London Bridge Terrorist Stopped by Man with Narwhal Tusk!

Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
November 30, 2019

Murdered two people before being stopped by the tusk of a narwhal.

Britain is a cartoon country.

The Guardian:

A man and a woman were killed in a terror attack in London carried out by an Islamist extremist who had been jailed for an al-Qaida inspired bomb plot and was recently released on licence.

Scotland Yard are investigating how 28-year-old Usman Khan was able to launch the attack in London Bridge on Friday, despite being known to the authorities and fitted with an electronic tag to monitor his movements. He was allowed out a year ago after serving time for his part in a plot to blow up the London Stock Exchange.

That’s more like a right-wing target than a Moslem target, isn’t it?

Surprised they let him out after that. You’d think they’d get him with anti-Semitism charges along with the terrorism charges. Anti-Semitism is a bigger crime than terrorism.

In the early hours of Saturday, officers confirmed earlier reports that Khan began his attack inside Fishmongers’ Hall, near the north end of the bridge, during a University of Cambridge-organised conference on rehabilitating offenders. Officers believe he acted alone.

“The circumstances, as we currently understand them, are that the attacker attended an event earlier on Friday afternoon at Fishmongers’ Hall called ‘Learning Together’. We believe that the attack began inside before he left the building and proceeded onto London Bridge, where he was detained and subsequently confronted and shot by armed officers,” said the Met police assistant commissioner, Neil Basu.

So he began the attack at some kind of mandatory diversity training conference.

That’s what set him off.

The two people who died have not yet been named. A man and two women were also injured. The casualties were taken to the Royal London hospital in Whitechapel, one of the capital’s four designated major trauma centres. NHS England said on Friday night that one of the three injured was critical but stable, a second was stable and a third had suffered less serious injuries.

Prof Stephen Toope, the university’s vice-chancellor, said he was “devastated” that an event organised by its Institute of Criminology was targeted in the attack. “We are in touch with the Metropolitan police, and awaiting further details of the victims. We mourn the dead and we hope for a speedy recovery for the injured. Our thoughts are with all their families and friends.”

Khan was one of nine members of an al-Qaida-inspired terror group convicted of plotting to bomb the Stock Exchange and build a terrorist training camp in Pakistan that was disrupted by MI5 and the police. He is also understood to have been a supporter of al-Muhijaroun, the extremist group which scores of terrorists were involved with, according to the anti-extremism group Hope Not Hate.

He was originally given an indeterminate sentence, with a minimum term of eight years in February 2012. This was replaced by a 16-year fixed-term sentence and an extended period on licence by the court of appeal in 2013.

In his judgment at the time, Lord Justice Leveson said: “There is no doubt that anyone convicted of this type of offence could legitimately be considered dangerous.

“There is an argument for concluding that anyone convicted of such an offence should be incentivised to demonstrate that he can safely be released; such a decision is then better left to the Parole Board for consideration proximate in time to the date when release becomes possible.”

lol yeah, apparently not.

Khan served the first year of his sentence on remand and spent about seven more behind bars after sentencing, before being released in December 2018 at about the halfway point. “Clearly, a key line of enquiry now is to establish how he came to carry out this attack,” Basu said on Friday night. He had been living in Staffordshire and police were focusing their searches at an address in the county.

Police have said Khan was wearing a fake suicide vest when he was shot. The incident played out in extraordinary scenes that prompted praise for the bravery of members of the public and police. In footage captured by bystanders, civilians were seen wrestling with a person lying on the ground at the northern end of the bridge, before being pulled to safety by armed police arriving at the scene.

Khan, dressed in black, then appeared to try to rise, before firearms officers fired two shots. One man wearing a suit appeared to have removed a large knife from the suspect before the shots were fired, and was filmed running down the road away from the scene gesturing at others to get back.There were reports that one man had taken a five-foot long narwhal tusk from Fishmongers’ Hall to confront the attacker.

It’s sort of hilarious.

The UK has been passing laws to ban people from owning knives for years now in order to try and cut down on cultural enrichment.

Now I guess they’ll have to ban sharp animal parts from public display.

You think I’m joking, but I guarantee they will issue some kind of edict on animal tusks in the wake of this. That is how out of touch the British are.