Colonel Allen West Answers a Marine's Question
Congressman-Elect Alan West is a man that I would vote for.
God bless him.
Congressman-Elect Alan West is a man that I would vote for.
God bless him.
FATHER RAYMOND J. DE SOUZA
The blood of Abel, the first innocent to be killed, cried out to heaven. The blood of these latest Iraqi martyrs screams out to heaven and Earth. Does the world want to listen?
Indonesian genocide in East Timor
A Smiling Obama Returns to Bloody Jakarta
By Daniel Greenfield
Wednesday, November 10, 2010
The media narrative is that Barack Hussein Obama is returning to the place where he grew up as part of a diplomatic tour. The truth is that Obama is visiting a genocidal country and paying homage to its regime, even while many of the atrocities continue.
While Obama found time to blast Israel for building housing in Jerusalem, he made no mention of the Indonesian genocide in East Timor. No word about the Indonesian mass murder of between 100,000 to 200,000 people in a country whose population totaled little more than half a million. Shortly after Obama left Jakarta, the Indonesian regime began an occupation that lasted until 1999. An occupation armed and aided by successive US administrations.
But there is a reason you won’t hear about the meat hooks where Indonesian backed militias hung their victims, before mutilating and killing them. You won’t hear about the fields of the dead where the corpses of men, women and children were piled into mass graves. You won’t hear of the machete squads who hacked people to death in full public view and on video. You certainly won’t hear about the ethnic cleansing, the mass deportations, the gang rapes or even the murder of Western reporters. And there’s a simple reason for all that.
Indonesia is a Muslim country. Their victims in East Timor were Christians.
Oshkosh Approves Mosque | Newsradio 620 - Milwaukee, Wisconsin
OSHKOSH, Wis. (AP) -- The Oshkosh City Council has approved the location of a mosque, despite objections from neighbors.
The council Tuesday night approved a permit that allows the Ahmadiyaa Muslim Community to convert a former funeral home into a mosque and community center.
The council's decision came after lengthy public comment from both sides. Neighbors opposed to the permit argued the mosque was the wrong use for the site and would be used 16 to 18 hours a day.
Ahmadiyaa leader Khurram Ahmad says they will do their best to address the neighbors concerns. He says part of the Muslim faith is to be accommodating to neighbors.
(Copyright 2010 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)