UK: Student’s Union Refuses to Condemn ISIS Due to Fears It Would be ‘Islamophobic’

Sven Longshanks
Daily Stormer
October 18, 2014

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The NUS is refusing to condemn ISIS because it might hurt Muslim’s feelings.

Britain’s National Union of Students are refusing to condemn ISIS, because to do so might mean they were ‘Islamophobic.’

Predictably this stupidity was dreamt up by one of the Black students and then unquestioningly followed by all the rest.

Thankfully, there were a few lone voices in the wilderness though, who anonymously complained that ‘Islamophobic’ was just a word used by bigots to try and silence criticism of Muslims.

One of the anonymous dissidents even came close to saying “why don’t you go back to your own country and see how much freedom you have there?” but stopped short of that and referred to the countries the Islamic State were occupying instead.

Shockingly, the brainwashed students even went so far as to call ISIS ‘religious-right forces,’ thereby linking them with the far-right in our own countries.

The fact of the matter is that if you are against ISIS, you are a hater of Islam (“Islamophobia” is a stupid term, implying fear rather than hate), because ISIS is the purest incarnation of Islam we’ve seen yet.  The students are tacitly acknowledging that, while talking out of the other side of their mouth with this “religion of peace” gibberish.

Daily Mail:

Students put forward a motion at the body’s National Executive Council meeting calling for the condemnation of terrorist atrocities and support for the Iraqi people.But the call was defeated after a rebellion led by Black Students Officer Malia Bouattia, who said the motion was merely a ‘justification for war’.

It comes a day after military chiefs from around the globe met to discuss the battle against ISIS and despite a number of Muslim leaders in Britain having condemned the extremist group.

One student, who wished to remain anonymous, said: ‘Islamophobia is a meaningless term used by irrational people when unable to rebut a rational criticism.

‘Malia Bouattia should realise how lucky she is to be able to stand up and express her opinions with freedom and security.

‘She would not enjoy the same freedom if she were to visit the ISIS/ISIL that she refuses to condemn, and protested her opinions.’

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NUS Headquarters in London.

Another added: ‘I personally would find something rather Islamophobic in Ms Bouattia’s idea that condemning ISIS is also to condemn the other, approximately two billion Muslims on the planet – who don’t rape minorities or murder journalists.

‘They don’t want ISIS to carry out such attacks in the name of their religion, and who in the West have repeatedly begged not to be associated with the activities of “Islamic” State.

‘If the vast majority of Muslim students in the UK are in fact repeatedly standing up and telling you that they don’t like ISIS, that these terrorists don’t represent their faith, that they don’t want to be associated with them in any way – then how exactly is not condemning ISIS helping to fight Islamophobia?’

The motion, proposed by Daniel Cooper, was raised at the National Union of Students’ NEC meeting at Derbyshire House in London in September.

It put forward seven suggestions as to how the body could support the ongoing battle with the Islamic State.

The motion stated: ‘To work with the International Students’ Campaign to support Iraqi, Syrian and other international students in the UK affected by this situation.

‘To campaign in solidarity with the Iraqi people and in particular support the hard-pressed student, workers’ and women’s organisations against all the competing nationalist and religious-right forces.

There was a time when universities were about learning how to make the best of your intellectual capacities, nowadays they are all about shutting those down and locking them away behind the prison bars of political correctness.

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Student Grant, from Viz comics.