".
This is, of course, my opinion, so take it or leave it:
If the conference was open to those without an indepth knowledge such as the speakers held, don't the speakers have a responsibility to convey what they know properly? And save the "as-a-brotherhood-we-understand-each-other" levity for closed discussions? That way, people like "clarifier" don't have to appear in a blog, defend the speakers and berate everyone for "misunderstanding".
What I don't understand is why the most educated in the field are so reluctant to say that it took, in most cases, an
entire life of swallowing whole "the soundbites offered them by the local cleric, or the international terrorist," and you forgot, culture, family enforced religious values, etc. for the vast majority of them. They didn't come to decide terrorism was a good idea on their own or in a short period of time. (As I said, in the vast majority of cases)
The extremist's interpretation of the religion is so rigid and spartan and demanding that when one encounters such a charismatic ideologue as their recruiters/trainers it only reinforces what they've already "learned" and brings them to a whole new level. These charismatic ideologues are given the task of breaking down the suicide-bomber's natural instinct of "self-preservation" by use of the "religion" and the promise of a utopia, among other things, before they're sent on missions, - suicide or otherwise. Their reasons for their anger can be political, but they're told their religion demands their action.
And let's not forget the one's who have told us of the drugs given them to bolster their confidence in their non-suicide missions or when we find the suidide-bomber handcuffed to the steering wheel of an IED-laden car. In these cases, it's obvious that they're reluctant and the "seargent" that sends them on the mission recognizes this. As I said, they're very adept.
The religion is the one constant though. Instead of looking for the motives of the suicide bomber, I just think it would be more important to put the middle man under the magnifying glass. The suicide-bomber's master. These guys are very adept at manipulation and re-inforcement. We don't hear from these guys. They stay under the radar. The suicide bomber is just their means to an end.
If the APSA panel is unsure where Iraq's bombers are coming from, and they are the "experts", then why are we constantly told that the vast majority of them are foreign - Saudi, Pakistani, Syrian, Iranian, etc.? But predominately Saudi. Are we getting bad information in that respect?
Yes, I'll read what I can of these "papers" and my opinion may change, but I think the religous part of it is just too obvious to dismiss to the point of looking for other reasons. I think it underlies everything else.
As I said: that's my opinion and I'm sticking to it ;-)
Posted by: Oyster at September 16, 2005 02:43 PM (fl6E1)
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Oyster:
I haven't read Clarifier's comments, so maybe I should do that first. I've just been swamped with... survival stuff. I'm also helping with a Katrina hotline for the Red Cross, which is a bit of an eye-opener. I'll have more on that later.
Academe is pretty insular, and I agree that the panelists had an obligation to make themselves clear by going beyond that. Argo actually seems to agree with that part of my criticism. Most of these panels at APSA were on take-it-or-leave-it topics, but this one deserves the same kind of respect we reserve for the holocaust.
I also don't think people misunderstood the panel that much. I misunderstood a few things, but I don't think they were made clear. For instance, it wasn't obvious to me that people were excluding Iraq from their conclusions, and I tend to think that many of them (especially Bloom and Pape) have a very definite point of view that isn't empirically driven. It's a preference stated as an expert opinion.
As for the drugging and handcuffing, I've heard those stories but it's not clear how much that goes on. At this point it would be a mistake to think that's a serious aspect of what we're facing. Most of these bombers weren't conscripted; they're volunteers.
I also agree whole-heartedly that Islam has had an undercurrent that was just waiting for this opportunity to manifest their revulsion for the rest of the human race. There are many noble things in Islam, but there is also this long-standing tendancy to regard themselves as the only genuine humans, which is why they refer (ironically) to the West as the "House of War." What they mean is that we are factionalized, whereas they are unified. In a deeper sense it means that we are mongrels, or children of the lie. This is why I saw Al Qaeda as a manifestation of a loming Tsunami. What we've seen so far is only a shadow of what's coming, if we don't try to cancel it.
The religion is the one constant though. Instead of looking for the motives of the suicide bomber, I just think it would be more important to put the middle man under the magnifying glass.
Yeah, I think these guys are the key as well. There will always be people willing to be recruited. Getting rid of the recruiters will undermine that threat, though.
Posted by: Demosophist at September 17, 2005 12:02 AM (mD48C)
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Total war is for losers.
Posted by: Downing Street Memo at September 18, 2005 07:54 PM (VhNDM)
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September 14, 2005
Losing the War on Terror One Website at a Time
We won the battle in Afghanistan. We will win the battle in Iraq. But will we win the war on terror? Not without fighting it on its most important field of battle:
the internet.
Aaron at Internet Hagganah has an important essay:
Afghanistan was invaded.
It had to be done.
It had to be done, and it was not enough.
So it is with the Internet.
There's more.
more...
Posted by: Rusty at
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Rusty:
I wonder why there are no comments on this post? I'm just speculating here, but it seems to me the main thing protecting these Qaeda sites is the fact that most of their natural oppostion doesn't speak the language. Thus, we have to rely on third party translations of what
they consider important statements, in order to have any idea at all about what's going on. I think it would be tough to get rid of this threat with command/control tactics and strategies, but that doesn't mean there aren't other ways to accomplish it.
Posted by: Demosophist at September 15, 2005 11:00 AM (wEPG0)
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Interesting theory, but i must comment myself that I believe a quote "War on Terror" is futile. Hard Power ineveitably causes terror, and robs the United States of international credibility. Hard Power, like military action or coercive interogation causes hatred, and not just from terrorists. Our approval ratings are at all time lows. I have read, and love George Soros's article on the war on terror. A "War" on terror will inevitably be lost because its a war. In order to stamp out terrorism we must allow them to funnel their dissent non-violently. We do this through Democracy Promotion, and soft power. Sites like this, saying that what the terrorists do are wrong is an excersize of free speech. We are using soft power. Once everyone in the world lives in the Free World of western democracy, and free thought, terrorism will be unnecessary as everyone can simply protest. What the terrorists do is an abuse to free speech, and must be stopped in order for legitimate free speech to continue.
Posted by: Ash at October 17, 2005 03:22 PM (v4xco)
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September 13, 2005
Reconstructing Terrorists
Our
success in the War on Terror has created an ethical and logistical problem. What do we do with the hundreds of terrorists who have been captured? What is the most just way to deal with pure Evil?
Warehousing them at Guantanamo Bay is, at best, a temporary solution. At worst, not only are our soldiers exposed daily to twisted, malevolent subhumans, but traitors and fools within our own society seek to use their captivity for political profit. We can't transfer custody of many of them to their countries of origin because they might be tortured (though that would be justice for many of the brave jihadi babyhunters). And some of their homelands simply allow them their freedom, so that they can go back to plotting and executing the murders of innocents. We can't (horrors) execute them, because that would be a "waste" of "human life".
So what do we do with the sort of creature who enjoys planning assaults on children?
The Dread Pundit Bluto has a solution. A solution that not only tackles the problem of captured terrorists, but applies it to the solution of another serious, but unrelated, problem, and addresses a secondary evil peripherally. Three birds with one stone.
more...
Posted by: Bluto at
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Very easy. Kill them. Hang 'em en masse.
I would be happy to assist.
