Zeiger
Daily Stormer
July 21, 2016
These men of terrorist descent are worried about their public image.
Look, nobody likes terrorism. But we have to get used to it, because there’s nothing that can be done to stop it. It’s just a fact of life now. We have no control over it – it’s like the weather.
There is something we have control over, however, and that’s our own prejudiced behavior. Just because you get Charlie’d, doesn’t mean you have to get upset about it and start throwing blame around.
I mean, think of the terrorist’s feelings, for God’s sake!
In the poor Nice suburb of Ariane, many Muslims feel their community is being unfairly blamed for the Bastille Day attack that killed 84 people, and fear discrimination and social divisions will grow in its wake.
They had just recovered, emotionally, from running over all these people… And now this?
Islamic State claimed the attack and hailed Tunisian-born Mohamed Lahouaiej Bouhlel, who drove a truck through a crowd of revelers on the French city’s sea-front promenade last Thursday, as one if its soldiers.
Prime Minister Manuel Valls said at the weekend that the 31-year-old attacker had been “radicalized very quickly.” The Paris prosecutor said on Monday that, while there was no evidence that he had direct links to Islamic State, he had recently developed an interest in radical Islam.
Radical Moslems are only a tiny minority, goy. But any Moslem can become a radical instantly, at the drop of a hat. That’s why we have to avoid hurting their feelings at all costs. Always be extra nice to Moslems. Give them discounts, always cave in to their every demand.
Anything could set them off.
Very much like Bomb Man, whom Mega Man had to fight to save the world.
In Ariane, a district with a big Muslim population a few kilometers from the Abbatoirs neighborhood where Bouhlel lived, the imam of the local Al Fourkane mosque said radical groups preyed on the weak, and cautioned against focusing on the killer’s faith.
“Because the weak are being exploited doesn’t mean that we should come down hard on their religion. Quite the opposite. We should be uniting together and defending the country,” said Boubekeur Bekri, adding that “a crime is a crime” regardless of faith.
Well, if this religious leader says we shouldn’t attack his religion because one of his guys killed a bunch of our guys, all in the name of said religion, should we take that very seriously?
There wouldn’t be a little conflict of interest here, Haji?
For decades Nice, better known for the super-yachts that anchor in its cobalt blue waters and palm-fringed boulevards, has been a gateway for waves of immigrants arriving from France’s former colonies such as Tunisia, Morocco and Algeria.
It has also produced the largest contingent of French militants waging jihad in Syria, with about one in 10 originating from the Mediterranean city.
Islamic State has lost much territory in Iraq and Syria this year and some officials fear it may be calling on adherents to conduct high-visibility attacks.
Typical French militants in Syria.
Every time there’s a Haji terrorist attack, the media trots out these insipid sob stories. The purpose, of course, is to remind people of their programming. Whenever a new Charlie is granted to us, the people start having bad, bad thoughts. They need to be made to feel guilty about these anti-Moslem thoughts.
As people’s faith in the media drops, and as the frequency of these attacks increases, the programming will be shattered by reality itself.