Sunday, November 15, 2015

Jihad's global designs

Paris hasn't been the only place to get hit by radical Muslims in the title digits in the last few months. Recall this horrifying spectacle from April:


At least 147 people, mostly students, have been killed in an assault by al-Shabab militants on a university in north-eastern Kenya.
Heavily armed attackers stormed Garissa University early on Thursday, killing two security guards then firing indiscriminately on students.
Four of the gunman were eventually surrounded in a dormitory, and died when their suicide vests detonated. 
It is the deadliest attack yet by al-Shabab. 
The militants singled out Christians and shot them, witnesses said.
Count on it happening here:

Fox News reports that jihadi web sites are rejoicing over today’s terrorist attacks in Paris. The line we have heard more than once from ISIS-related sites is, “The American blood is best, and we will taste it soon.” The French are tougher than many realize, but they are not the primary targets of Muslim extremists. 

This threat is not idle:

The first 10,000 refugees from Syria began arriving in New Orleans last week. Last month FBI Director James Comey warned Congress that the incoming refugees cannot be adequately vetted, and if ISIS is weaponizing them we have no way of knowing it. While it is important for the United States to assume some of the humanitarian burden for the expanding Syria crisis, it is recklessly irresponsible to distribute unvetted refugees to 180 communities across the country,forcing untrained and inexperienced local law enforcement officers to try to sort out who is a potential threat. 

It's not likely that we will either prevent it or respond effectively when it happens. Post-America is so unacquainted with the concept of seriousness and self-preservation that the cattle-masses and their overlords will at best hold group therapy sessions for the indulging of feelings and find some kind of stripes with which to overlay their social-media profile photos.

Please prove me wrong, post-America.


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