Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
September 3, 2016
It was just a little group of night food stands they bombed – old people serving beers and grilled seafoods to teenagers. The softest conceivable target.
The King of the Flips has been violently confronted by his enemies – the Moslems.
So far, he hasn’t really done much against them, but they are involved in the Philippines’ drug trade to a large extent, and presumably also view his sheer manliness and aggressive, violent support of the people as a threat, generally.
They bombed his home town.
The challenge has been accepted.
Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte on Saturday declared a nationwide “state of lawlessness” after an attack in the country’s southern region killed 14 people, granting the military special powers to aid in police operations.
At least 71 people were injured in the explosion Friday night at a market in Davao, a city Duterte led as mayor for 22 years before he assumed the presidency. National Defense Secretary Delfin Lorenzana blamed the Philippines Islamist extremist group Abu Sayyaf for the attack; a presidential spokesman said that parts of an improvised explosive device were found at the scene.
The state of lawlessness permits the police and military to set up checkpoints and patrols, and to search cars and pedestrians.
“It’s not martial law, but it would require nationwide, well-coordinated efforts of the military and the police,” Duterte said, according to the Philippine Daily Inquirer newspaper.
Analysts said that Duterte’s declaration also could abet his brutal — and intensifying — “war on drugs,” which has killed nearly 2,000 suspected drug users and pushers since he took office June 30. Duterte promised that 100,000 drug dealers would be killed in his first six months in office; since then, the country has seen a spike in both police shootings and summary executions by shadowy vigilantes.
“We’re trying to cope with a crisis now. There is a crisis in this country involving drugs, extrajudicial killings, and there seems to be an environment of lawless violence,” Duterte told reporters at the scene of Friday’s attack, according to the Associated Press.
HAHA!
He includes the killings he publicly orders as part of the crisis!
Like “yeah, we got all kinds of stuff happening here, you know, for one thing people are just killing drug dealers on the streets – can you believe that?”
Jose Torres, a Manila-based journalist and author, described the president’s declaration as a “double-edged sword.”
“With the state of lawlessness, he has declared everything to be under the police and the military,” said Torres, who wrote “Into the Mountain: Hostaged by the Abu Sayyaf.”
“He can be tougher and crack down on lawless elements. But at the same time, anything that can happen under the state of lawlessness can be blamed on him. He can no longer blame vigilante groups, or drug syndicates killing people from other syndicates.”
…Abu Sayyaf is one of three major separatist groups in the southern Philippines island of Mindanao — an impoverished, majority-Muslim region that long has chafed at Manila’s rule. (More than 80% of Filipinos are Roman Catholic).
Philippines armed forces ramped up an offensive against the group on the southern island of Jolo in late August, after it beheaded a village chief.
The group’s spokesman, Abu Rami, took credit for Friday’s attack, calling it a “call for unity to all mujahideen in the country,” according to the Philippines’ ABS-CBN News. He warned of more attacks in coming days.
Abu Sayyaf and some smaller militant groups have pledged allegiance to Islamic State. They wave Islamic State flags, echo Islamic State ideology and like Islamic State, produce gruesome, Internet-ready videos of their victims.
…
“Whoever was behind [Friday’s bombing] was actually tempting Duterte, or courting him, because he’s been so tough,” Torres said.
“They could have done it in another place, but they did it in Davao because that’s where he was from, and where he said it was very safe.”
No doubt where now going to see Duterte up the awesome as he continues to cleanse the filth from the streets of his country in the name of the people.
Godspeed, ye noble one.