Posted by: Filthy Allah at September 13, 2005 12:13 PM (5ceWd)
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Pelosi wonÂ’t even let us pee on their Korans, how are we going to harvest their organs?
Posted by: Brad at September 13, 2005 12:28 PM (3OPZt)
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Ummm, yuck. Perhaps some of the more devout livers would be in better shape than mine, but I'm still not ready to go cutting on people. I'll endorse a ticking-bomb exception to the no-torture rule, but come on, this ain't communist china.
Posted by: See-Dubya at September 13, 2005 12:51 PM (jV2ep)
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See-Dubya: The PRC crack is a red herring. If you're willing to have convicted terrorists executed, then why should they be allowed to carry valuable resources to the grave with them?
Posted by: The Dread Pundit Bluto at September 13, 2005 04:02 PM (RHG+K)
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September 08, 2005
E-mail a terrorist
We will make no distinction between the terrorists who committed these acts and those who harbor them.--President George W. Bush
I've just spent the last ten minutes of my life watching disgusting videos produced by the Islamic Media Center. One was a high-production video based on candid camera with laugh tracks accompanying the death of American soldiers. Here is the e-mail associated with these disgusting propaganda films.
zubeiddah1417@hotmail.com
Was Joseph Goebels, chief propagandist for Nazi Germany, who never picked up a weapon and killed any one, a legitimate target in war? If so, why are those that produce jihad videos used to bolster the morale of our enemies and recruit new fighters to kill our soldiers not legitimate targets?
Bonus terrorist e-mail:
b52b52@gawab.com Not working *sigh*
If you get a response, please FORWARD the e-mail to me (not just cut and paste)
Posted by: Rusty at
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I bet he is dreamy. Beard all oiled with ghee, not a nit out of place.....strong smell of cumin and farts...
Would love to meet him. Give him the Louima treatment and then hand him over to some wild sex starved chimps for some hairly hot love.
Posted by: filthy allah at September 09, 2005 07:58 AM (5ceWd)
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September 06, 2005
Saudis Kill Two Al-Qaeda Most-Wanted
(Damman, Saudi Arabia) According to an early
report in the
Arab News, two al-Qaeda members on the list of 36 most-wanted terrorists have been killed in a gunbattle outside a supermarket in the city of Damman in eastern Saudi Arabia. The two dead terrorists were identified as Zaid Saad Al-Samari, 31, and Walid Mutlaq Al-Radadi, 21. Two Saudi policemen also died from wounds received in the battle.
An area used as an operations center in Damman was put under siege by Saudi Security Forces.
"Sporadic gunfire is continuing around the buildings where the members of the deviant group are holed up," one security source said, adding that there were 10 suspects inside.
"The security forces have reinforced their positions and are bringing in bulldozers and additional heavy equipment."
"We're in no rush to storm the building as were hoping to capture them alive and obtain information about wanted terrorists," he said.
[ ... ]
There were unconfirmed reports that terrorists had killed one of their own colleagues when he tried to surrender to security officers.
The reports also indicated that the terrorists might have run away from Madinah after their commander Saleh Al-Oufi was gunned down by security forces last month.
The U.S. Consulate in the adjacent city of Dhahran was closed due to security concerns related to the shootout.
In an updated report from Reuters, Saudi Security forces stormed the terrorist stronghold and "cleared and secured" the area. A source estimated that at least six terrorists were killed and ten were wounded. Four policemen also died.
I think it's great that the Saudis are going after the al-Qaeda terrorists in the kingdom. However, they'll never win because they're fighting an enemy that continues to be resupplied with recruits from the Wahabi mosques and schools within the country. So, they're destined to fight forever unless the schools are reformed or dismantled which, of course, won't happen since Saudi Arabia is officially a Wahabi Nation.
Companion post at Interested-Participant.
Posted by: Mike Pechar at
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PBS (yes I admit I watch it) had a great Frontline piece on the origin of the House Of Saud and Saudi Arabia. They are literally between a rock and a hard place here. They created this monster to serve their interests and discovered that not only can't they control it - but it wants to destroy its maker.
Posted by: hondo at September 06, 2005 07:51 PM (4Gtyc)
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Speaking of catching terrorists: Rusty's post here
http://mypetjawa.mu.nu/archives/114043.php
told us of a Russian governor being injured by a roadside bomb (you know, the bombing A_Finn was so happy about). Well the ring leader is dead.
http://english.people.com(dot)cn/200509/03/eng20050903_206267.html
Turns out he was also a key player in the Beslan terror among many other terror operations. Yes, he's a Muslim.
(seems that com(dot)cn is also questionable content here too so you'll have to replace the (dot) with a real dot if you want to read it. Soon "everything" will be questionable content here.)
Posted by: Oyster at September 06, 2005 08:09 PM (YudAC)
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Two less terrorsists and who more for the the devil to welcome home and shake hands with
Posted by: sandpiper at September 06, 2005 08:22 PM (08Fdo)
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Oh yeah, the "Woohoo, go separatists etc..." Almost forgot already. Weeeell it was sort of a conflict between a country that has been a lot of trouble in the past and a bunch of wackoes because of whom all kinds of passport changes and terrorism laws are restricting the liberty of moving from A to B and doing spur-of-the-moment trips abroad. Now that I wanted to go to Sweden for the weekend and for some stupid reason they asked for a passport, which I naturally didn't have since it has been an open border for person movement about forever, I see the terrorists as a much bigger nuisance.
Posted by: A Finn at September 07, 2005 06:03 AM (cWMi4)
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September 02, 2005
Homegrown Islamic Terrorists Arrested
(Los Angeles) Four homegrown Islamic terrorists identified as members of the radical group Jamiyyat Ul-Islam Is-Saheeh, or JIS, have been arrested for conspiring to attack military facilities, synagogues, and other targets in California.
From The Mercury-News:
Four suspects were charged Wednesday with conspiring to wage war against the U.S. government through terrorism. Named in the federal indictment were Levar Haley Washington, 25; Gregory Vernon Patterson, 21; Hammad Riaz Samana, 21; and Kevin James, 29.
All but Samana, a Pakistani national, are American born and Muslim converts. Counterterrorism officials have found no evidence directly connecting the group - described as the cell of a California prison gang of radical Muslims - to al-Qaida or other foreign terror networks.
Law enforcement officials and terrorism experts said it could represent one of the first Islamic terrorism cases involving U.S. natives without those connections.
Among the counts in the indictment, the four face
charges of conspiracy to wage war against the U.S. government through terrorism, kill armed service members, and murder foreign officials.
The founder of Jamiyyat Ul-Islam Is-Saheeh is California State Prison inmate Kevin James (aka Shakyh Shahaab Murshid) who preaches terror to Islam's enemies. Followers apparently pledged loyalty to James "until death by martyrdom."
Interestingly, the plotters were exposed only after they were arrested for an unrelated series of gas station robberies. Subsequent searches of their possessions found weapons, ammunition, and plans for the attacks. In other words, the authorities were lucky to catch these fanatics before they acted.
"Make no mistake about it -- we dodged a bullet here, perhaps many bullets," Los Angeles police Chief William Bratton said at a news conference.
I need to be reminded why we allow convicts to spew murderous religious dogma in prison. Despite what the ACLU professes, I can't imagine the framers of the Constitution were thinking of radical, thug Islam when they drafted the Bill of Rights.
