Wednesday, May 30, 2007
Adam Gadahn al-Qaeda Video
This is worth watching for the end, where he spells out the terrorists demands for the U.S and how ridiculous it is to think we would ever comply to all of that. Plus he explains that pulling out of Iraq will not save us from their continued attacks. It backs up what I keep saying, being in Iraq is not causing terrorist problems. They are fighting our soldiers there because it is easier than attacking us here. It actually diverts their aggression away from the U.S.
Technorati Tags: news, politics, terrorists, al-qaeda, adam gadahn video, iraq, war on terror
Thursday, May 24, 2007
Lebanon warns militants: Surrender or else
From CNN:
Lebanon's defense minister issued an ultimatum Wednesday to Islamic militants barricaded in a Palestinian refugee camp to surrender or face a military onslaught, as the army reinforced its positions, raising fears of what could be a bloody showdown.You have to like their attitude, this is the only language they understand. You must negotiate from a position of strength. Now, if they defy them we will see if they mean what they say. If not they will show weakness and be doomed.
Fighters from the al Qaeda-inspired Fatah al-Islam militant group vowed not to give up and to resist any Lebanese assault.
Technorati Tags: news, middle east, terrorism, terrorists, lebanon, fatah al-islam, war
Wednesday, April 18, 2007
4 bombs kill 178 people in Baghdad
From the AP:
Four large bombs exploded in mostly Shiite areas of Baghdad on Wednesday, killing at least 178 people and wounding scores — the deadliest day in the city since the start of the U.S.-Iraqi campaign to pacify the capital two months ago.People warned that the terrorists were watching what we are saying back here and what our government is doing. This is a desperate attempt to defeat the Great Satan, the US, again. Thanks to Bill Clinton the terrorists claimed victory in Mogadishu and if they claim victory in Iraq we and the civilized world, is going to be in real trouble...
U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates called the bombings "horrifying" and accused al-Qaida of being behind them.
In the deadliest of the attacks, a parked car bomb detonated in a crowd of workers at the Sadriyah market in central Baghdad, killing at least 122 people and wounding 148, said Raad Muhsin, an official at Al-Kindi Hospital where the victims were taken.
A police official confirmed the toll, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to release the information.
Among the dead were several construction workers who had been rebuilding the mostly Shiite marketplace after a bombing destroyed many shops and killed 137 people there in February, the police official said.
The laborers typically finish work around 4 p.m. each day. One of those wounded, 28-year-old Salih Mustafa, said he was waiting for a minibus to head home when the blast went off at 4:05 p.m.
"I rushed with others to give a hand and help the victims," he said. "I saw three bodies in a wooden cart, and civilian cars were helping to transfer the victims. It was really a horrible scene."
The market is situated on a side street lined with shops and vendors selling produce, meat and other staples. It is also about 500 yards from a Sunni shrine.
About an hour earlier, a suicide car bomber crashed into an Iraqi police checkpoint at an entrance to Sadr City, the capital's biggest Shiite Muslim neighborhood and a stronghold for the militia led by radical anti-U.S. cleric Muqtada al-Sadr.
The explosion killed at least 41 people, including five Iraqi security officers, and wounded 76, police and hospital officials said.
Wednesday, March 21, 2007
The Uncooperative Radio Show Recording March 18, 2007
Headlines of the week
Subjects: Top US General Calls Homosexuality Immoral, Khalid Shaikh Mohammad Confesses to Planning 9/11 and council saves piggies' bacon. Schools told of terrorist bus drivers, oh yea. Then, the President needs to control our current elected cockroaches, just a little bit.
Sources:
Wednesday, March 14, 2007
Federal Judge Says Sudan is to Blame for Deadly USS Cole Bombing
From FNC:
NORFOLK, Va. — A federal judge said Wednesday that Sudan is responsible for the bombing of the USS Cole but he needs more time to determine damages for the families of the 17 sailors killed when terrorists bombed the ship in 2000."There is substantial evidence in this case presented by the expert testimony that the government of Sudan induced the particular bombing of the Cole by virtue of prior actions of the government of Sudan," U.S. District Judge Robert G. Doumar said.
