#441
Curt Cobain has been dead 20 years, dude
#442
mods change my username to Kurd Kobane
#443
Se'ev Al-bini's production work on Kurd Kobane's album was magisterial.
#444


http://www.vox.com/2014/10/5/6909837/naomi-wolf-isis-ebola-scotland-conspiracy-theories

She also posted at great length on Ebola, including a post arguing that the US troops traveling to Liberia were not actually sent to help fight Ebola, but rather to further the aim of a "militarized Africa" and because this "creates a direct vector into the US" for Ebola, meant "to justify military condoning of US population."

Wolf's record of respectability gives her a platform and helps advance her conspiracy theories further than they would travel otherwise. This is not to argue that all of Wolf's earlier work must be discarded on the basis of these Facebook posts, but rather to urge others to see the broader context of Wolf and her thinking. In other words, it is important for readers who may encounter Wolf's ideas to understand the distinction between her earlier work, which rose on its merits, and her newer conspiracy theories, which are unhinged, damaging, and dangerous.

#445
#446
[account deactivated]
#447
[account deactivated]
#448
[account deactivated]
#449
[account deactivated]
#450
*sits back and allows genocide to occur*

*reads a few posts by tuppins*
#451
[account deactivated]
#452
another tpaine Jew post

Edited by gyrofry ()

#453
how i can sit here allowing genocide to happen when i could be over there, actually massacring people myself
#454

Makeshift_Swahili posted:

https://pbs.tw.com/media/BzJCRZZCYAAWuyj.pnghttp://www.vox.com/2014/10/5/6909837/naomi-wolf-isis-ebola-scotland-conspiracy-theories

She also posted at great length on Ebola, including a post arguing that the US troops traveling to Liberia were not actually sent to help fight Ebola, but rather to further the aim of a "militarized Africa" and because this "creates a direct vector into the US" for Ebola, meant "to justify military condoning of US population."

Wolf's record of respectability gives her a platform and helps advance her conspiracy theories further than they would travel otherwise. This is not to argue that all of Wolf's earlier work must be discarded on the basis of these Facebook posts, but rather to urge others to see the broader context of Wolf and her thinking. In other words, it is important for readers who may encounter Wolf's ideas to understand the distinction between her earlier work, which rose on its merits, and her newer conspiracy theories, which are unhinged, damaging, and dangerous.



let me uhhh... *nervously whips bangs out of face* ummm, errrr....talk....to her *jams engagement ring box back in windbreaker pocket*

#455
*sits back and allows genocide to occur*
#456
"winps and posers leave the hall" -Naomy wolf
#457
someone get her an account!
#458
david graeber has been really bad ever since that jacobin thing. although maybe that just made me aware that he was always an anti-communist & redbaiting "radical" liberal
#459
apparently his new crusade is trying to get the US to supply weapons to the kurds against isis

#460
lol what a dumbass someone tell him they already are and have been doign that
#461
#462
don't the kurds practice female genital mutilation at a higher rate than any other tribe or sect in the area?
#463
did someone already post the article praising the female kurdish child soldiers?
#464
whoa ho ho the left now is acting just like the left in 1930, strategically, better call the cops
#465

daddyholes posted:

whoa ho ho the left now is acting just like the left in 1930, strategically, better call the cops



Where is the USSR in ROjava??? fucking stalin betraying the revolution again

#466
#467
now THOSE are 61 comments, you DO wanna view all of!
#468
reddit is trash
#469
actually reddit is a wonderful site filled with sophisticated and intelligent commentators.
#470
http://www.cnn.com/2014/10/06/us/teen-isis-support-arrest/index.html

"Details about who purchased the airplane ticket for Khan and whom he was planning to meet in Turkey were not included in the criminal complaint."

"During questioning at the airport, Khan waived his Miranda rights and told FBI agents that a person he met online (not identified by name in the court document) had given him the phone number of a person to call once he arrived in Istanbul."
#471

postposting posted:

http://www.cnn.com/2014/10/06/us/teen-isis-support-arrest/index.html"Details about who purchased the airplane ticket for Khan and whom he was planning to meet in Turkey were not included in the criminal complaint."

"During questioning at the airport, Khan waived his Miranda rights and told FBI agents that a person he met online (not identified by name in the court document) had given him the phone number of a person to call once he arrived in Istanbul."



so exactly the same shit the FBI does to entrap goofy anarchists

#472
#473

redfiesta posted:



that isnt the half of it they run a whole bunch of crazy anti muslim shit

#474
this is what happens when impressionable teens start innocently chatting with babyfinland on twitter
#475

http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2014/10/turkey-syria-kurds-isis-kobani-war.html posted:

I reminded Nimet of the legends we hear of IS militants fearing to encounter women fighters. She replied, “This is not a myth but reality. I personally met IS fighters face-to-face. Women fighters infringe on their psyche. They believe they won’t go to paradise if they are killed by women. That is why they flee when they see women. I saw that personally at the Celaga front. We monitor their radio calls. When they hear a woman's voice on the air, they become hysterical.”