Companion post at Interested-Participant.
Posted by: Mike Pechar at
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Since the ethnicity of the "American" muslims wasn't mentioned, I'll assume they were black. I beg someone to prove otherwise, but until then, I'll just chalk this up as more evidence that many, if not most blacks, are actively anti-American, and anti-civilization, and I think the recent activity in New Orleans supports this assertion. Call me racist, but if it quacks like a duck, call it a duck, and I think Thomas Sowell would agree here.
Posted by: Improbulus Maximus at September 02, 2005 02:45 PM (0yYS2)
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IM aren't you playing that card a bit much this week? I've met people from all over the world and of all colors. Black not = n word just as white not = sensible. I see your point but it reflects badly on you. Trash is trash no matter the color. You know I like you dude but sheesh.
PS please don't shoot me.
Posted by: Howie at September 02, 2005 03:02 PM (D3+20)
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How am I "playing the card", when it's blacks who are raping, looting, and shooting at helicopters, and who started screaming "racism" before the storm had even passed? All this PC bullshit is just that, and we know what's happening and who's doing it. If people want to keep their head buried in the sand, then fine, but don't expect me to as well.
Yeah, trash is trash, but how many white people have you seen on the news carrying stolen merchandise? Not too damned many, and it isn't because of the "racist" media, because the media won't show black people in a bad light if they can help it.
People can bleat along with all the other PC sheep all they want, but I'm done with apologetics, and I'm not going to pretend it isn't real.
Posted by: Improbulus Maximus at September 02, 2005 03:13 PM (0yYS2)
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Correction - - I think I recall reading in LAT a month or two ago that the crimes leading to their arrest were committed to fund terrorism. Not unrelated.
The question now is can the ACLU find these guys a judge like the guy who handled the terrorist who snuck in across the Canadian border to blow up LAX 5 years ago. If so they will only get a slap on the wrist and credit for time served.
Posted by: Rod Stanton at September 02, 2005 03:28 PM (03F0I)
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Improbulus Maximus,
Plenty of whites are looting. It is just that the media shows them as "finding" things rather than looting. It is ony the blacks who actually "loot."
Are you a member of SF? You should go there and rant, all of them are just like you.
Posted by: Sheila at September 02, 2005 05:28 PM (P9mdt)
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Sheila, what is your source that "plenty of whites are looting"? Or are you just assuming that so you can be a good liberal apologist? You stupid whore, New Orleans is 67% black, and everyone has stated that the vast majority of people left are black, so where do "plenty" of whites come from? You goddamned liberals all need hanged by the neck until dead, and I'm stockpiling rope for that glorious day.
Posted by: Improbulus Maximus at September 02, 2005 07:23 PM (0yYS2)
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yeah those are blacks looting, most of those left are black, the police chief trying to keep order is black people who need aid are black.. they're still people, good and bad, despite all the BS you spew.
get your shit together..
Posted by: Ren at September 02, 2005 09:56 PM (7ZsmI)
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Hey do you think the ACLU will be there to defend them? they always want to defend anyone who isnt christain
Posted by: sandpiper at September 02, 2005 10:13 PM (QtdTZ)
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IM, you are the biggest bastard I have ever met.
Go to stormfront, they need a new asshole to brainwash.
Posted by: Sheila at September 02, 2005 10:28 PM (P9mdt)
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in a way i agree with IM...lemme tell you something here, i was talking with a bunch of my co-workers, majority of them are black and to a man all the black guys said they woould be looting and when i asked them why they said, why not???...i was shocked and so were the other two white co-workers...than the black guys said that since the police were looting as well that it must be okay to loot...you tell me....EVERY SINGLE pic i have seen in my newspaper here in NJ and the two NY papers i check out at work had pics of looters grabbing up sneakers, jeans, sports clothing, tv's and guess what color they all were???...the pics of white people showed them laying on the ground or holding onto family members...i can totally understand anyone and color makes no differnce if they are trying to get needed food and drink, no problem, you need them to just survive, but tell me, why the hell are you gonna take a tv, or stereo or DVD player when there is no power, no city and no one probally has any money...the entire area is under water, destroyed and these knuckleheads are looting electronics...helloooo??!!?
Posted by: THANOS35 at September 02, 2005 11:11 PM (hcN1S)
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What is IM really saying? That black people should be shot? No. The majority of people there happen to be black, hence the larger proportion of black looters.
Is he saying that all looters should be shot--black or white? Yes.
Who disagrees?
Posted by: Young Bourbon Professional at September 03, 2005 07:39 AM (j3Yph)
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Just because they're black doesn't autmatically make them thugs or looters. Make a difference between right and wrong.
Posted by: Ren at September 03, 2005 10:35 AM (7ZsmI)
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Do not let them get the same judge that got the illegal alien who tried to blow up LAX 5 years ago. They will be back on the streets in 09.
Posted by: Jo macDougal at September 03, 2005 05:28 PM (LbyCD)
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I love how the libtards can never refute anything I say, but rather just snivel and whine. Let me clariffy a couple of things:
Yes, I'm the biggest bastard you will ever meet, if you are so unlucky to do so; I can kill a liberal with facts and logic from fifty yards, and few walk away from me without limping from the pain in their shiny new asshole, freshly torn, by me.
Anyone who shoots at their rescuers, loots, rapes, etc., during a disaster, is not a human being, but a subhuman who needs to be expurged for the good of society and the gene pool, as does anyone who excuses such behavior because of skin color.
I don't give a good flying damn what someone's skin color is; never have, never will. I'm a rationalist, and I understand that skin color is meaningless superficiality, but it's behavior that counts, because behavior, especially during times of crisis, tells you all you need to know about someone. What was it someone said about wanting their children to be judged not by the color of their skin, but by the content of their character? Whoever said that was obviously prejudiced against blacks, wouldn't you agree?
Posted by: Improbulus Maximus at September 04, 2005 12:16 AM (0yYS2)
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Dammit IM, had me thinking you're some kind of racist.. Well, you got it going right, I really don't disagree.
A disaster is no excuse for thuggery and looting and your colour ain't going to make it right. Some coloured and the libs will take every opportunity to play the THE-OPPRESSED-COLOURED-VICTIM card calling out about general racism and oppression being apologetic about everything, it's very *ss backward and doesn't lead to anything, just makes them look very stupid & retarded. Of course, that won't stop them from doing it anyway and I wish them the best of luck.
Posted by: Ren at September 04, 2005 07:43 AM (7ZsmI)
16
I'm not a racist, I'm a civilizationalist; I respect those who can behave as civilized people, and despise those who behave as savages or condone savagery. I don't make the demographics of reality, but I do see them clearly.
Posted by: Improbulus Maximus at September 04, 2005 07:09 PM (0yYS2)
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August 29, 2005
Terror Attack Likely at APEC Meeting in Korea
Security officials are warning that an al Qaeda attack is likely at the upcoming
Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) summit meeting scheduled to meet in mid-November in Busan, Korea. President Bush is scheduled to attend the meeting.
While there will be heavy security around APEC officials, including President Bush, recent attacks in London indicate that terrorist may target soft-targets, such as transportation centers, or the capital of Seoul. Let's hope the South Koreans pull together security before the meeting takes place.
