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Hello Europeans, how are those muslim immigrants treating you? (pg. 3)
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View this Thread in Original format
| tranzformer |
| Ever since Europe started allowing "diversity" in the last 50 years, the place has gone down hill. In terms of morals, culture...etc. Not sure there will be a Europe as we know it by the next generation. |
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| Trance-M |
| quote: | Originally posted by AlphaStarred
Someone who lives in Belgium told me he sees it happening. |
At certain places or neighborhoods it will happen, also here, but in general this behavior for sure is not accepted in my opinion.
Meanwhile, at 70 km from me at the right side in Germany (Belgium at the left) this is getting a lot of attention:
Germany shocked by Cologne New Year gang assaults on women:
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-35231046
http://edition.cnn.com/2016/01/05/e...-year-assaults/ |
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| Serial Killer |
https://gma.yahoo.com/feds-arrest-2-refugees-terror-related-charges-024447765--abc-news-topstories.html?soc_src=copy
| quote: | Authorities arrested two refugees -- one in Sacramento and one in Houston -- Thursday on terror-related charges, according to the Department of Justice.
Sacramento resident Aws Mohammed Younis Al-Jayab was arrested on charges of making a false statement involving international terrorism, according to the Department of Justice. The 23-year-old allegedly traveled overseas to fight alongside terrorist organizations and lied to U.S. authorities about his activities, Assistant Attorney General Carlin said in a release.
Authorities allege Al-Jayab, a Palestinian born in Iraq, traveled to Syria to fight with terrorist organizations in the area. There is no indication that he planned an act of terrorism in the United States. Al-Jayab came to the United States as a refugee in October 2012. While he was living in Arizona between October 2012 and November 2013, he communicated with numerous other individuals over social media about his intent to return to Syria to fight for terrorist organizations, the complaint said.
On Oct. 30, 2012, Al-Jayab allegedly told an individual over social media to find him a way into Syria if he flew to Turkey.
"I want them to help me financially so I can return," he allegedly wrote the next day to different individual.
On March 13, 2013, Al-Jayab allegedly asked someone how he could enter Syria with an American passport, the complaint said. Up until October of that year, he allegedly discussed weaponry tactics with several individuals online. He then flew from Chicago to Istanbul, Turkey on Nov. 9, 2013 and entered Syria, authorities said. On Dec. 17 of that year, he allegedly told someone that he was "afraid of being imprisoned in America [because] the government is alert for everything, [and] my trip here constitutes a charge."
Al-Jayab allegedly reported on social media that he was in Syria fighting with various terrorist organizations including Ansar al-Islam between November 2013 and January 2014, according to the complaint. He returned to the U.S. via London and Los Angeles on Jan. 23, 2014 and settled in Sacramento.
When Al-Jayab was interviewed by U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services on Oct. 6, 2014, he denied that he had ever been a member of any rebel group or militia; had ever provided material support for any person or group engaged in terrorist activity; and that he had been a member of a group, or assisted in a group, which used or threatened the use of weapons against others.
Al-Jayab also allegedly stated that he visited Syria to visit his grandmother, the complaint said, which alleges that all of the statements he made were false.
If convicted, Al-Jayab faces eight years in prison and a $250,000 fine. There is no current threat to public safety associated with this arrest, said the spokeswoman for the U.S. Attorney's Office.Omar Faraj Saeed Al Hardan, a Palestinian national born in Iraq, allegedly attempted to provide material support and resources to ISIS, according to a criminal complaint.
Al Hardan came to the U.S. in November 2009 from Iraq as a refugee and was granted permanent legal status in August 2011. During his interview to become a naturalized citizen in Texas on Aug. 14, 2014, he stated he was not in any way associated with a terrorist organization and that he had never received any weapons training, which was not true, the complaint said.
The complaint said that he was associated with ISIL through 2014 and the al-Nusrah Front in 2013 and 2014.
It was not clear if either suspect had representation.
The FBI encouraged the public to voice their concerns to law enforcement if they encounter individuals who express an intent to do harm or claim allegiance to a terrorist group. |
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| soulstar606 |
| quote: | Originally posted by tranzformer
Ever since Europe started allowing "diversity" in the last 50 years, the place has gone down hill. In terms of morals, culture...etc. Not sure there will be a Europe as we know it by the next generation. |
if you're European..ie. a colourless person...ie. not a person of colour...then you are not allowed to say that
and you can't say that you want to have your own nation with mainly other Europeans like you...because that's Nazi racist, and you are Hitler
but you can say that if you're Jewish. they have their own Country....a country for Jews. and you can only pass on real Jewish blood if your Mother was Jew...and that not racist either...because..Holocaust....
but......being a colourless person myself...a culturally boring racist evil person who is born with privilege over all other races......it's hard to just have a laugh sometimes, i take life way too seriously...... |
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| Vector A |
Someone posted that exact same BBC article yesterday, which is why the thread got bumped up.
Read much? |
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| Trance-M |
| quote: | Originally posted by Vector A
Someone posted that exact same BBC article yesterday, which is why the thread got bumped up.
Read much? |
Well, actually the one I linked is two days older, so it's not exactly the same, but I didn't go back till the first page so must admit that I missed that post. |
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| LoveHate |
| How many of you are voting for trump? |
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| Vector A |
| Trump is even more of an idiot than Merkle. |
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| Trance-M |
| I would never vote for him. |
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| LoveHate |
| quote: | Originally posted by soulstar606
if you're European..ie. a colourless person...ie. not a person of colour...then you are not allowed to say that
and you can't say that you want to have your own nation with mainly other Europeans like you...because that's Nazi racist, and you are Hitler
but you can say that if you're Jewish. they have their own Country....a country for Jews. and you can only pass on real Jewish blood if your Mother was Jew...and that not racist either...because..Holocaust....
but......being a colourless person myself...a culturally boring racism's evil person who is born with privilege over all other races......it's hard to just have a laugh sometimes, i take life way too seriously...... |
Pfft, the only thing stopping you is yourself and or other "colorless" people some of you are really dillusional |
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| SYSTEM-J |
| quote: | Originally posted by Vector A
Trump is even more of an idiot than Merkle. |
I'd say Merkel is a pretty ing strong leader, given the strength and development of her country and the way, as the effective leader of Europe, she has navigated some pretty major problems facing the entire continent. And given that she is leader of the conservative Christian Democratic Union and famously stated in 2010 that efforts to build a multicultural German society have totally failed, her "open borders" policy in the face of the refugee crisis is a quite remarkable triumph of compassion over ideology.
Here is a leader who has openly criticised the failures of integration and yet has responded to that failure by trying to make things better, whereas just about everyone in this thread would seemingly respond to that failure by throwing every single member of a religion out of the country, nay - make that the continent. |
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| Mr.Mystery |
| quote: | Originally posted by SYSTEM-J
whereas just about everyone in this thread would seemingly respond to that failure by throwing every single member of a religion out of the country, nay - make that the continent. |
That's just how the world seems to work nowadays - treat the symptom, ignore the cause. |
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