The civil trial started Tuesday in which the victims' relatives tried to prove the terrorist attack couldn't have happened without Sudan's support.
Tuesday, March 13, 2007
USS Cole Lawsuit Trial to Start in Virginia
From The Las Vegas Sun:
Good for them, the country deserves to pay the families of those lost in the attack on the Cole. Heck, it will leave them with that much less money to give to terrorists and may actually make them re-think even letting terrorist exist in their country.NORFOLK, Va. (AP) - More than six years after terrorists bombed the USS Cole in Yemen, the families of the 17 sailors killed in the blast are heading to court to try to prove the attack could not have happened without Sudan's help.
The families' lawsuit against Sudan's government was to go to trial Tuesday in U.S. District in Norfolk, where the Navy destroyer is based.
"Sudan's material support ... including continuous flow of funding, money, weapons, logistical support, diplomatic passports and religious blessing, was crucial in enabling the attack on the USS Cole," lawyers for the families said in court papers outlining their case.
The United States has listed Sudan as a state sponsor of terrorism since 1993.
The families' lawyers intend to prove that Sudan has given safe haven to Osama bin Laden's al-Qaida terrorist network since 1991 - long before Yemeni operatives blasted a 40-foot-hole in the side of the Cole in Yemen's Aden harbor on Oct. 12, 2000.
They also hope to show that the operatives were trained at camps Sudan permitted al-Qaida to operate within its borders; Sudan's military provided al-Qaida with at least four crates of weapons and explosives for use in terrorist activities in Yemen; bin Laden and Sudan's government owned businesses that provided cover for the procurement of explosives, weapons and chemicals; and that Sudan gave al-Qaida diplomatic pouches to ship explosives and weapons internationally without being searched.
The plaintiffs contend Sudan's embassy in New York gave logistical assistance to the bombers of the World Trade Center in 1993, but court documents included no details of the allegation.
Andrew C. Hall, an attorney for the families, said he expects the trial to last two to three days, with testimony by six family members and one or two experts. Lawyers also will give the judge depositions by about 50 people, including other family members and R. James Woolsey, former CIA director under President Clinton.
The families seek $105 million in damages to be shared by 59 spouses, parents and children of the bombing victims.
Monday, March 12, 2007
CAIR OK'd to meet in Capitol
A House Democrat has arranged for a conference room in the Capitol building to be used tomorrow by the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), a Muslim advocacy group criticized for its persistent refusal to disavow terrorist groups such as Hamas and Hezbollah.
The District-based group also is singled out by other Democratic lawmakers and some law-enforcement officials because of financial ties to terrorists.
Rep. Bill Pascrell Jr., New Jersey Democrat, reserved the basement conference room for CAIR's panel discussion Tuesday titled "Global Attitudes on Islam-West Relations: U.S. Policy Implications."
"We just see it as a simple room request," Pascrell spokesman Caley Gray said. "We did receive a room request and evaluated it and approved it."
He said the forum "opens up an important dialogue about global public opinion concerning the United States."
Still, the event's sponsor raised eyebrows on Capitol Hill, even if all sorts of groups routinely hold receptions and meetings in the Capitol.
"It does happen all the time but usually it is the United Way or some constituent group or Mothers Against Drunk Driving, not a group with supposed ties to terrorism -- in the Capitol no less," a Hill staffer said.
Yup, let us listen to a Radical group mis-representing Islam to all the people who have not read the Qur'an. Why does anyone let these people speak?
Islam is not a tolerant religion. It is not a religion of peace and I am sick of this group mis-representing Islam and the prophet mohammad to the American people. Not to mention their ties to funding terrorism.
They get upset when their prophet is insulted? The man was a murderer, pedophile, rapist and all around monster. How do you insult someone like that exactly?