Al Qaeda has threatened South Korea in the past and a ring of Religion of Peace militants was broken up in that country last year. Members of al Qaeda's Southeast Asian sister-organization, Jemaah Islamiyah, would probably be those most likely to carry out the attacks.
more...
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August 28, 2005
Lodi Muslims Suspect Government Mole
(Lodi, California) The Lodi Muslim community has been rocked by two prominent citizens being implicated in a federal terrorism investigation.
From ABC7News.com:
Hamid Hayat is accused of lying about attending a terrorist training camp in Pakistan. His father, Umer Hayat, was also arrested for lying about his son's involvement.
Muslim leaders in Lodi say since those arrests, a man who'd forged deep ties in the community has now disappeared. Federal prosecutors have revealed they did have a cooperating witness in Lodi, but did not name the person.
What a cheap shot. Blame it on the guy who skipped town. Instead of trying to distance themselves from terrorist activities and summarily denounce terrorism, the Muslims in Lodi are saying that someone ratted them out.
In my estimation, we would probably benefit by having more moles.
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Muslims will never take any blame no matter how much direct evidence is right in front of their eyes...they have nerve to talk about Americans being arrogant...thats the ultimate arrogance, being so ignorant that you cant see what youre doing wrong right in front of you
Posted by: THANOS35 at August 28, 2005 03:40 PM (hcN1S)
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I hope the FBI has thousands more moles. Finally something good is done by the FBI after 27 years of bad or nothing.
If they (Muslim murders) do not like it they are free to go back to Pakistgan. No one will stand in their way. May even get some help.
Posted by: Rod Stanton at August 28, 2005 05:51 PM (03F0I)
3
I see. One guy disappears and he's automatically the mole. I don't suppose he could be guilty of ties to terrorism and scrammed to avoid getting picked up himself, could he? No, of course not. Let's point out a scapegoat for a rat and not address the issue of the terrorist sympathizers in our midst. Oh yeah, there's that nagging issue of the guys who want to kill a bunch of people, huh? Forgot that.
Posted by: Oyster at August 28, 2005 07:01 PM (YudAC)
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Muslims have a long way to go before denouncing terrorism in any meaningful way. Don't know what the problem is but there is a problem.
Posted by: bill at August 28, 2005 07:22 PM (7evkT)
5
THANOS35,
Muslims will never take any blame no matter how much direct evidence is right in front of their eyes
What a dumb thing to say. Every group has people like that. Our president is like that.
they have nerve to talk about Americans being arrogant...thats the ultimate arrogance, being so ignorant that you cant see what youre doing wrong right in front of you
Did you not just call them arrogant? That, by your own logic, would make you arrogant. And maybe they think what they are doing is right, just like the KKK thinks they are doing whats right. I agree that is ignorant, but that isn't their fault. You are ignorant to judge one group based on the actions of certain individuals.
Posted by: Sheila at August 29, 2005 06:26 AM (l72kO)
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August 26, 2005
Two Senior Police Killed in Sinai Sweep
(Cairo, Egypt) According to the Egyptian Interior Ministry, two senior police officers were killed by land mines during the
massive manhunt for terrorists in the Sinai.
From the Arab News:
Maj. Gen. Mahmoud Adel and Lt. Col. Omar Abdel Moneim were the highest ranked police officers killed in Egypt since a violent insurgency in the mid-1990s and the first slain since about 4,000 security personnel launched a massive sweep Sunday of the northern Sinai for suspects linked to July's triple Sharm El-Sheik attacks and October's bombings at the Taba and nearby Ras Shitan resorts.
Yesterday's blasts occurred after two land mines exploded on the 1,800-meter high Halal mountain, about 60 kilometers south of the Mediterranean coastal town of El-Arish, the Interior Ministry said in a statement.
On conditions of anonymity, officials stated that they believe fugitives, who traditionally hide in the Sinai's mountains, planted the mines. Egyptian security forces have detained 650 people thus far in the Sinai sweep which started last Sunday. A primary target still at large is Salem Khadr El-Shenoub, suspected of harboring terrorists linked to the Taba and Ras Shitan attacks.
Also worthy of mentioning is that the indigenous Bedouin tribesmen, steeped in knowledge of hideouts and smuggling routes, have emerged as key suspects sometimes and valuable informers at other times. However, in general, it's believed that the tribesmen collaborate with the terrorists at a level less than originally thought due to significantly different ideologies and interests. For instance, the autonomous Bedouins do not like to have the police looking at their affairs which is exactly what happens if they collaborate with the terrorists. So, unless there are family ties, I suspect the tribesmen don't provide a lot of help to the terrorists.
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They must be upset about Egypt's "brutal occupation" of the Sinai.
Posted by: Carlos at August 26, 2005 03:36 PM (8e/V4)
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August 25, 2005
Should we put flowers in their cells too?
Knowing your enemy is one of the most important parts of waging any war. If you don't know anything about the person you are fighting, they can get away with nearly anything because everything they do will be a surprise. Good knowledge of their personalities as well as their tactics can lead to easily won battles and shorten the necessary combat time.
Lack of knowledge can also lead to fatal mistakes when dealing with your enemy. Two New York Times writers are asking the United States to make just such a fatal mistake. Scott Gerwher and Nina Hachigian have said that in Iraqi prisons, maybe we should "try a little tenderness." By this, they are referring to the practice, during the Viet Nam war, of "turning" prisoners by offering them better and more rations, freedoms and other rewards for information and good behavior. At that time, the system was successful in converting some prisoners and obtaining information from others. As I haven't had time to look it up, I don't know exactly how successful it was, though.
But to propose the same treatment for terrorist POWs is not only wrong, but horribly dangerous. We are simply dealing with a completely different class of people here. While some communist fighters (I use some loosely because I'm not currently aware of the exact figures) were hardcore ideologues, others were just soldiers. And still others were conscripts who had no wish to be there fighting at all. Muslim terrorists, however, are by definition, complete zealots. All of them are so committed to their cause that they are ready to blow themselves up or participate in other types of suicidal attacks in order to kill or injure a few Americans. They aren't just fighting against us because their "generals" ordered them to. They are, each and every one, radically committed to our complete annihilation. That's not to say that the entire Muslim world feels this way. Obviously they don't or we wouldn't be in Iraq to begin with.
This isn't an army that we're dealing with. At least not in any conventional sense of the word. It's a loose confederation of extremists who share the same goal. When they are captured, they continue to be as hostile as possible. Attempting to turn them will not only not work, but will put our troops in unnecessarily dangerous situations as these prisoners attempt to use their newfound kindness against our troops.
As the writers continue to explain about this tactic and the history behind it, they provide, unknowingly, one of the prime reasons that it would fail in Iraq.
So what does this have to do with Iraq? While Chieu Hoi was geared to counter a Communist threat, it was based on universal principles of counterinsurgency that could easily be applied to the current struggle. In fact, Chieu Hoi was something of an import in its own right: it was the brainchild of three men with long experience battling rebels.