IS, ISIS, ISIL... maybe just call them, MRA..... Heh

#476

"Details about who purchased the airplane ticket for Khan and whom he was planning to meet in Turkey were not included in the criminal complaint."

"During questioning at the airport, Khan waived his Miranda rights and told FBI agents that a person he met online (not identified by name in the court document) had given him the phone number of a person to call once he arrived in Istanbul, shortly after telling him "Us adult converts to Islam need to stick together" and asking if he "had stairs in his house"

Edited by Superabound ()

#477

This piece was written by Guest Contributor Asma T. Uddin.

Asra Nomani’s recent piece in Marie Claire, “My Big Fat Muslim Wedding”, underscored everything that is wrong with Marie Claire’s coverage of Islam and Muslim women. Nomani’s piece was a confused narrative at best, conflating culture with religion and individual bad experiences with larger truths about entire faiths. A story that should have been about Nomani’s conflicted path to love somehow became a treatise on Islam and love generally, suggesting that all Muslim men and women follow similarly conflicted, contradictory paths. Western ways of premarital intercourse and freedom to marry without regard to religious frameworks are presented as the higher moral ground.

courtney-cox-on-marie-claire-cover-november-2008A similar sort of paternalism is rampant throughout Marie Claire’s treatment of Muslim women. Time and again, the image we see emerging from this magazine is that of Muslim women as sequestered, brainwashed, and victimized if by no one else than their own naïve, unknowing selves. Almost all of Marie Claire’s stories dealing with Islam or Muslims have to do with Muslim women either oppressed by or complicit in terrorism and extremism. Women who choose to embrace Islam are belittled, and Islam, in the process, is portrayed as attractive to only lost and desperate souls. On the flip side, Malika, the female jihadist in “Love in the Time of Terror” reflects the danger of Muslim female strength, while purportedly more respectable brands of strong females have spurned Islam to some degree or another (think Ayaan Hirsi Ali).

Consider, for example, Paul Cruickshank’s piece, “I Married a Terrorist”, the story of Maureen, a Belgian woman who met a non-practicing Muslim man at a bar and started dating him, their affair a whirlwind of partying. Somewhere amidst all the clubbing, Maureen began feeling empty, overwhelmed by her crazy ways. Her emptiness prompted curiosity about religion, and she began asking her boyfriend, Rachid, about Islam, of which he himself was ignorant.

This where the story about Maureen begins to reveal its anti-Islamic and sexist undertones; as Cruickshank describes Maureen’s mosque visits in search of knowledge, he notes, “ike many young women with few career prospects, Maureen was in search of a sense of purpose, something to believe in.”

In that one sentence, Cruickshank reveals a number of troubling assumptions and biases: Women without careers are purposeless. Maureen’s curiosity and interest in Islam was necessarily rooted in her lack of career prospects, suggesting in itself that Maureen must be uneducated and even gullible.

The complexity of a spiritual quest and the attraction of Islam to rational minds are lost in this one simplistic sentence. The biases in that one sentence frame the story that follows and is repeated throughout it. Cruickshank goes on to describe Maureen’s conversion and how her excitement led to Rachid’s return to his religion. Rachid and Maureen end up turning to “fundamentalist” religious leaders for guidance, and one day Maureen decides to don the all-encompassing burqa on the basis of her conviction that Islam requires it.

As Cruickshank makes his way through Maureen’s stories–whether they be of her belief in the utility of the burqa or her disbelief that her husband, accused by Belgian police of aiding in the Madrid bombings, was implicated–he continues to reflect an astonishment, almost disbelief, that Maureen really believes what she’s telling him. There’s a sense that Maureen is blinded, almost brainwashed, by forces greater than herself, partly owing to female weaknesses and partly to the force of her fundamentalist beliefs and community.

Describing Maureen’s new husband, Ayoub, as a “moderate” Muslim – as reflected, apparently, by his easy-going personality and clean-shaven face – Cruickshank writes, “But despite Ayoub’s positive influence, traces of Maureen’s old views linger.” Because Maureen “refuses to describe her years wearing the burka as a mistake”, the reader gets the idea that Maureen doesn’t really know what is right or wrong, or what type of influence a scary, oppressive Islam had on her.

While “I Married a Terrorist” emphasizes the victimization of Muslim women by their own naïveté, many of Marie Claire’s other stories on Islam repeat the mantra over and over again that Muslim women need to be saved by greater, external forces, most often Islam itself. Admittedly, there are social conditions in the Muslim world that affect women adversely and need to be addressed, but Marie Claire’s treatment of these topics lacks in nuance and complexity, leaving the reader to pity Muslim women simply for their being Muslim.