We are not fighting a counterinsurgency. The men we are fighting are not rebels. Not in the traditional sense of the word. To label this as an insurgency would indicate that the terrorists we are fighting have some sort of legitimate claim on the Iraqi government or at least some claim to even be in Iraq. But that is not the case. The majority of the terrorists we are fighting are coming from other countries. Their reasons for fighting have nothing to do with insurgency or rebellion.
They designed Chieu Hoi to focus on changing the underlying attitudes of the subjects, not simply on trying to control their behavior. Empirical research in social psychology reveals that efforts to directly control behavior through coercion or bribery usually leave underlying attitudes intact, or even harden them. Thus putting a gun to a man's head and instructing him to support a particular political ideology will work only as long as the gun is present and he is being watched. The preferred method for long-term change is instilling sincere belief in the new political ideology, making the gun and monitoring unnecessary.
Once again, there are numerous problems with the statements above. First and foremost, we are not fighting a political ideology. We are fighting a religious ideology. Regardless what you would like to think, fighting with the terrorists is strictly a religious war. They believe that their religion demands our complete destruction and they are not going to stop at anything short of that.
Which brings us back around to my original point. You can't "deprogram" these people. Religious fanaticism is one of the strongest psychological forces known. Why else would hundreds of people drink poisoned kool-aid?
In addition, running our prisons under the Chieu Hoi model could help reverse the terrible propaganda defeat suffered with the revelations of torture at Abu Ghraib. Nongovernmental groups like the International Red Cross and Amnesty International would praise America, bringing more international support.
I don't buy that for a second. International "aid" groups are not going to praise us no matter what we do. And the whole point in being in Iraq isn't get get a pat on the head from Amnesty International. If that's our motivation, then we need some serious self-evaluation.
The whole idea of "deprogramming" the Iraqi prisoners is, to me, laughable enough that I don't know why a major paper is even taking it seriously enough to run it. But considering the Times hasn't even bothered to run a correction for Krugman's lies of the past two weeks, I guess I shouldn't be surprised. I'm just thankful that they aren't the ones making policy decisions.
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We can also thank God that the Bush administration presumably doesn't consult the NY Times for policy advice.
Posted by: Joshua at August 25, 2005 09:22 AM (XPnN/)
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The left worships at the alter of government, but I wonder where the moonbats like these writers go for spiritual guidance, probably the AP.
Posted by: bill at August 25, 2005 09:36 AM (7evkT)
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Drew, you make some good points. But this approach is already being taken at Gitmo. And all it has yielded is a few prisoners acting more cooperatively while they're there. As soon as they're released though, most go right back to the same old jihadi behavior and start screaming about their mistreatment.
These people, Scott and Nina, are maybe under the assumption that techniques in raising children will work for jihadis? It doesn't even always work on children.
Posted by: Oyster at August 25, 2005 09:44 AM (fl6E1)
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Heh. I can't recall one time that talking reasonably and offering rewards worked on my 14 year old.
Posted by: Drew at August 25, 2005 09:50 AM (Ml8z/)
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Michael Yon talks about some baddies who were let out of Abu Ghraib. LTC Kurilla was shot trying to apprehend them in a training exercise.
At least one of the terrorists was eunechized.
Posted by: Marcus Aurelius at August 25, 2005 06:16 PM (6IMFK)
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Damn whinny bunch of liberals in the left-wing news media especialy the New York Pravda? what do they want for them a cell that would put the WALDORF ASTORIA to shame?
Posted by: sandpiper at August 27, 2005 05:25 PM (qMAo+)
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August 24, 2005
UN to UK: "Terrorists Are People, Too"
A United Nations official has said that Great Britain will be cited for "human rights violations" if the UK goes ahead with plans to deport renegade clerics and terrorist sympathizers. From the
Guardian (UK):
A senior UN representative last night threatened to cite the British government for violation of human rights over its planned deportations of alleged terrorist sympathisers.
Manfred Novak, the UN human rights commission's special investigator on torture, told the Guardian he is seeking permission through the Foreign Office to visit Britain to discuss the issue with the home secretary, Charles Clarke.
In a statement on Tuesday night, Prof Novak said that the government's intention to return radical preachers to their countries of origin, even though some of those countries have a track record of human rights abuses, "reflects a tendency in Europe to circumvent the international obligation not to deport anybody if there is a serious risk that he or she might be subjected to torture".
Pardon me while I go barf.
The Dread Pundit Bluto thinks it's time and past time for the US Justice Department to prosecute the UN under the RICO (Racketeering Influenced and Corrupt Organizations) Act.
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I agree with Bluto! I guess what's stopping them is the how harsh/awfull we'd look to the world and how many more operations we'd have to take over without the financial support and tax breaks they get.
Posted by: michele at August 24, 2005 10:41 PM (ht2RK)
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The most, and I do mean MOST, annoying thing is that most of the fuckers are claiming benefits (social security) and are living in accomodation paid for by us, the UK taxpayer!
Posted by: Tilesey at August 25, 2005 02:48 AM (eyEGU)
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Hmm... you have social security benefits? I thought "welfare state" was a word of curse for Brits. Well anyway, solution to all your problems:
assosiate: teams of England losing in football
to: unemployed Muslims (how? make Elisabeth say it and write it on every brewery product)
outcome: football fan-atics will rip them all to shreds after the next UEFA-cup or world championships.
Posted by: A Finn at August 25, 2005 04:21 AM (cWMi4)
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Huh?!?! Terrorists are people? When did this happen? Talk about defining humanity down...
Posted by: David at August 25, 2005 06:19 AM (ACL5/)
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I still say that if what they're doing is bad enough to deport them (and it is) then it's bad enough to lock them up. If there are those who are worried about the cost of feeding them and clothing them in prison, all I'd say is it's cheaper than what they're costing us now and they're no less a danger elsewhere. They're likely to get even more support in the countries they're from, not torture.
Posted by: Oyster at August 25, 2005 07:03 AM (YudAC)
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How I wish the UN were not in the States. If they were on some Island somewhere then the UK can send these terrorist types to UNistan.
Posted by: Marcus Aurelius at August 25, 2005 07:38 AM (zIVyC)
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I say the whole damn UN should just get lost and we should move the whole UN pig sty out of america and tear down that eye sore
Posted by: sandpiper at August 25, 2005 09:11 AM (QtdTZ)
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If I were a Britain(well, some of my ancestors were British), I would get a few of my friends together and meet Mr. Novak at Heathrow,and then proceed to give him a piece of my mind.
Maybe a rotten egg of two would also be appropriate. Send him back to wherever the bastard came from. Unless its New York. We don't want the bastard here either.
Posted by: jesusland joe at August 25, 2005 10:29 AM (DDXXI)
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Fight the Islamic Propaganda First and all will be well.
The teachers of this so called islam shit are using FEAR and HATE propaganda to turn muslim youth into suicide bombers.
all they do is * "First You tell ppl that they will get killed or get to do time in hell, then u show them some stupid way by which they can escape.Like herding cows. One will lead and the rest follow.
Posted by: monzter at August 25, 2005 11:14 AM (rA3Xj)
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Blair should tell the UN to F off.
Posted by: Pat A at August 25, 2005 03:18 PM (YyWmH)
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Time for the UN to take a walk a long far walk far away from it all and way out in the middle of nowhere
Posted by: sandpiper at August 27, 2005 09:55 PM (GOyHB)
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August 22, 2005
Egyptians Sweep Sinai for Terrorists
With adequate evidence that the Sinai Peninsula is a hotbed for terrorists, several thousand Egyptian police supported with armored vehicles were mobilized yesterday to
search and apprehend perpetrators and anyone with information. The sweep started in the towns of El-Arish and Sheikh Zuayed and a total of about 500 individuals were detained for questioning. El-Arish has been identified as an explosives smuggling center.
In addition to the towns, security forces fanned out on the desert in the operation which is expected to take several days. The manhunt has been called open-ended, whatever that means. Hopefully, it means that they will continue searching and apprehending terrorists until there are none residing anywhere outside the comfy walls of Egyptian prisons.
Companion at I-P.
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August 20, 2005
Images of Dead Terrorist Suspected in Paul Johnson Beheading
Rarely does it please me to post images of dead people. This is an exception. Two days ago the Saudis killed two wanted terrorists, including Saleh Muhammad al-Aoofi (Oufi), the leader of al Qaeda in Saudi Arabia. Saleh Muhammad al-Aoofi
was also suspected of involvement in the gruesome beheading murder of American Paul Johnson.
Paul Johnson's head was found in al-Aoofi's freezer:
Saudi security forces have killed al-Qaida's top leader in the country as well as five other suspected Islamic insurgents in gun battles.
Thursday's confrontation took place in the capital and Medina, where Prophet Muhammad is buried, in the first major anti-terrorist sweep since King Abdullah took the throne this month, the authorities said.
Saleh Muhammad al-Aoofi, the kingdom's most wanted man, had been leading al-Qaida's branch in Saudi Arabia for more than two years and was believed to have been involved in the June 2004 kidnapping and beheading of American engineer Paul Johnson.
Weeks after Johnson's slaying, Saudi police found his head in a freezer in an apartment where al-Aoofi had been hiding.
Al-Aoofi's death was the latest victory claimed by Saudi authorities in their crackdown on Islamic insurgents in the kingdom, launched after a wave of deadly attacks that began in May 2003.
Saudi police have killed or captured many of the figures on the kingdom's list of most wanted insurgents, and Abdullah vowed to push ahead with the crackdown when he was elevated to king in early August after the death of his half-brother Fahd.
Earlier today, these images began circulating on jihadi message boards. From what I gather, they are probably of the dead Saleh Muhammad al-Aoofi--the leader of al Qaeda in Saudi Arabia-- and Muhammad ibn Abdullah Owaida, but could possibly be Majed al-Hasseri and an accomplice. The men were killed in seperate gun battles this week, one in Medina and one in Riyadh. In any event, good riddance.
Three more al Qaeda terrorists were captured today in Saudi Arabia. It's been a good week in the Kingdom.
Oh, and if you think I'm being insensitive by showing these images, then surely you haven't seen the propaganda video made by al Qaeda in Saudi Arabia of the Paul Johnson beheading. Click here to see what this piece of human filth was involved in (WARNING: GRAPHIC IMAGE).
WARNING: Graphic images below.
more...
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These pics are PG-13 compared to the video of Paul Johnson's murder. Weirdos.
Posted by: tyler at August 20, 2005 09:04 PM (t+GZI)
2
Let's face it. They wanted to die. They couldn't
wait to die. Glad someone obliged 'em. Everyday I pray there really is an afterlife, just so these guys can get their rude awakening.
Also: Hate to nitpick, but in your first paragraph "the leader of al Qaeda in
Iraq" should read Saudi Arabia
Posted by: Oyster at August 21, 2005 07:13 AM (YudAC)
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Insensitive? I wish I could eat my breakfast every morning with pictures of dead jihadis. You need to show more of these.
Posted by: Carlos at August 21, 2005 10:34 AM (8e/V4)
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Ever notice the scenery around these pics looks roughly like it is out of the Flintstones?
Posted by: Kstumpf at August 21, 2005 05:59 PM (6fL6K)
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Yea the paul Johnson thing was the .0002 seconds I talked about the other day. The Nepal things was bad too. nasty.
Posted by: Howie at August 21, 2005 08:31 PM (D3+20)
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I didnt look but Im glad he's dead.
Posted by: Jane at August 21, 2005 09:58 PM (M7kiy)
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Is that guy split in half? Neat. Did a tank blast him or did he blow himself up?
Posted by: A Finn at August 22, 2005 04:02 AM (cWMi4)
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Saudi Arabia....that's what I freakin meant to say. He was probably sawed in half with a hundred AK-47 rounds.
Posted by: Rusty Shackleford at August 22, 2005 08:02 AM (JQjhA)
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Interesting email sent to me...
<>
Posted by: Young Bourbon Professional at August 22, 2005 09:18 AM (x+5JB)
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Correct answers:
1. b 2. c 3. c 4. b 5. b 6. a 7. c 8. b 9. b 10. c 11. c 12. b (<=this one is 100% certain =P) 13. a
Posted by: A Finn at August 22, 2005 02:27 PM (lGolT)
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I thought it was the 72 virgins that killed
Daniel Pearl.
Posted by: Butch at August 22, 2005 03:36 PM (Gqhi9)
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What's blacked out in the second pic? Did you black out bloody entrails???
Damn censorship.
Posted by: Princess Kimberley at August 22, 2005 05:07 PM (KncNC)
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August 19, 2005
Ansar al Sunnah Website Down
http://sitealansar66.tripod.com/
Who could possibly be responsible?
more...
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You get on that Internet and click click click
/TJ
Posted by: TJ at August 19, 2005 03:24 PM (PL7dL)
2
Rusty, I assume you know about
http://haganah.org.il.
Anyway, they track terrorist websites and dig up useful info on them (mostly whois info). Really neat. We need a group of people to go through their lists and deface all the sites...
Had I not gotten in trouble for various activities 5 years ago, I'd be all over it.
Posted by: tyler at August 19, 2005 03:26 PM (Y9Lwb)
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I've known about Aaron's Internet Hagganah for some time, and frequently link him. He's the inspiration for my proposal for hacker privateers.
Posted by: Rusty Shackleford at August 19, 2005 03:35 PM (JQjhA)
4
Dale Gribble - pest exterminator.
Posted by: slickdpdx at August 19, 2005 03:43 PM (MjGRu)
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August 18, 2005
I'm not an antissemite, but.....
Wait a second,
you mean Goldstein is a J-O-O? Wow, that one came way out of left field......
UPDATE: This post is in the spirit of our e-mail a terrorist conceptual series. Follow the link and e-mail an antisemetic asshole.
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Saudi al-Qaeda Leader Killed
Here's some good news.
From Reuters:
Saudi security forces killed the leader of the kingdom's al Qaeda group in a clash in the holy city of Medina on Thursday, a security source said.
He said security forces had killed Saleh al-Awfi, who was believed to have taken over leadership of al Qaeda in Saudi Arabia last year.
In a telephone interview from Riyadh, Interior Ministry spokesman Major General Mansour al-Turki
said ongoing raids against suspected terrorists resulted in the killing.
I'm going to have a celebratory donut.
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Cool,
The life expectancy of Al-Qaeda leaders in the KSA seems to be rather short.
Posted by: Marcus Aurelius at August 18, 2005 08:11 AM (o3KhE)
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It's so nice to see a leader of these guys buy the farm so to speak.