Consider Jan Goodwin’s, “Honor Suicides in Turkey”. According to Goodwin, as a response to more stringent laws against honor killings (apparently initiated merely so that Turkey can prove itself worthy of admission into the EU) many families in Turkey are foregoing honor killings by asking women to commit suicide instead–thus the term, “honor suicide”. Nowhere in her piece does Goodwin discuss cultural factors, or the fact that honor killing occurs among some minority communities in Turkey rather than being a mainstream phenomenon. Instead, honor killings and suicides are clumped into the same group as headscarves and female illiteracy, the entire group being symptomatic of Turkey’s Islamist government. Muslim women are the losers in this country, all because of their and their country’s Islam.

There are thus multiple levels of victimization expressed in Marie Claire’s coverage of Muslim women, ranging from self-victimization (Islam as the answer for desperate, lost souls and only those souls), to falling prey to female weaknesses (Islam as attractive to only stupid, career-barren women), to being the inevitable victim of the ominous Islam of one’s family, society, and government. All of this adds up to Marie Claire’s distorted view of Muslim women.

#478
this is a little game the fbi plays a lot in chicago. take young brown people who express anything vaguely radical sounding and then hook them up with an agent to coax them to say more and more until you get something you can charge, and over time you can see how their strategy has evolved.

2010 - Sami Samir Hassoun

22 year old lebanese immigrant charged with attempting to set off a fake bomb the fbi gave him somehwere near wrigley field

"According to the charges, Hassoun seemed eager to launch an attack, allegedly suggesting first nonlethal car bombs at the Daley Center downtown, then seeming to warm to the idea of casualties.
...

Hassoun's Facebook page listed him as a former student of American University of Beirut and said his favorite shows on TV included "Seinfeld" and "Scrubs."



http://articles.chicagotribune.com/2010-09-20/news/ct-met-wrigleyville-bomb-plot-20100920_1_car-bombs-phony-bomb-terrorism-plot

2012 - Adel Daoud

18 year old kid charged with "attempt to use a weapon of mass destruction" for allegedly trying to blow up a shitty dive bar with, again, a car bomb that the fbi gave him.

the choice of location was significant. Cal's, the (since closed) bar he was supposedly attempting to bomb, was the last cheap dive bar right on the edge of what could be considered 'downtown' chicago. It was a tiny room where they'd give you beers from the adjoining liquor store, and some muslim teen from aurora had certainly never heard of it. so the feds wanted somewhere with visibility--'downtown'--but didn't even want to pick one of the countless bourgeois or capital intensive targets that actually exist there, maybe so their 'arrest' action wouldn't disrupt any important 'city functioning', or worse, be seen by someone.

-where are they now-well, his defense lawyer is trying to get the the fisa court documents unsealed, but

"Prosecutors argued in their written appeal that letting Adel Daoud's lawyers see records submitted to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, or Fisa court, would be a dangerous "sea change" in established procedures and endanger national security.

In its Monday opinion, the appellate court agreed."

http://www.theguardian.com/law/2014/jun/16/fisa-surveillance-documents-daoud-court-overturn-chicago



2013 - Abdella Ahmad Tounisi

Another 18 year old who was also arrested at o'hare purportedly boarding a flight to turkey and then intended to 'pass through the porous border to syria' and join Jabhat al-Nusrah.

"Tounisi, a U.S. citizen, was snared in an Internet sting after contacting a sham website set up by the FBI that purported to hook up would-be fighters with terrorists, the federal complaint says"

"At the top of the website were the words, "A Call for Jihad in Syria," and the site invited interested parties to "come and join your lion brothers ... who are fighting under the true banner of Islam."



Tounisi was also a friend of Adel Daoud. Apparently he was intended to be part of the original set-up, but when they weren't able to find anything to charge him on the first time, they went back again about a year later.

I'm guessing it was getting too labor intensive to go through the trouble of making a fake bomb, and then getting the car, loading it up, etc. etc. so now they just buy you a plane ticket and then say you were gonna go do some jihads. these troubling economic times cause cutbacks everywhere

http://www.foxnews.com/us/2013/04/21/illinois-man-tried-to-join-al-qaeda-linked-group-fbi-says/

What tounisi's dad had to say:

He’s not the type that wants to hurt anybody, he wants to alleviate suffering,” Tounisi said about his son. “They could entrap anybody, they could send anybody anything and when you’re young and impressionable, your gonna believe it. If that’s the case, that’s the case. I am just generalizing this issue right now because a lot of kids in the Muslim community have been entrapped just like this, anybody that goes to the mosque five times a day and he’s holding onto his religion really good, he is a red flag.

http://www.suntimes.com/news/crime/19634670-418/father-of-aurora-man-doubts-his-son-was-flying-to-syria-to-join-group-tied.html#.VDXarWddVrU



what i'm saying is: has anyone heard from jeffrey?

#479
literally every single "domestic terrorist" arrested in every Western country, at least over the past 14 years, was directly set up, funded, encouraged, and supplied by one or more government agents. Every single one. Banned for Homegrown
#480
Hello I am here. They haven’t tried anything like you’ve described, yet. An update since I outed Tom aka babyfinland:

Spoiler!