Posted by: Howie at August 18, 2005 09:41 AM (D3+20)
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You have a celebratory donut. I will dance. Disco of course.
Posted by: Cindy at August 18, 2005 10:20 AM (wxczw)
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It seems that the Saudis don't appreciate it when the terrorists they've bred, fed, indoctrinated, financed, trained, and equipped turn against them.
Posted by: Improbulus Maximus at August 18, 2005 12:06 PM (0yYS2)
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Who wants to bet the Saudis are labeling reformists as Al Qaeda and killing them left and right...
Posted by: Ariya at August 18, 2005 12:50 PM (noCGr)
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Do you really think killing al-Qaeda leaders will stop them? I suspect for every one you kill two more will spring up.
There are at least a billion Muslims are you willing to kill all of them?
Probibly so.
Posted by: fatima at August 18, 2005 01:01 PM (C17sw)
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Uh Fatima we didn't kill him.
Posted by: Howie at August 18, 2005 01:32 PM (D3+20)
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Fatima, the answer is yes, if necessary. That, however, is up to the muslims, who have proven totally inept at modern warfare. Your choice; live or die.
Posted by: Improbulus Maximus at August 18, 2005 02:50 PM (0yYS2)
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Fatima, I thought terrorists and Muslems were not the same thing and now you're saying they are.
Nemas problemas! We'll have to take your word for it and kill them all.
Posted by: Ren at August 18, 2005 03:09 PM (a9tRx)
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Fatima: I believe in killing them until the religion based cowardly terrorism stops. If muslims support Al-Qaeda, yes, kill them. I believe all members of Al-Qaeda and their supporters in any way should be eleminated. They should not be allowed to terrorize the civilized world. If killing them is the solution. O'kay with me. After all killing is their game.
If you support Al-Qaeda. You should die. It is only just. Murderers and their cohorts should die.
Posted by: greyrooster at August 19, 2005 12:35 AM (CBNGy)
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August 17, 2005
Terror Arrests in California; Imam says, "nice kid"
Three men who attended the same mosque in the L.A. area have been arrested in connection with a terrorist plot to blow up the Israeli consulate and National Guard facilities.
Jeff Quinton is covering the story here.
The suspect are Hammad Riaz Samana, 21 from Pakistan; and Levar Haney Washington, 25, and Gregory Vernon Patterson, 21. The latter two had been arrested earlier this month for a string of gas station robberies and, were converts to Islam, and had been found with jihadi material in their home. One of them had served time in Folsom State Prison, and there is a possibility that the plot was hatched by a radical Islamic extremists in the prison known as Jamiyyat Ul Islam Is Saheeh, or The Assembly of Authentic Islam .
The three attended a Jamat-E-Masjidul Islam mosque in Inglewood, a heavily African-American suburb of Los Angeles. The mosque appears to be part of a network of mosques funded by the Saudi Royal family.
It is always interesting to note that every time a Muslim is arrested on terrorism related charges that fellow Muslims first act shocked and then claim a government conspiracy. Stage one complete, prepare for stage two.
KPLC:
LOS ANGELES The president of his mosque says a Pakistani national arrested in a terrorism probe was "a nice kid" and very respectful.
The mosque leader says the arrest of the man (Hammad Riaz Samana) comes as a shock.
Authorities say the suspect, in custody since August second, may be linked to a possible plot to attack the Israeli Consulate, National Guard facilities and synagogues in Los Angeles.
A law enforcement source says his arrest came after investigators found a potential target list at the home of Levar Washington, who's been charged in a series of gas station robberies with another man, Gregory Patterson.
The mosque leader says Washington and Patterson had also attended the mosque but he did not recall all three men associating with one another.
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Two months ago I posted that Black Muslims stink. I was immediately attacked by OSAMABEENTHERE. We have been sitting here ignoring the already known criminal element in our prisons. The reason they become black muslims is because they hate white people. It is not a religious thing. Just a banner to hide behind. People had better wake up to this obvious danger. When muslim terrorists mix with black muslims in prison nothing good can come from it. We had better get some spies in the system. Muslims in prison still have access to well funded Islamofacists organizations that can easily entice black muslims getting out of prison. Getting paid to blow up whitey? Might sound pretty good to criminals that already hate whitey.
Or are we already to late?
Posted by: greyrooster at August 17, 2005 05:09 PM (CBNGy)
2
Have we forgotton the El Ruikn gang in Chicago and their association with Libya. A black gang from Chicago, actually, contacted Libya, to and told them they would commit terrorist acts in the USA for money.
Posted by: greyrooster at August 19, 2005 12:03 AM (CBNGy)
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We all know that the Niggers and Muslims would be nowhere in this world if it wasn't for the White race.
Muslims and niggers have a lot in common, they both stink like shit and both come from cultures that are full of illiterate, un-intelligent, uneducated, backwards 3rd world people.
Time to send the monkeys back home.. let them get back to fingerpainting caves and throwing spears at each other.
Posted by: Northern at September 08, 2005 11:05 PM (xynLH)
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August 12, 2005
Seattle Muslim Threatens Jawa Readers
One of the tiny minority of extremists sends the following message to Jawa readers. Abbas is from Seattle, Washington, and writes [warning: nasty language follows]:
more...
Posted by: Rusty at
07:09 PM
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1
You just gotta love diversity. Diversity is strength, didn't you know? That's what makes our country STRONG!!!!
And what's with the guy's grammar though? Is that like muslim ebonics?
Posted by: Carlos at August 12, 2005 07:16 PM (8e/V4)
2
Oh man, I’m still at work right now and the Northgate Mosque is about ½ mile away.
Chances are pretty good this dude in close by!
LetÂ’s see, ok Abbas let me just address one of your points
IÂ’ve been married 17 years, and we really donÂ’t Â….ya know ...all that often anymore you asshole!!!
Posted by: Brad at August 12, 2005 07:22 PM (3OPZt)
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So....can we claim a fatwa or not?
Posted by: Mad Dog Vinnie at August 12, 2005 07:23 PM (Kr6/f)
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This is exactly why I say the goat humpers shouldn't be in America to begin with. Deport all believers in this nasty religion. Starting with this unappreciative little shit. MUSLIMS OUT OF AMERICA!
Posted by: greyrooster at August 12, 2005 07:36 PM (CBNGy)
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Hmmm...that really begs the question, you know. If Abbas is so ardently opposed to fornication...what about the 72 sloe-eyed
houris with succulent and perpetually untouched
zinaats? Is Abbas going to spend eternity wringing his weasel?
Posted by: The Dread Pundit Bluto at August 12, 2005 08:02 PM (RHG+K)
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Hey Abbas, I'm with Brad. Most of us just wish we could... you know.
So f-ck off.
Posted by: Carlos at August 12, 2005 08:02 PM (8e/V4)
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The British have finally seen the light and are kicking the extremists out. It's time the US gets with the program. These people need to be rooted up and deported pronto, or the people of the United States just might have to take a little action on their own.
Posted by: jesusland joe at August 12, 2005 08:04 PM (DDXXI)
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As if 1 ABBA wasn't enough... this party guy should be locked in a room w/ your average Huffington Poster & a TV that plays nothing but Queer Eye for ther Straight Guy... who am I kidding, the entire E! lineup.
Posted by: PMain at August 12, 2005 08:16 PM (QyMqT)
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"BUT DO NOT SAY I TOLD YOU !!"
Okay. Mum's the word!
Posted by: Oyster at August 12, 2005 08:32 PM (YudAC)
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Um, does that count as a fatwa?
... just saying
/TJ
Posted by: TJ at August 12, 2005 08:41 PM (PL7dL)
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Nicely put greyrooster. Maybe not so nicely, but blunt and to the damn point.
Posted by: tyler at August 12, 2005 08:48 PM (t+GZI)
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Looks like someone needs to switch to decaf. Can't understand why he took the name of a Swedish rock band though. Maybe Dancing Queen was big in Mecca or something.
Anyway, good luck with your project there Abba. Just remember to connect the blue wire before the red one. Or is it the red one before the... Wait! Red is positive and Black is the ground. Yeah, that's it.
Posted by: Charles at August 12, 2005 10:52 PM (lQ1Or)
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The ever tolerant, have no fun Muslims are just trying to make me think about a day in the laugh of a guy with a small dick, low-tolerance for alcohol, and the ability to use terms like, "women are for babies and men are for fun".
What losers these Muslim extremists are.
Posted by: Chris Short at August 13, 2005 05:46 AM (0OCQY)
14
Okay, now that I've had my pork products for breakfast, I feel in the right state of mind to comment on this. The most offensive thing for me about senor Abbas' "rant" is the spelling and punctuation. Why do these things always come across like a text message from an angry, blind monkey with only one finger? Also, I consider it a triumph of infidel technology that we can turn the "Caps Lock" off at will. To quote Bugs Bunny: What a Maroon.
Posted by: Graeme at August 13, 2005 06:33 AM (ZLlKM)
Posted by: Paul at August 13, 2005 07:23 AM (PM/BC)
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Abbas,
It would be useful if Muslim preachers paid a bit more attention to God, which means doing some theology, rather than making speeches about Palestine, Afghanistan and Iraq which are, after all, political, and not religious issues. The excessive politicisation of Islam has created a situation in which the best-known Muslim today is Osama bin Laden.
Islam must decide whether it wants to be a faith or a political movement. It cannot be both without being hijacked by Salafis or Khomeinists who have transformed it into a breeding ground for terror.
Posted by: Amir at August 13, 2005 07:39 AM (PM/BC)
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With his language skills, I can't imagine this guy has a job, so he must be a graduate student at one of our illustrious leftist universities.
Posted by: Mike at August 13, 2005 09:30 AM (M7kiy)
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Any extremists in the Atlanta area want to take a crack at me? Rusty, can I make up t-shirts with your blog name and url? I want these punks to be able to pick me out from a crowd more easily. I'm 39 and this guy makes we want to re-enlist and go send a few back to allah.
Posted by: kstumpf at August 13, 2005 09:34 AM (Kv4B9)
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Sounds as though this guy Abbas is a typical illiterate Islamist whose "Allah" is no god at all, just a perverted distortion of reality whose "prophet" Muhammed was nothing more than a child molesting, woman abusing terrorist whose teachings, for whatever originally intended purpose and for whatever value they may have originally possessed, have been so significantly distorted by mindless, inhumane clerics spewing hate and inhumanity to sub-human fools who are easily misguided and mislead to conduct acts against innocent people and write/spew mindless dribble such as we've just seen evidenced by our friend Abbas!
Abbas should immediately gain a little common sense, stop eating pork and bathing in pig's blood, and convert - he should become a Christian or a Jew, learn a little more about human love and kindness, and possibly, how to speak and write.
Posted by: Hyscience at August 13, 2005 09:36 AM (xFeJi)
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.. YOU GOT THE BIG BALLS..
and you got three defect ones, now lay off Rusty you God damn linguistic retard.
Posted by: Ren at August 13, 2005 01:00 PM (a9tRx)
21
This guy's an assmuffin who needs his head handed to him.
Can I volunteer for the job?
Posted by: elliott at August 13, 2005 02:30 PM (XlQVK)
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Unfortunately a threat is not a fatwa. Fun, but not a fatwa.
Posted by: Rusty Shackleford at August 13, 2005 03:08 PM (JQjhA)
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Hyscience: I love run-on sentences!
Posted by: Oyster at August 13, 2005 03:23 PM (YudAC)
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"sharpens up double headed axe in the backyard shed"...."evil laughter"....send in Abbas
Posted by: THANOS35 at August 13, 2005 06:34 PM (IJ51c)
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Tyler: I'm known for my layed back mannerism.
Oyster: So do I. That's why I continue to use them. Or is it the fact that I don't know better?
Posted by: greyrooster at August 13, 2005 08:57 PM (CBNGy)
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August 10, 2005
Able Danger Help
I'm trying to figure out the whole Able Danger/we-knew- about- Atta- being- an- al- Qaeda- member- a- year- before- 9/11 thing. If you have a post about it, or know of a good summary, I'd appreciate it if you e-mailed it to me. A lot of discussion about this, but I'm not sure where to begin. Thanks.
Posted by: Rusty at
04:51 PM
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1
Check out Captain Ed: http://www.captainsquartersblog.com/mt/archives/005175.php
I have couple week posts, but, from what I understand, the rules that Jamie Goerlick and the Slick admin put in hamstrung the ability of military intel to share what they had with law enforcement, plus they were big weenies regarding investigating folks in the US on legal visas, despite possible AQ ties. Investigating Atta and company might have stopped 9/11, or maybe not. We will never know.
The New York Times made sure that they did not mention Clinton in their article about this today.
Posted by: William Teach at August 10, 2005 06:04 PM (Pzlrt)
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OK head over to my blog. I have three posts.
http://snookerswamp.blogspot.com/2005/08/data-mining-and-sandy-bergers-pants.html
http://snookerswamp.blogspot.com/2005/08/connecting-some-more-dots.html
http://snookerswamp.blogspot.com/2005/08/news-of-usefulness-of-gorelick-wall.html
One explains data mining, the others the essence of the story. I built some data mines for unnamed users.
Always willing to help the Jawa out.
Posted by: bill at August 10, 2005 06:27 PM (7evkT)
3
Anyone with half a brain will figure out whose admin was occupying the White House when Atta's name came up. Oh wait.....
Posted by: Oyster at August 10, 2005 06:28 PM (YudAC)
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I think the groundwork for this fiasco was laid in the seventies, following our defeat in the first major propaganda war: Vietnam. At that time, the military and intelligence agencies were despised by many people and laws were passed to curb their perceived excesses. The Brass also began to evolve (devolve?) into PR people and poll watchers.
The process accelerated during the nineties as Clinton exploited the "peace dividend". Wish I had a dollar for all the ex-military personnel who told me they resigned rather than serve under Slick Willy.
Posted by: The Dread Pundit Bluto at August 10, 2005 07:07 PM (RHG+K)
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Check Andrew McCarthy's archives at NRO, he seems to be the expert on FISA and "the Wall." Heather MacDonald had a few pieces in City Journal that also hit on this.
Posted by: Rob A. at August 10, 2005 08:33 PM (hWGIY)
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